Easy Oatmeal Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

“A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand.”–Barbara Johnson

Coaching cookies? 🏃‍♀️

During my first year of teaching at a large rural high school in Kentucky, I helped coach the women’s cross country and track teams. The young ladies were an enthusiastic group who wholeheartedly supported each other while managing to be individually competitive. 

 The head coach worked from a philosophy of three “hard-work” practices with active recovery workouts in between. Active recovery days meant running slower, but for longer distances and periods of time. Therefore, those girls burned calories. 

On the day of track meets, which could last upwards of four or more hours, depending upon how many teams were participating, the head coach and a few parents provided fruit, granola bars, little boxes of raisins, and packages of peanut butter crackers, alongside coolers of gatorade and water for the team. It wasn’t unusual for the young ladies to snack throughout the meet, especially once their main event was completed.  

I was young, single, and had extra time on my hands, so I started baking cookies for their meets. The first time I did this, I baked chocolate chip cookies and peanut butter cookies.

An Idea is Born 🤔

The ladies, in the way only teenagers do, started goofing off with the cookies. One of the girls gained her teammates’ attention and put a peanut butter cookie in one hand and a chocolate chip cookie in the other. Then, she dramatically took a bite off one cookie and a bite off the other, and she chewed the two “bites” together. 

“Mmmm,” she raved

Inspired by her friend, another teammate stacked three cookies together, like a sandwich, and bit into the stack. 

“Yummy,” she said with theatrical flair as crumbs sprayed out of her mouth.

A third young lady, giggling hysterically, managed to put a peanut butter cookie on her bottom lip/mouth area and somehow managed to get the chocolate chip cookie to momentarily stick to her top lip.  She tried to talk, and the two cookies, predictably, crumbled out of her mouth, raining onto the other girls and the metal bleachers. 

 She dramatically chewed the pieces of the cookies that remained in her mouth, sing-songing, “Soooo gooooood!” 

Snorts of laughter–and crumbs–erupted.

The girls, slap-happy from such a long-evening on a spring school night, continued eating and entertaining one another with the cookies and silly stories. One girl turned to me. 

“Hey, Ms. Musick, why don’t you make a peanut butter and chocolate chip cookie?” 

“But add oatmeal because it’s good for our cholesterol,” added another girl, arousing fits of raging laughter from her friends. 

The reference was to the head coach–also the head cross country coach–who had, in all seriousness, had a mild cardiac event before the start of school. Throughout that school year, he lost quite a bit of weight and lowered his cholesterol through diet and exercise. It was no secret among the girls that he ate some form of oatmeal and/or oat bran twice daily.

Introducing the Goop-N-Chip Cookie 🍪

Thus, a new cookie recipe was formed by the next track meet. If the cookies contained raisins, they were called “GORP-N-Chip” cookies, and if the cookies did not have raisins, the girls called them “GOOP-N-Chip,” mostly because it rhymed with poop, which made the girls hoot and holler. 

Since that long-ago era, I haven’t made this recipe, and my notes for how to make them slipped into pages of the past, never to be found. (It was based on an idea found on an oatmeal container back in the late 80s during the oatmeal/oat bran craze.) Therefore, this current version takes inspiration from my own butterfinger cookie recipe as well as recipes found on Southern eats and goodies and Sally’s baking addiction. Perhaps, you can share these cookies with your favorite home team, however you define it.

The REcipe ⬇️

GOOP-N-Chip

(Good Old-Fashioned Oatmeal Peanut butter cookies with Chocolate chips)

With gluten-free options 

Ingredients

1 ½ cup all purpose flour (I use gluten free)

1 teaspoon baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

½ cup butter, room temperature

½ cup shortening

1 cup creamy or crunchy (your preference) peanut butter

¾  cup granulated sugar

¾  cup brown sugar

2 large eggs, room temperature 

1 tablespoon vinegar

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

2 cups oats (I used gluten free, old-fashioned rolled oats)

2 cups total of chocolate, peanut butter, or other candy chips (I used a variety of different types of chocolate chips)

½ cup raisins or nuts, optional

Directions

An hour or two before baking, set out eggs and butter to come to room temperature

When ready to bake, preheat oven 350 degrees

Line baking sheet with parchment paper & set out cooling racks

In a large bowl, blend together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt, then set aside

In a large mixing bowl, cream together butter, shortening, and peanut butter until well blended

Beat in sugar for 2-3 minutes, scraping down sides of bowl as needed

Add in eggs–one at a time–vinegar, and vanilla until well blended, 1-3 more minutes

Stir in flour mixture until blended

Gradually add in oats and chocolate chips

Drop by rounded spoonfuls onto parchment paper, leaving at least one inch between.

