Easy Peanut Butter Cookies Recipe
This classic recipe for peanut butter cookies comes straight from my mom’s recipe box, and they are the BEST peanut butter cookies. They are easy to make and stay wonderfully soft. This staple recipe deserves a place in everyone’s kitchen!

When you think about what would be on the all-star team of cookies, I think it breaks down pretty simply to the following:
- Chocolate chip cookies
- Peanut butter cookies
- Sugar cookies
- Oatmeal raisin cookies
Sure, there are tons of other amazing cookies out there (hello shortbread, thumbprint, snickerdoodles, snowballs, and macaroons, to name a few), but these four are the essentials (and then of course there’s the trifecta of peanut butter-oatmeal chocolate chip cookies). They’re the cookies that always show up on cookie trays, the ones that everyone’s family has multiple recipes for, are easy to whip up, and evoke the most nostalgic cookie memories.
Of these, I’ve always had the softest spot for peanut butter cookies. There’s just something about those crisscross-laced cookies loaded with peanut butter and rolled in crunchy sugar that makes me remember sitting in my mom’s old kitchen and licking the beaters, helping her roll those balls of dough and pressing the tines of a fork on top.
I might be biased, but I think these are the BEST peanut butter cookies!

This is the recipe my mom made with me and my sister when we were little and it was the first recipe I begged her for after I left home. I would venture to guess that it came from the back of a jar of peanut butter back in the day, but she doesn’t have a source listed anywhere.
It’s a simple list of ingredients – flour, baking soda, salt, peanut butter (of course!) brown sugar, shortening, milk, and vanilla. It takes all of five minutes to mix them together, then you roll the dough into tablespoon-size balls of dough, roll them in granular sugar, then press the tines of a fork in a crisscross pattern on top.
They are incredibly easy to make and belong on every single Christmas cookie tray, wedding cookie table, and after school snack plate from now until the end of time.
Why the criss-cross pattern on top?
Good question! That crosshatch is a defining trait of nearly all peanut butter cookies.
Peanut butter cookie dough is a bit dense, so pressing down on them helps to flatten them a bit so they bake more evenly. And, bonus! Since this is a traditional characteristic of peanut butter cookies, you’ll always be able to spot them on a cookie tray without having to ask what kind of cookie it is.
Making this pretty pattern is incredibly easy – dip the tines of a fork in sugar, gently press it into the top of the cookie, then repeat, this time making the impression perpendicular to the first. You did it!

The best kind of peanut butter to use
I always, always recommend only baking with creamy, processed peanut butter, such as Jif, Skippy, or Peter Pan. Natural-style peanut butter with oil separation is simply too greasy for nearly all baking recipes; using it can result in cookies that spread too much and that can become crumbly.
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If you’d like to use a nut butter alternative, see the recipe notes below on some recommendations.
Tips for measuring peanut butter
Peanut butter can be sticky and hard to get into and then back out of a measuring cup when baking. I have a few suggestions for making it easier!
- Weigh your ingredients – You know I’m a big advocate of this and have an entire post dedicated to why you should weigh ingredients when baking; all you need to do is scoop it out of the jar and plop it in your bowl – no messing around with measuring cups!
- Use an adjustable measuring cup – An adjustable measuring cup allows you to set the amount to measure, fill it up, and dispense it into the bowl. This is a great tool for sticky ingredients like peanut butter, honey, molasses, etc.
- Grease your measuring cups – Last but not least, you can coat your measuring cup with non-stick cooking spray to help it slide right out after it’s been measured.

