Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

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Today is the big reveal day for the August posts for the Secret Recipe Club

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

And these fugdy, chewy, very chocolatey chocolate cookies

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

with hints of peanut butter undertones

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

are what I am really excited to reveal!

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Last month, I made Flourless Peanut Butter Cookies

Flourless Peanut Butter CookiesMany of you have written to me to tell me that you’ve made these and you love the simplicity of the recipe and that the full-bodied peanut butter flavor has you hooked and you’re never going back to traditional PB cookies.  Me either!

But I think you’ll be very happy with my enhanced version, i.e. chocolate is added in two forms

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
Because isn’t everything better with a little enhancing?

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesI think so.

This month, I was assigned the blog Not Rachel Ray and when I saw she had made Flourless Chocolate Cookies using Lori the Recipe Girl’s recipe (as an aside Lori is a fellow San Diego area blogger and she hosted an awesome party I attended a few weeks ago)

I knew I wanted to take a stab at Flourless Chocolate Cookies.

I adapted my own Flourless Peanut Butter Cookie recipe and this is what I came up with.

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesI’m pretty sure you won’t have problems with leftovers on your hands.

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Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies (Naturally Gluten Free, with Vegan Option.  Adapted from my own Flourless Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe)

3/4 c white sugar

1/4 c brown sugar, packed

1/2 c cocoa powder, unsweetened

1 c peanut butter

1 egg (replace real egg by combining 1 tbsp ground flax seeds + 3 tbsp warm water in a small bowl and stirring.  Allow a “jelly” to form after a few minutes and use this as your “egg”)

1 tsp vanilla extract

1/2 c to 3/4 chocolate chips (or peanut butter chips, white chocolate chips, butterscotch chips) & stir to combine

Directions:

Combine all ingredients except the chocolate chips in one bowl and stir by hand with a spoon.

After all ingredients are incorporated stir in the chocolate chips

At this point you have the option to place the dough in the freezer for 10-15 minutes.  Cold dough will create puffier/thicker cookies vs. thinner/flatter cookies during the baking process.  It will also help with the rolling out/ball-forming process but it’s optional if you’re in a hurry.

Form into 1 inch balls (I rolled mine with my hands but you could just drop them on a cookie sheet with a spoon) and place on cookie sheet (I used parchment-lined + lightly sprayed with cooking spray for easy cleanup).

Bake at 350F for 10 to 12 minutes or until they barely look done.  They can go from raw to burned in about 90 seconds so watch them but know that because they are dark cookies, visuals may be tricky.

They may not look done after 10-12 minutes, but that’s ok.  Take them out of the oven anyway and allow them to cool.

Yields 24 cookies (Mine were fairly small.  Reducing to 12-18 bigger cookies is an option and adjust baking time accordingly)

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A Visual Guide:

Gather your ingredients

Ingredients for Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesAdd everything into one bowl except the chocolate chips.

I kept the dry ingredients at the bottom and then put the wet ingredients on top because I wanted a dry ingredients “bed” for the PB but I’m sure it doesn’t matter.  I wouldn’t want to waste a drop of PB by having it get stuck to bottom the bowl.

Stir to combine all the ingredients, then add the chocolate chips, and stir those in.

Ingredients Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Dough will be very thick and it looks sticky and quite un-workable, but the fat in the peanut butter keeps the dough together and less sticky than you’d imagine.

Freeze your mixing bowl with the dough in it for 10-15 minutes before rolling out the balls.

Or, simply roll immediately if you’re impatient and don’t want to chill the dough.

Note: warmer dough will produce flatter and crisper cookies; colder dough will produce puffier and chewier cookies

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesBake for 10-12 minutes or until they are barely done looking.

I like chewy, gooey, half-baked cookies so I was a 10 minute girl

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Allow them to cool for as long as you can stand it

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Devour

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

The beauty of these cookies are that:

they only take 2 minutes to mix up the dough

no electric mixer required & you can do it all by hand

minimal cleanup/dishes (I hate baking projects where you dirty every dish in your kitchen!)

naturally GF and very easily adapted to be vegan

and they will make all chocaholics very happy.

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesThe cold dough really dis make a difference in the finished product.

The flourless chococlate cookies are really puffy compared to my previous flourless peanut butter cookies which I baked with warm dough on a warm day.

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

These cookies are perfectly chewy

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesAnd not dry.  <– Dry baked goods are not worth my chew!

In terms of flavor, these are definitely chocolate cookies that have been enhanced with peanut butter

If you want more of a peanut buttery flavor, scale back the cocoa powder

Or just make these and add chocolate chips

But if you want to get your chocolate on, today’s cookies are for you.

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesAnd they’re small.  So grab a few.

And if for some reason you want to stuff candy bars in your cookies, try Snickers Bar Stuffed Chocolate Chip Cookies

Snickers Bar Stuffed Chocolate Chip CookiesFeel free to stuff just about any kind of candy bar in these, too


Want to see what other people in the Secret Recipe Club made this month?