Bake 8-12 minutes, less time if you prefer softer cookie, more time if you prefer crunchier cookie

Lift by parchment paper onto a cooling rack and allow to cool.

Store in an airtight container for up to one week or so. 

Tastes especially good with a short reheat in the microwave before eating, and also tastes good with a scoop of ice cream on top!

Butterfinger Cookies Recipe: A Royal Treat from the Sweet Potato Queens with gluten-free options

“Turns out chocolate is O-fficially good for you.  Some of us didn’t need years of expensive science to tell us that.”–Jill Conner Browne

Photo by John Ray Ebora on Pexels.com

Queenly Reading 📖

I remember when The Sweet Potato Queens’ Book of Love (and subsequent series) was all the rage in the late 90s/early 2000s. It seemed as if most of the women with whom I worked and interacted at that time period were reading, cooking, or buying products related to the book written by Jill Conner Browne. There were “queenly” gatherings in which each person who attended brought with them a prepared dish based upon one of Browne’s recipes.  Attending these get-togethers often included donning a tiara, sparkling clothes, perhaps a colorful boa, or some outrageous jewelry. Some even carried a scepter, usually a child’s version that made noise and lit up–after all, it wasn’t serious. 

Ultimately, those dinners were centered around laughing and enjoying life. Even though life grew busier as kids became older, careers shifted, and life pulled in different directions, those “royal times” made for good memories.  Not to mention, the book became a resource of tasty recipes, and my daughter’s dress-up box benefitted with all the fun accouterments from that time period. 

Photo by Arturo EG on Pexels.com

Basic Food Groups 🥧🍟🥓🧈

Many years later, I look back on those recipes and that time period with fondness.  I was young, and my metabolism was still revving compared to now.  Plus, I was ignorant of the fact I had celiac disease and acid reflux.  All those recipes tasted soooo good, but . . . no wonder I had such digestive upheaval afterwards! 

That’s because Browne believes all good recipes should be centered around four food groups: “sweet, salty, fried, and au gratin”! Her Mississippi roots shine through the foods she featured in her books, official website, and social media.  She unabashedly still proclaims her love of eating for any and all reasons. Her enthusiasm for southern food is contagious when you read the way in which she describes food and the various life scenarios that “require” comfort food.

Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels.com

Fandom 👸

To this day, Browne, and her Sweet Potato Queens, have legions of followers.  There is a play about the Sweet Potato Queens, and there is an annual SPQ’s weekend event each year around St. Patrick’s day. Plus, chapters of Sweet Potato Queens remain throughout the U.S., and there are several Facebook groups dedicated to the “queenly” cause. 

While I don’t, per se, follow Browne and her fans, I do appreciate her literary and culinary contributions, and I appreciate the way she doesn’t appear to take herself, or her love of food, too seriously. She uplifts women and makes food, and the gatherings/traditions around food, a social celebration.

Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels.com

Family Favorite 🍪

At one time, I had a handful of SPQ recipes I regularly prepared. Now, however, there remains one recipe I still make, and it is a family favorite, Butterfinger cookies.  As it turns out, original Butterfinger candy bars (not any of the other iterations) are gluten-free. However, back “in-the-day,” pre-celiac diagnosis, I would not have known, much less noticed.  All I knew is that Browne had me with a recipe whose main ingredient is peanut butter.  Toss in candy bars with chocolate and peanut butter? What could be tastier?

That said, these are not cookies I often make, saving them for special events. This is mostly because breaking and/or cutting up all of those candy bars and mixing them into the thick cookie dough takes time and a hefty dose of elbow grease.  However, all the effort is worth it in the end because this recipe bakes up over 60 cookies that are a balanced mixture of sweet, salty, and rich–perfect for sharing with others.

In fact, this is a recipe I make for my husband’s annual fishing trip to the north woods of Canada with his buddies.  In their younger years, he would share that the cookies were often all eaten before they arrived at their destination. I will note, however, when I bake these cookies for their fishing trip, I do not make them gluten-free.  However, if I am going to bake them for a family event, and I want to enjoy a few, I will then use an all-purpose, 1:1 gluten-free flour. 

