No Bake Peanut Butter Balls Recipe
User Reviews
5
No Bake Peanut Butter Balls Recipe
Description
This recipe combines classic smooth peanut butter with softened butter, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt, whipped until smooth before powdering in enough sugar to achieve a firm but pliable dough. The dough is portioned into consistent 1-inch balls and frozen until solid. Dipping the frozen balls into melted semi-sweet chocolate mixed with butter creates an even, glossy coating. The chocolate firms after chilling, providing contrast to the creamy peanut butter interior.
The texture is smooth and dense, with a buttery, lightly spiced peanut butter center that pairs well with the bittersweet chocolate layer. The recipe requires some patience to freeze the balls fully prior to coating to ensure clean dipping and a stable shape.
Using multiple smaller baking sheets for freezing allows managing more balls efficiently. Coating hands in powdered sugar helps prevent sticking when rolling. These peanut butter balls, or buckeyes, keep for up to 3 days at room temperature, 2 weeks refrigerated, or 3 months frozen.
Ingredients
- 2 cups peanut butter choose a classic variety, not “natural” peanut butter, creamy
- ½ cup butter + 1 tablespoon for chocolate, softened
- 2 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon optional
- 3 ½ - 4 cups powdered sugar
- 12 ounce semi sweet chocolate chips
Instructions
- In the bowl of an electric mixer, add the peanut butter, ½ cup softened butter, vanilla, salt, and cinnamon. Beat on high until the mixture is very smooth. Scrape the bowl with a rubber spatula. Then turn the mixer on low and slowly add in the powdered sugar. If the mixture seems too sticky to roll after adding 3 ½ cups, add another ½ cup of powdered sugar. Beat until smooth.
- Set out a large baking sheet lined with parchment paper or wax paper. Scoop the peanut butter ball batter with a spoon and roll into 1 inch balls. Try to make them all the same size. Place on the baking sheet.
- Place the baking sheet in the freezer for at least 1 hour, or until the balls are frozen hard.
- Once the balls are very cold and stiff, place the chocolate chips and remaining 1 tablespoon butter, in a microwave-safe bowl. Microwave in one-minute increments, stirring in between, until the chocolate is melted and smooth. (You can also melt the chocolate in a small sauce pan over low heat.)
- Take several of the balls out of the freezer at a time, leaving the rest to stay cold. Insert a toothpick into the top of a peanut butter ball, and dunk it in chocolate, leaving an open rim around the top so the peanut butter ball is exposed. Gently tap the buckeye on the edge of the bowl to remove excess chocolate, then place the ball back on the frozen baking sheet. Use the tip of your finger to tap down the toothpick hole. Repeat, repeat, repeat, making sure to leave the peanut butter balls in the freezer as long as possible. If they thaw, they are harder to dip. You may also need to rewarm the chocolate once or twice, so it stays thin enough to dip.
- Once all the buckeye candy is coated in chocolate, you can choose to keep them in the freeze, or let them thaw to room temperature, so they are soft. Either way, move them to an airtight container.
Notes
- Using 2-3 smaller pans to freeze balls helps manage space and speeds freezing.
- Coat hands with powdered sugar to prevent the dough from sticking while rolling.
- Store finished buckeyes up to 3 days at room temperature, 2 weeks in the fridge, or 3 months frozen for best quality.
Nutrition Information
Show DetailsNutrition Facts
Serving: 65Buckeyes
Amount Per Serving
Calories 144 kcal
% Daily Value*
| Serving | 1ball | |
| Calories | 144kcal | 7% |
| Carbohydrates | 18g | 6% |
| Protein | 2g | 4% |
| Fat | 7g | 11% |
| Saturated Fat | 3g | 15% |
| Cholesterol | 4mg | 1% |
| Sodium | 85mg | 4% |
| Potassium | 81mg | 2% |
| Fiber | 1g | 4% |
| Sugar | 16g | 32% |
| Vitamin A | 46IU | 1% |
| Calcium | 7mg | 1% |
| Iron | 1mg | 6% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.