Recipe Tips & Notes
- Preparing your pans – Whether you use cookie sheets or rimmed baking sheets, be sure that your sheets are ungreased or lined with parchment to keep the cookies from spreading and absorbing too much grease.
- Can you use butter instead of shortening? In a word, no. Shortening keeps the cookies from spreading too much, keeps them from being crumbly, and ensures that they are nice and soft. Replacing it with butter would significantly alter the texture of the cookies and I beg you not to do it. They do now make butter-flavored shortening that I’ve used from time to time if you’re worried about the flavor.
- Peanut Butter – It is important to use traditional, processed peanut butter (i.e. Jif, Skippy, Peter Pan, etc.) in this recipe. Using natural peanut butter that has oil separation will be much too greasy and cause the cookies to spread and become crumbly, so I do not recommend using natural peanut butter.
- Nut Butter Alternatives – You can use other nut butters such as almond butter, cashew butter, etc. as long as they do not have oil separation (see the note above). A great almond butter substitute that works exceptionally well in all baked goods I’ve tried it with is Barney Butter.
- Avoid crumbly cookies – The three most common reasons peanut butter cookies end up crumbly are (1) too much flour; (2) using the wrong kind of peanut butter, and (3) they are overbaked. Be sure to either weigh your flour or spoon it into your measuring cup before leveling (the scoop method often results in too much flour), use the correct type of peanut butter (see above), and take the cookies out when the centers still look soft and underdone. They will set as they cool.
- Fun Extras – You can jazz these cookies up a bit if you’d like! Try rolling in colored sugars for a festive look or add some mix-ins – try a ½ cup of chopped peanuts, mini chocolate chips, peanut butter chips, butterscotch chips, or any other mix-in you like to pair with peanut butter!
- Make-Ahead – You can prepare the cookie dough and refrigerate for up to 3 days before baking. When ready, let it sit on the counter for about 30 minutes before scooping and proceeding with baking.
- Storage – These cookies will keep in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week.
- Freezing Instructions – These cookies freeze exceptionally well! You can freeze the balls of dough in a ziptop plastic bag for up to 3 months. Remove from the freezer, let sit at room temperature for 30 minutes, then roll in sugar and make the crisscross pattern on top, then bake as directed, adding an extra minute. You can also freeze the baked cookies by wrapping them individually in plastic wrap, then place them in a ziptop bag and freeze for up to 3 months.

Variations on classic peanut butter cookies
While regular ol’ peanut butter cookies are fantastic on their own, these variations deserve a spot in your recipe box, too:
- Monster Cookies – Peanut butter cookie dough PLUS oats, chocolate chips, M&Ms, and Reese’s Pieces!
- Peanut Butter Blossoms – A holiday classic! Place the sugared balls of dough on a cookie sheet and press a Hershey’s kiss into the center when they come out of the oven.
- Peanut Butter Cup Cookies – Take that ball of dough, pop into a mini muffin pan, then press a mini peanut butter cup into the centers when they come out of the oven.
- Salted Peanut Butter Cup Chocolate Chip Cookies – A riff on my favorite chocolate chip cookies, these have a peanut butter dough base, are super thick and soft, and loaded with peanut butter chips, milk chocolate chips, and chopped peanut butter cups.

Watch How to Make Peanut Butter Cookies:
If you make this recipe and love it, I would so appreciate it if you would take a moment to leave a rating below. Thank you so much! ❤️️

