Classic Peanut Butter Cookies Made with Natural Peanut Butter

Learn how to make classic peanut butter cookies using natural peanut butter with this easy, reliable recipe. These cookies are slightly thicker and spread less thanks to an adjusted flour amount, and they get the familiar criss-cross fork pattern that defines peanut butter cookies.

A plate of classic peanut butter cookies.

This recipe comes from a family recipe box and is a classic version of the peanut butter cookie many of us grew up with. It uses both butter and natural peanut butter, plus eggs, flour, sugar, and baking soda to produce a familiar, chewy cookie with a clean peanut flavor.

Ingredients

Ingredients to make peanut butter cookies with all natural peanut butter measured out.
  • Butter – Unsalted butter is recommended; if you use salted butter, reduce the added salt.
  • Peanut butter – Use all-natural, unsweetened smooth peanut butter (the kind that separates and needs stirring). Regular sweetened peanut butter will make the cookies sweeter.
  • Sugar – A mix of granulated and light brown sugar gives the best texture, though you can use all granulated or all brown sugar if preferred.
  • Eggs – Recipe tested with large eggs; different sizes may change the result.
  • Leavening – Baking soda (not baking powder) provides the gentle rise and texture.
  • Salt – Fine kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal) is suggested; if using table salt, use half the measured amount.
  • Flour – All-purpose flour (bleached or unbleached). The amount of flour affects spread and chewiness; see notes below for options.

See the recipe card for exact ingredient weights and measurements used in testing.

Substitutions and Variations

  • Peanut-free: Replace peanut butter with almond butter or sunflower seed butter. Note: sunflower seed butter can react with baking soda and may darken or turn slightly green, but the flavor is fine.
  • Chocolate: Stir in up to 175 g (1 cup) chocolate chips or chopped chocolate. Dark/semisweet works well; white chocolate is a sweet alternative.
  • Shortening: Using shortening instead of butter yields thicker cookies that spread less. If using shortening, reduce the flour to about 125 g (1 cup) so the cookies still spread adequately.

Testing Notes

Flour amount strongly influences spread and texture. In testing I compared a lower-flour version (125 g / 1 cup) with a higher-flour version (188 g / 1½ cups):

Comparing two peanut butter cookies, one made with more flour to create a thicker, chewier cookie, and one made with less flour to create a thinner, softer cookie.
  • Less flour (125 g): Cookies spread more and bake thinner and softer, with a bit of chew.
  • More flour (188 g): Cookies spread less and bake thicker, firmer, and chewier.

I also tested whether pressing the dough with a fork is necessary. Pressing creates the classic criss-cross look and encourages modest spreading. If you skip this step, the cookies bake taller and rounder and retain the scoop shape.

Comparing a peanut butter cookie pressed with a fork (or not) to create that criss-cross pattern. The pressed cookie bakes thinner and more spread out than the unpressed cookies.

How to Make Classic Peanut Butter Cookies

This is a beginner-friendly recipe that mixes easily by hand or with a mixer. You can use a wooden spoon, spatula, hand mixer, or stand mixer.

Creaming butter, peanut butter, and sugars together before adding egg and vanilla to mixer bowl to make peanut butter cookies.

Step 1: Cream butter, peanut butter, and sugars until smooth and fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and beat until well combined.

Whisking dry ingredients separately before adding to the mixer bowl to make peanut butter cookie dough.

Step 2: Whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt in a separate bowl. Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture and stir until a thick dough forms.

Scooping peanut butter cookie dough onto a parchment paper-lined sheet pan and pressing each scoop with a fork to create a criss-cross pattern.

Step 3: Scoop dough with a small cookie scoop (about 30–35 g). Space scoops evenly on a parchment-lined half sheet pan (about eight per pan). Flatten each mound with a fork to create a criss-cross pattern. Rolling the dough in granulated sugar first can help prevent sticking and encourage surface cracking.

Peanut butter cookies with criss-cross fork pattern before and after baking on a parchment paper-lined sheet pan.

Step 4: Bake the cookies until the edges are set and the surface appears dry. For a chewy texture bake about 10–12 minutes at 350°F (175°C); for crisper cookies bake 13–15 minutes. Let cool on the pan a few minutes before transferring to a rack to cool completely.

A sheet pan of homemade peanut butter cookies.

