Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffles

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I don’t make truffles very often because they are a bit of a pain.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffles

The rolling of the little dough balls.

Then dipping all those balls, one-by-one, into melted chocolate that tends to get cold too fast and it has to be reheated umpteen times mid-dippage.

Jar of chocolate chips

Then after each truffle has been dipped, garnishing them with chopped bits of pretzels, peanuts, a peanut butter or caramel drizzle, is tons of crumbly fun.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffle on paper

Lots of steps and stages with balls in and out of the freezer and bowls of chocolate in and out of the microwave.

But these puppies are worth it.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffle cut in half

I purposely kept this recipe small because:

1. no one “needs” more than a dozen of these laying around

and

2. no one should go to the work of making more than a dozen at a time.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffles

Not that they’re that much work; please, I do want you to make them.

But balls are not like pans of bars, which is why I tend to make bars more than any other type of dessert.

Special K Bars are more wham bam slap it in one pan thank you ma’am are usually more my speed.  And interest level.

Stack of Special K Bars

Balls, always a bit more of a challenge.  Such a loaded statement but let’s address that as long as we’re talking balls in this post.

Nuts and nut jokes?  Addressed in this post with Rosemary Chipotle Almonds

Bowl of Rosemary Chipotle Almonds

Ball jokes.  Frosty, chilly balls.

Covered at the bottom of this post.

Frozen Dough Balls

These are truffles, not balls.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffle

Or just call them sweet and salty, chewy and crunchy, all encased within a chocolate shell.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffle cut in half

The best of all ball worlds.

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Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Chocolate Truffles (with vegan and gluten free options)

Makes 1 dozen (I made 13 from this recipe)

1/4 cup peanut butter

1 tablespoon caramel sauce (try Dark Rum Caramel Sauce or any store-bought jarred caramel sauce or ice cream topping caramel sauce; substitute maple syrup)

2 tablespoons powdered sugar

1 tablespoon brown sugar

1/4 cup pretzels, crushed

1/4 cup peanuts, crushed

Pinch salt, optional to taste

3/4 cup + chocolate chips, melted for dipping

2 tablespoons pretzels and peanut mixture, crushed for garnishing optional

Peanut butter and/or caramel sauce drizzled over the top for garnishing, optional

Combine peanut butter, caramel sauce, and sugars in a small bowl and stir until combined.  Add the crushed pretzels and peanuts (I crush mine in a plastic baggie by beating them with the back of a knife until broken down but use a food processor or other blending device if desired).  Add the dry mixture to the wet mixture and fold to combine.

Roll the dough into small balls, no larger than 1/2 inch in diameter, and place them on a parchment-lined or wax-paper lined flat surface.  Tip: Do not roll the balls larger than 1/2 inch in diameter because they become much larger after you coated in chocolate, appearing to nearly double in size.  This is a truffle (one bite), not an apricot.  Roll smaller than you think and if the dough is difficult to work with, chilling it in the freezer for 15 minutes may be helpful.

Place the rolled cookie dough balls in the freezer for at least a half hour; the colder the better for the next step: dipping.

My process for dipping and coating the balls in chocolate involves melting chocolate chips in a small microwave-safe bowl, heating the chocolate in 20-30 second bursts, removing from the microwave and stirring after each 20-30 second interval to encourage melting.   You could do this over a double boiler if desired.

After the chocolate has melted, removed the chilled cookie dough balls from the freezer and place one ball into the bowl and toss it lightly with two forks in the chocolate bath.  Carefully remove the coated ball and set it down on wax or parchment paper.   If desired, sprinkle with crushed pretzels before the chocolate fully hardens.  Repeat this process with the next 11 balls.

You may need to reheat your chocolate mixture after a few balls, as it will cool down and become more difficult to work with.  Reheat in the microwave in 20 to 30 second bursts as needed.  After all the balls have been dipped, you can optionally add a drizzle of peanut butter or caramel sauce over the top.  Place the finished truffles in the freezer to fully set up for at least 30 minutes before serving.

Store extras in the refrigerator or freezer.

Notes and Tips:

If dough is too wet before rolling into balls, add slightly more dry ingredients (pretzel or peanuts).  Or, chilling the dough in the refrigerator or freezer helps, also.

If dough is too dry, add slightly more wet ingredients (peanut butter or caramel sauce).

I urge you to roll the balls small, no bigger than 1/2  inch in diameter.  They will get much bigger after you coat them in chocolate, appearing to nearly double in size once coated.

To keep vegan, use vegan caramel sauce or maple syrup and vegan pretzels or similar.

To keep gluten free, use GF pretzels or similar.

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 These are the perfect mixture of salty and sweet.

The sweetness from the chocolate and caramel is offset by the saltiness from the pretzels, peanuts, and the peanut butter.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffles

The peanut butter cookie dough with or without the crunchy bits in it, with or without being dipped in chocolate, is great on its own.

Peanut butter mixed with sugar and caramel could never be bad though, really, let’s be truthful.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffle cut in half

Texturally there is a lot going on with these little balls, too.

The crunchy bits inside the smooth peanut butter cookie dough and the crunchy chocolate coating are fun to munch.  And crunch.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffle

Conversely, if a dessert doesn’t have texture, I am not as into it.  Then again, I tend to like things crunchy enough to break a tooth on.