Easy Peanut Butter Cookies
Ingredients
- 1¾ cups (218.75 g) all-purpose flour
- ¾ teaspoon (0.75 teaspoon) salt
- ¾ teaspoon (0.75 teaspoon) baking soda
- ¾ cup (193.5 g) creamy peanut butter
- ½ cup (102.5 g) vegetable shortening
- 1¼ cups (275 g) packed light brown sugar
- 3 tablespoons milk
- 1 tablespoon vanilla
- 1 egg
- Granulated sugar, for rolling cookies
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Line baking sheets with parchment or a silicone baking mat.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the flour, salt and baking soda.
- In a mixing bowl, combine the peanut butter, shortening, brown sugar, milk and vanilla. Beat at medium speed until well blended, about 2 to 3 minutes. Add the egg and beat just until blended. Reduce speed to low and add the dry ingredients to the creamed mixture gradually, mixing just until combined.
- Put the granulated sugar in a small bowl. Scoop a tablespoonful of dough and roll into a ball between the palms of your hands. Roll the dough into the sugar and place on the baking sheet, about 2 inches apart. Dip the tines of a fork into the sugar and make a crisscross pattern on the cookies, flattening them slightly.
- Bake for 7 to 8 minutes or until set and just beginning to brown. Cool 2 minutes on baking sheet before removing to a wire rack to cool completely. The cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week or frozen for up to 3 months.
Notes
- Preparing your pans – Whether you use cookie sheets or rimmed baking sheets, be sure that your sheets are ungreased or lined with parchment to keep the cookies from spreading and absorbing too much grease.
- Can you use butter instead of shortening? In a word, no. Shortening keeps the cookies from spreading too much, keeps them from being crumbly, and ensures that they are nice and soft. Replacing it with butter would significantly alter the texture of the cookies and I beg you not to do it. They do now make butter-flavored shortening that I’ve used from time to time if you’re worried about the flavor.
- Peanut Butter – It is important to use traditional, processed peanut butter (i.e. Jif, Skippy, Peter Pan, etc.) in this recipe. Using natural peanut butter that has oil separation will be much too greasy and cause the cookies to spread and become crumbly, so I do not recommend using natural peanut butter.
- Nut Butter Alternatives – You can use other nut butters such as almond butter, cashew butter, etc. as long as they do not have oil separation (see the note above). A great almond butter substitute that works exceptionally well in all baked goods I’ve tried it with is Barney Butter.
- Avoid crumbly cookies – The three most common reasons peanut butter cookies end up crumbly are (1) too much flour; (2) using the wrong kind of peanut butter, and (3) they are overbaked. Be sure to either weigh your flour or spoon it into your measuring cup before leveling (the scoop method often results in too much flour), use the correct type of peanut butter (see above), and take the cookies out when the centers still look soft and underdone. They will set as they cool.
- Fun Extras – You can jazz these cookies up a bit if you’d like! Try rolling in colored sugars for a festive look or add some mix-ins – try a ½ cup of chopped peanuts, mini chocolate chips, peanut butter chips, butterscotch chips, or any other mix-in you like to pair with peanut butter!
- Make-Ahead – You can prepare the cookie dough and refrigerate for up to 3 days before baking. When ready, let it sit on the counter for about 30 minutes before scooping and proceeding with baking.
- Storage – These cookies will keep in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week.
- Freezing Instructions – These cookies freeze exceptionally well! You can freeze the balls of dough in a ziptop plastic bag for up to 3 months. Remove from the freezer, let sit at room temperature for 30 minutes, then roll in sugar and make the crisscross pattern on top, then bake as directed, adding an extra minute. You can also freeze the baked cookies by wrapping them individually in plastic wrap, then place them in a ziptop bag and freeze for up to 3 months.
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!
[photos by Whitney Wright]