Questions:

1. What’s your favorite cookie?

My favorite cookies are half-baked, ooey-gooey, not dry.  And if a cookie is properly baked and the flavors are balanced, I can appreciate just about any kind of cookie from chocolate chip to peanut butter cookies to snickerdoodle to molasses.

Ironically one cookie that tends to bore me are sugar cookies.  And I love sugar!  But they are usually too overbaked, too crispy, too dry, and the monotone flavor is boring for me.  I created raw vegan sugar cookie dough bites though, and they’re not dry or boring.  Promise.

I also really like texture which is why oatmeal raisin cookie with their chunky oats, raisins, and brown sugar are always a hit with me.  The raw vegan oatmeal raisin cookies here are so easy, too.  No oven required.

2. Can anything ever be too chocolatey?  Too dark or intense?

I think not! 

Just like I said nothing can ever be too rich or too sweet when I was talking about these

White Chocolate Vanilla Marshmallow Cake Bars – 4 Layers

White Chocolate Vanilla Marshmallow Cake Bars – 4 Layers

Nothing can ever be too chocolatey or too dark. 

I’d rather skip “milk” chocolate and either do white or dark chocolate, actually.

These cookies are more of dark chocolate meets hint of peanut butter.

I love sweet, white chocolate but I also love rich, full-bodied dark chocolate, too.

Flourless Chocolate Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies stacked on white plate

P.S. If you’re just catching up on posts from the weekend, here are mine since Friday:

Have a great week!

About the Author

Welcome to AverieCooks! Here you’ll find fast and easy recipes that taste amazing and are geared for real life. Nothing fussy or complicated, just awesome tasting dishes everyone loves!

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

Comments

  1. Wow, that list at the bottom with pics is some intense food porn! A whole day could go by just surfing that sugar tide…

    Looks like an awesome recipe, and I’m just like you: I hate losing any smidge of pb (or whatever) stuck to the bottom of the bowl!

    I am actually coming to the conclusion (sacrilege?) that chocolate isn’t worth it for me. I love how it tastes but it really doesn’t make me feel good, and since I changed my diet in favor of more carbs, my cravings for chocolate just disappeared. But I have lots of chocolate lovers to pander to/fix for, who adore pb, so I bet I’ll make these at some point!

  2. Oh, I was so hoping for a picture of a cookie broken in half! But there are enough pretty pictures of the whole cookies to (almost) satisfy me. ;) They look so amazing! YUM.

  3. My favorite cookies used to be the oat cookies my grandmom used to make. Sometimes she also added coconut flakes, but I like the pure oat version the best. Now that I eat a flourless, dairy-free, and very low sugar diet, I don’t eat cookies anymore. I can imagine to start experimenting around with nut butter and protein powder for baking, though.

    I’m not a great fan of chocolate, especially the dark one. So for me, things can definitely be too dark, too chocolatey, and too intense. But I sometimes enjoy a hot chocolate made from unsweetened cocoa powder, hot water, and almond milk. :)

  4. I am so so so gifting my gluten free girlfriends with these! That chocolate is basically dripping off the screen, and I for one cannot get enough of it – ever. Great post!

  5. Oh my gosh! Wow, these look sooo good! I must make them soon. I absolutely loved your other flourless cookies. And thanks for the tip on chilling them for a while. I definitely want a chewy cookie. And yes things can definitely be too intense or dark, especially when it comes to chocolate. I have such a huge sweet tooth I have never tasted anything that was “too” rich or “too” sweet. But too intense and too bitter/dark definitely!

  6. I definitely wish I could pull these babies right out of my computer screen and devour them … yum!!

  7. Averie! You always make me hungry :) I book marked this recipe! I am always sending cookies to my brother in law and I know he would LOVE these! Hope you’re doing well

  8. Chocolate, peanut butter, and ooey-gooey? Count me in! I love my cookies a bit underbaked and chewy. Also, pretty sure I saw your mixing bowls at Urban Outfitters yesterday! I exclaimed this fact to the boyfriend, as if he cared.

    Never too much chocolate! If you like dark chocolate, try Trader Joe’s Dark Chocolate Lover’s Chocolate Bar. I am addicted! It’s smooth and delicious but still has that slightly bitter dark chocolate taste.

  9. Averie these look so good! And thanks for the tip about how chilling the dough gives you puffier cookies and warm dough gives you flatter/crispier cookies. I never knew why some recipes ask you to chill the dough first.

    My favorite cookie — the PB blossom cookies with the kiss in the middle. I could eat those by the truckload.

  10. I think these will be the next thing I will bake.
    I love macadamia nut cookies with white chocolate and I also prefer them only half baked.
    And no, I can never get too chocolaty or sweet. I totally agree with you on that one.
    Have a good start of the week.

  11. I have to go with either chocolate chip or oatmeal raisin as my favorite cookie. My tastes lately are simple. As long as they are gooey though, i’ll eat them. And there can’t be nuts.

    LOVE the looks of these cookies!! And if I ad pb I’d make them right now. I have to go to the store later today….