Baking with Natural Peanut Butter

Natural peanut butter is simply ground peanuts and tends to separate, with oil rising to the top. To use it in baking, you must remix the jar so oil and solids are evenly combined. You can stir vigorously by hand with a spoon or use an electric hand mixer (one whisk attachment is helpful). If using a mixer, consider transferring the peanut butter to a bowl first to avoid oil splatter and to make mixing easier.

Mixing a jar of natural peanut butter with an electric hand mixer with only one beater.

Peanut Butter Cookie Tips

The criss-cross pattern is both traditional and practical: pressing the dough helps the cookies spread and prevents them from staying too tall and round. If fork tines stick, lightly dust the back of the fork with flour and brush off excess before pressing.

Pressing scoops of peanut butter cookie dough with a fork before baking.

Adjust baking time to control texture. Around 10–12 minutes at 350°F yields a soft, chewy cookie. Baking longer yields a crisper cookie.

Peanut Butter Cookie FAQs

How long can I store them?

Store fully cooled cookies in an airtight container for up to one week.

Can I freeze peanut butter cookies?

Yes. For freezing dough: portion and press the dough on a parchment-lined sheet pan, freeze until firm, then transfer to a freezer bag and bake from frozen (add about 1 minute to bake time). For baked cookies: cool completely, then freeze in a sealed bag for up to three months.

Other Easy Drop Cookie Recipes to Try

This recipe is a variation on a thick, chewy cookie base that works well for many adaptations. Once you have the base, try versions such as oatmeal cookies with chocolate and peanuts, blueberry cookies with white chocolate, or chocolate chip cookies with pecans. For even thicker peanut butter cookies, try a bakery-style chewy version with white chocolate and nuts. For a flourless option, try three-ingredient peanut butter cookies made with peanut butter, sugar, and egg.

A plate of peanut butter cookies ready to be eaten.

If you tried this recipe for classic peanut butter cookies made with natural peanut butter, please leave a star rating and share how it went in the comments. I love hearing from readers!

📖 Recipe

A plate of peanut butter cookies.

Classic Peanut Butter Cookies

A recipe for thick, chewy peanut butter cookies made with natural peanut butter.
Prep Time 15 mins
Cook Time 10 mins
Total Time 25 mins
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Servings 24
Calories 129 kcal

Equipment

  • Stand mixer or hand mixer (optional)
  • Whisk
  • Small cookie scoop (≈ ¾ oz / 30–35 g)
  • Parchment-lined sheet pan

Ingredients

  • 115 g unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 125 g natural unsweetened smooth peanut butter
  • 100 g granulated sugar
  • 100 g light brown sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 2.5 mL pure vanilla extract
  • 2.5 mL baking soda
  • 2.5 mL fine kosher salt (or half that amount if using table salt)
  • 188 g all-purpose flour (use 125 g for a thinner, softer cookie; use 188 g for thicker, chewier cookies)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C).
  2. In a mixer fitted with the paddle attachment (or using a hand mixer or by hand), cream the butter, peanut butter, and both sugars until smooth, starting on low and increasing to medium. Scrape the bowl as needed.
  3. Add the egg and beat until incorporated, then add the vanilla and scrape the bowl again.
  4. In a separate bowl, whisk together baking soda, salt, and the chosen amount of flour. Add the dry ingredients to the wet and mix until just combined.
  5. Scoop dough onto parchment-lined baking sheets (about 30–35 g per scoop). Flatten with a lightly floured fork to make a criss-cross pattern. Optionally roll in granulated sugar first to reduce sticking.
  6. Bake 10–12 minutes for chewy cookies or 13–15 minutes for crisper cookies. Edges should be set and the surface dry. Cool on the pan a few minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

Notes

  • Use fine kosher salt for the recipe measurements; reduce salt if using table salt.
  • Natural peanut butter separates; stir or mix thoroughly before measuring. Mixing in a bowl with a hand mixer can be easier and cleaner than mixing in the jar.
  • If fork tines stick to the dough, lightly dust the fork with flour and brush off excess before pressing.
  • If you bake on darker pans, reduce oven temperature to 325°F (165°C) to avoid over-browning.
  • For peanut-free cookies use almond or sunflower seed butter. For a flourless option see three-ingredient peanut butter cookie variations.

Nutrition

Calories: 129 kcal | Carbohydrates: 15 g | Protein: 2 g | Fat: 7 g

Nutrition is an estimate and should be used as a guideline only.