These cookies are awsome! I bake cookies every year to give out to our good customers at Christmas time. I already tried the Better-than-Brownie cookies and they were a hit with my kids and husband. For these peanut butter cookies I tried them with chopped dry roasted peanuts mixed into the dough. I then dipped the balls in chopped dry roated peanut and then rolled in large crystal sugar ( I used Demerara sugar). Thanks for the great recipes. I enjoy your website.
Oooh love your additions to this recipe, need to try those adaptations this year!
This is the exact recipe that I got from the package of Butter Flavor Crisco sticks. It’s a good one.
Peanut butter yummy…I just pulled a batch of these from the oven and they’re just perfect. I have another peanut butter cookie recipe and those cookies turned out so dry and crumbly, almost like a peanut butter shortbread but these cookies are so soft and chewy! I’m home alone so I’m gonna have to seriously control myself tonight…but these cookies are just so darn good!
Hi Michelle! I was looking back at some of your cookie recipes, and I recognized this instantly! I am 98% certain that your mom wrote down the recipe from the jar of JIF peanut butter! The big size that you buy in the wrapped 2-pack – yep I eat that much peanut butter! This is probably the first cookie recipe I took the initiative and cooked completely on my own – and I still love it! I have definitely added Reece’s pieces to the mix before too!
My mom has a recipe that calls for mapeline instead of vanilla. I want to dig it out and try it! It’s pretty irresistable. I absolutely love your snickerdoodles! I rolled some in cinnamon sugar and some in sprinkles. My kids LOVED them! So glad I found you!
I am so excited that I found this recipe. My Mother-In-Law (who has passed away) gave me this recipe about 30 some years ago. When I just went to use it the ink had run on the paper and some things were missing. I looked at every PB cookie on all sites and none of them were the exact ingredients. I finally saw this site and could not believe every ingredient and every step was the same as her recipe. This is a wonderful PB recipe. I am so glad I kept looking till I found it. I was just about ready to give up. Thank you!!
I made this over the weekend and they were amazing! Shortening can’t scare me away! :)
These were perfect. I used Butter-Flavored Crisco. The perfect texture, so good.
Hiamyj – So glad you enjoyed these, thanks for letting me know! :)
I just made these cookies, super easy and YUM!
As you say, it looks irresistible and I’m not sure I would resist too long before making this recipe!
Man these look fabulous and shortening is in my favorite ginger cookie recipe, it just does the trick sometimes.
Alice, how funny about your mom growing up on a farm and using shortening! But I agree with you – for some recipes, there’s just no replacing. I tend to draw the line when the recipe calls for the shortening to be melted. Melted shortening?! Blech! The original recipe for the pizzelle I just posted called for melted shortening, so I used butter.
You are too funny!
I’ve been looking for a good peanut butter cookie for years, I’ll give these a try. I know what you mean about the shortening, I’ve made a few older family recipes for my blog that call for shortening,it’s embarassing, but there’s just no replacing it.
i just got a hold of my grandma’s old recipe book, probably from the 40s and 50s, full of shortening…so funny, I was thinking great, my grandma’s old recipe book, everybody seems to have old family recipes on their blogs, now I have some to share, open my book and it’s full of shortening… I can’t use any of it! ha ha! I asked my mom if there was a butter shortage when she was a kid…I thought she grew up on a farm???
These look delicious – great job! (I’ve missed commenting on your blog for a bit so it’s so good to have some time and catch up with all your cooking/baking! :) )
They look perfecto! Got us craving pb cookies now.
Michelle – So glad that you enjoyed these!
Cookin’ Canuck – I love peanut butter cookies rolled in sugar. Some recipes don’t call for it (this original didn’t) but I always do it!
I love that you added the step of rolling the cookies in the sugar before baking. They look so beautiful & I’ll bet the sugar adds a great crunch.
Update…..I just made these (I told you I would), and they are fabulous!
I love peanut butter and I love cookies so I would love these. Toss in some M&M’s or Reese’s Pieces and I am set!
Heidi – I agree with Crisco in moderation. I don’t put it in everything, so some recipes here and there I am okay with, especially when I notice a big difference in texture if I don’t use it. And glad to hear Cook’s Illustrated gave the trans fat version a thumbs up!
I was just thinking PB cookies would be a great thing for my kids and I to bake together because there is nary a chocolate chip in my cupboard, but I always have peanutbutter. BTW, Crisco in moderation doesn’t scare me, but I just read that Crisco has a new ‘0 trans fat’ version and Cook’s Illustrated gives it the ‘thumbs up’.
Michelle – Perfect timing! I hope you enjoy them!
I was just craving peanut butter cookies last night, I think I will make these today!
Delicious!!! I suggest chopped peanuts instead of half of the peanut butter
Liz – You’re right, Crisco is shortening.
I TOTALLY get random cravings. I’ll print recipes that sound good and then it takes forever to actually make… but then I’ll see a recipe on a blog and be like “I NEED to make this TONIGHT” haha so good!
Wow I meant Crisco. I really know nothing about shortening. Obviously.
yes Crisco is vegetable shortening
So is shortening like, Crico? I’ve never used it…
Oooh yes, I too get random cravings, haha :-D Peanut Butter cookies are another nostalgic favorite of mine (like the pizzelles)!!
I have cravings for PB all the time, that’s when I run to the jar with a spoon! Shortening makes me shudder, but my pb cookies do get kind of crumbly. I might try subbing some in next time. Even though they got rid of the transfats, Crisco still tastes like plastic. I hope the Pens win tmr!!
I substitute Organic Coconut oil in a jar for all recipes calling for shortning . It is much healthier and you don’t taste it in the peanut butter cookie recipe! I do chill my cookues briefly before baking. They turn out great.