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4.75 from 36 votes
The BEST No Bake Cookies Recipe with Chocolate, Oatmeal, and Peanut Butter: The classic recipe that uses milk, butter, sugar, cocoa, peanut butter, and oats! Plus, the pro-tip that will help you make sure they turn out every time!
- Chocolate no bake cookies?
- Chocolate peanut butter no bake cookies?
- No bake chocolate oatmeal cookies?
- No bake oatmeal cookies?
I’m not sure what you may call them… because I’ve heard them called all SORTS of different names, but we talk about them so much that we’ve just shortened it to “no bakes” around here.
If you love easy cookies, you’ll love these Monster cookies , these Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies, the No Bake S’mores Cheesecake Recipe, our Gluten Free, Oatmeal Breakfast Cookies, and these Chocolate and Peanut Butter Energy Bites – No Bake!
❤️ Why You’ll Love this Recipe
I’ve hesitated sharing this recipe for no bake cookies, because I felt like EVERYONE must already have a recipe and know what no bake cookies are. Right?! Wrong.
Or at least they’ve been made by others but so many have had trouble with other recipes hardening and turning out. But this recipe never fails me, and you’ll see why in the PRO TIP below!
🍪 How to Make No Bake Cookies
They’re really easy, and the PERFECT recipe for someone just starting out in the kitchen. (I actually think this was the very first cookie recipe I tackled as a little girl too! It’s kind of neat actually to be sharing this with you today since I had NO idea back then that this blogging “thing” would even exist, where I share my favorite recipes.)
Using everyday ingredients, that you probably already have on hand, you’ll cook them on the stovetop and they’ll air-dry on the counter. No baking required!
The full, printable recipe card is at the bottom of this post.
Step 1: Butter, Sugar, Milk, Cocoa
Combine the following ingredients in a saucepan on the stovetop. (Not turning the burner on just yet.)
TIP: This is a GREAT time to place a piece of aluminum foil out on the countertop, so it is ready for you when the cookies are ready to scoop out.
- Butter – You’ll be using a stick of butter, which is a half of a cup. Don’t worry about it being softened, cold right out of the refrigerator will work just fine. I also prefer to use salted butter, but unsalted works just fine too!
- Sugar – 2 cups of white granulated sugar
- Milk – I usually use 2%, but have used whole and skim before as well, so using whatever you have on hand should work just fine!
- Cocoa – 4 tablespoons of unsweetened cocoa
Step 2: Mix & Boil
Turn the burner on to medium-high heat, and begin stirring so the butter will melt.
Step 3: Boil for 1 Minute
Once the butter has melted, stop stirring to allow the mixture to come to a boil.
PRO TIP: Once all of the chocolate mixture starts boiling, (not just a bubble here and there — wait until it all starts boiling) begin timing the boil, stir slowly and constantly, and let it boil for 1 minute.
Remove from heat.
Step 4: Add in Peanut Butter
Once the saucepan has been moved away from the heat, add and stir in the peanut butter until completely mixed in.
Step 5: Add the Oats
Pour in 3 cups of oats and stir until combined.
Step 6: Quickly Spoon Out Cookies
This is where you’ll want to be quick and spoon out cookies with a tablespoon, on to a sheet of aluminum foil.
Leaving them in the hot pan will allow the cookies to continue to cook and harden, resulting in a very crumbly cookie.
Step 7: Rest for 20 minutes
Let the cookies rest for at least 20 minutes to harden.
To see if the cookies have set, you should be able to pick up the cookies with your hand.
❄️ Storage
Once hardened and cooled, store in an air-tight container and enjoy within a couple of days as they can tend to dry out.
🍪 More Cookie Recipes
If you’ve fallen in love with these no bake cookies, then I know you’re also going to love this 3-ingredient peanut butter fudge, this chocolate peanut butter bars too and these chewy oatmeal raisin cookies! They’re also a favorite in our house! Or, give these cake mix peanut butter cookies a whirl, too!
📖 Recipe
The BEST No Bake Cookies
Jessica Burgess
No Bake Cookies Recipe with Chocolate Oatmeal and Peanut Butter: The classic recipe that uses milk, butter, sugar, cocoa, peanut butter and oats!
4.75 from 36 votes
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 5 minutes mins
Cook Time 1 minute min
Resting Time 20 minutes mins
Total Time 26 minutes mins
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Servings 16 cookies
Calories 245 kcal
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup salted butter 1 stick
- 2 cups white granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup milk 2%, whole or skim
- 4 tablespoon cocoa
- 1/3 cup peanut butter creamy or crunchy
- 3 cups oats quick or old-fashioned
Instructions
Place a piece of aluminum foil, approximately a foot long, out on the counter. You'll be scooping out the cookies on to this to let dry once they're finished cooking.
In a large sauce pan place butter, sugar, milk and cocoa and turn burner on to medium-high heat.
Stirring to combine, cook until butter has melted.
Next, and PRO TIP: Once all of the chocolate mixture starts boiling, (not just a bubble here and there — wait until it all starts boiling) begin timing the boil, stir slowly and constantly, and let it boil for 1 minute.
After one minute of boiling, remove from heat
Mix in peanut butter and stir until combined
Add in oats and stir until evenly mixed
QUICKLY, using a spoon, scoop out a tablespoon of cookie mixture on to your prepared aluminum foil, making approximately 16-20 cookies.
Let cookies sit for about 20 minutes or until the cookies have hardened and you can pick them up off of the aluminum foil.
Video
Notes
TIP: Spread out a piece of aluminum foil on to the counter before you start making the cookies so it will be ready and you can quickly spoon out the cookies.
Nutrition
Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 245kcal | Carbohydrates: 37g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 10g | Saturated Fat: 5g | Cholesterol: 16mg | Sodium: 80mg | Potassium: 121mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 26g | Vitamin A: 190IU | Calcium: 22mg | Iron: 1mg
Nutritional information is based on third-party calculations and should be considered estimates. Actual nutritional content will vary with brands used, measuring methods, portion sizes and more.
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