If you’re into salty and sweet (chocolate) desserts, White Chocolate Peanut, Pretzel, & Chocolate Chip Fudge (no-bake, no candy thermometer required) is easy and delivers the salty and sweet, smooth and crunchy vibe.

White Chocolate Peanut Pretzel Fudge

If you like just a wee bit of crunch with your chocolate balls, the Oreo cookies inside the Chocolate-Covered Oreo Balls (no-bake, and Oreos are vegan) give just a touch of crunch while the cream cheese “batter” is smooth and melts in your mouth.

Chocolate-Covered Oreo Balls

And if you’re more of an entirely smooth truffle person, I think the Vanilla Cake Batter Chocolate Truffles (no-bake) may be of interest.

Vanilla Cake Batter Chocolate Truffles in a bowl

For now, I’m happily munching on these.

Pretzel Peanut Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Truffles

Do you like making balls, bites, cookie doughs, or truffles?

Do you have any favorites?

I have an entire post devoted to balls, bites, cookie doughs and truffles with at least 30+ recipes linked, and yes, I do like making them.

It’s just dipping balls or truffles into a chocolate bath that is a bit tedious which is why I usually make “cookie doughs” rather than “truffles” but hey, New Year, new kitchen project.  I was up for it.

And the promise of a dessert coated in chocolate is always worth it.

Happy New Year!

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. Girl! I love looking at all the yummy things you make. I love making “balls” and learned it from you. Ok…I actually like eating them more than I like making them…but you know. ;-)

  2. I don’t know if this will help, but I always melt chocolate (that I am using for dipping) in a mini crockpot. It takes a little longer to melt, but then it stays nice and smooth without getting burned for as long as I need it.

    P.s. I love your website! :-D

    1. You know I’ve seen ladies on baking blogs do that but I just figured I have this HUGE crockpot and needed about 1/4 c of chocolate and I’d have so much waste and that would be more of a “production” than it was worth but if I had a mini-crockpot, I’d be in business. Thanks for the tip and for reading!

  3. Oh sweet mother of all things chocolate (and peanut butter and caramel and pretzel), these sound so freaking amazing. I must get my buttookus into the kitchen right away and make a batch of these little babies. You continue to wow me with all your awesome concoctions and baked goods. Thanks for such a great recipe! I don’t have any caramel sauce so I’ll have to substitute with the maple syrup but I’m sure they’ll still be totally tasty. Any thoughts on what else I could use?

    1. Yeah just use maple syrup. Really any combo of peanut butter and sugar until you get dough consistency, throw in the dry goods, roll out into balls, dip. Enjoy!

  4. You are a genius. I am nominating you for an edible Nobel Prize.

    That doesn’t exist? Well we should create it just for you. ;)

  5. I love that salt/ sweet combo, your truffles look amazing! I just finished dipping dehydrated pineapple slices in dark chocolate and added some coarse salt spinkled on them, yum! Takes care of two cravings at once. Happy New Year!

  6. happy new year averie! those truffles look amazing! i’ve never made trufles before, so thank you for the detailed instructions and tips! Also, what i love most about your posts is that you link back to other wonderful recipes in your recipe collection. those sepcial k bars look fantasic!!

    1. I’m glad you like my linkbacks. Some people don’t but I love it when I go to other blogs as a reminder of things or seeing things I missed the first time around, so thanks for telling me that :)

  7. I immediately had to pin these. They look delicious! I’m totally not a patient one when it comes to cooking in general, so I’m definitely not going to make more than a few of these when I’m feeling better. But bruises or no, I might just have to prop my foot up and make something sweet.

  8. Oh my word..these look amazing!! I love peanut butter cookie dough and the fact that you make them into a truffle is awesome! I like that you added the pretzel for the salty crunch :) haha ball jokes are fun ;)

  9. I may have asked you this before….but can I come live with you? Even for 4 days….I’ll just eat everything good, hug you and then leave! Ohhhhh drink coffee with you too ;)

    xxoo

      1. the rpecie is right . usually the sweetness of th ganache will overpower the cocoa powder. i love these especially when I add liqueur :)

  10. Truffles ARE a bit of a pain to make, I hear you there, but they’re soooo good that they’re definitely worth it from time to time, can’t wait to try these ones – I haven’t made truffles with peanut butter yet (I know, I know! Shock horror! lol)

  11. Hi Averie! Happy New year!! I feel so well rested after a 2 week hiatus from the school routine and so excited to start the new year!

    These truffles look amazing. All you need to do is package them up and sell them at your local specialty store.

    1. I was just thinking about you yesterday…glad you guys had a nice holiday! and thanks for your high praise with selling them :)

  12. I actually don’t think I have ever made balls or truffles before, but I would like to! They look really good and I am sure they would freeze well, and be perfect for a last minute dessert if needed.

  13. Yum! I’m a sucker for anything pretzel-chocolate, I’m sure I would love these. And I agree with you on truffles – they should be made in small batches so as to not end up HATING your kitchen/end product. :)

    1. Yes b/c by ball 5 you’re thinking what was I thinking and by ball 11 if the finish line wasn’t in sight, I’d be killing myself. Well ya know. One of the things I learned when making balls of ANY kind is…SMALL batches so you dont hate the end product/experience!