Photo by Adrianna CA on Pexels.com

REcipe Adaptations 🧑‍🍳

While the original recipe does call for chunky peanut butter, I have always made it with creamy peanut butter, and the cookies turn out fine. The cookies are chewy and hold up to being dipped in milk, tea, or coffee.  They are also nice slightly heated in the microwave.

There are two other adaptations I have made to the original recipe.  First, Browne’s recipe calls for one stick of butter.  However, my grandmother taught me that when baking, you should use equal amounts of butter and shortening.  This gives your baking the rich, buttery flavor, but also gives recipes both lift and tenderness. Hence, you will notice my adaptation has ½ cup butter and ½ cup shortening. 

The other adaptation I made is to add a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar. This is a recipe trick I learned from gluten-free baking. The ACV not only acts as an additional leavening agent to the baking soda, but it also enhances the depth of the flavor of baked goods.

I hope you’ll give this recipe your best “royal” effort!  It is not only a tasty treat, but worthy of sharing with those in your monarchy and at all royal, or not-so-royal, events.  

Butterfinger Cookies

Ingredients:

1 ½ cup sugar

1 ⅓ cup dark brown sugar

½ stick of butter

½ cup shortening

4 eggs

1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar

3 teaspoons vanilla extract

2 ½ cups peanut butter, preferably chunky, but I’ve never used chunky and they taste great to me

2 cups flour, gluten free variation if needed, either an all purpose 1:1 flour or oat flour works best

1 teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon salt

20 or so ounces’ worth of butterfinger bars, crunched, crushed, or cut up

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees

Cream together sugars, butter, shortening, eggs, cider, and vanilla extract.

Blend in peanut butter

In a separate bowl, blend together flour, baking soda and salt.

Mix into cookie dough

Mix in candy bars

Drop by heaping teaspoons onto ungreased cookie sheets

Bake for 7-9 minutes or until golden brown

Allow to cool on cookie sheet for at least 2 minutes

Then, move cookies to cooling rack to completely cool

Store in airtight container

Keeps for 7+ days, if they last that long

Makes 60 plus cookies

Double chocolate, chocolate chip cookies, with gluten-free and plant based options

“If you can’t change the world with chocolate chip cookies, how can you change the world?” – Pat Murphy

Photo by Lucas Guizo on Pexels.com

Eat Mostly Healthy, but . . .🍫

As most regular readers know, I focus on eating overall healthy foods, 95% of which are plants.  Nonetheless, I do save room for a daily sweet treat, which is typically dark chocolate.  However, I do love to bake, and two of my favorite goodies to make from scratch are brownies and chocolate chip cookies.  These special-treat recipes were handed down to me from my Grandmother Helen. 

Once I was diagnosed with celiac disease in my late 40s, I had to learn to adjust all my family favorite recipes to gluten free versions.  Still, I have no complaints as it has just been one long baking adventure ever since!

In fact, I often chat with my brother, who also loves to bake, about different recipes, and he was recently telling me about a cookie recipe he baked: chocolate, white chocolate chip cookies.  I could see the color contrast of white chocolate chips against the chocolate background making a beautiful and decadent cookie.  However, I am not a white chocolate fan. (In my mind, white chocolate is a poseur, but hey, that’s my opinion!)

Best of Both Worlds 🍪

Still, the idea of chocolate cookies sent me down a rabbit-hole of thoughts.  What if I could create a gluten free cookie that combined the best of two worlds–grandmother Helen’s brownies and chocolate chip cookies?  Hmm.  Now there was a thought worth considering.

After hitting up several of my favorite cooking sites, including Mama knows gluten free, Very best baking, Gluten free palate, and King Arthur baking, I cobbled together a recipe similar to Grandmother Helen’s chocolate chip cookies–only with cocoa powder, espresso, and a couple of other minor tweaks. Therefore, I felt comfortable and confident assembling and baking these cookies for the first time since the recipe was so similar..

What a Treat! 😋

And what a treat they were! The cookies were soft and tender with a slight chew.  Best of all, they were full of that melt-in-your mouth flavor you want to savor. I varied the types of chocolate chips in size and degrees of flavor–from semi-sweet to darker variations.  

Ultimately, this created a cookie that was everything I could have hoped for. It was as if an un-iced brownie and chocolate chip cookie romantically collided, creating a hybrid of flavor and texture. Of course, you can absolutely use white chocolate chips or a mix of both types if that’s your thing. Feel free to also sprinkle the tops with a bit of white baking sparkling sugar before baking if you’re feeling extra jazzy!

Give it a Try! 👩‍🍳

Next time you have a hankering for something chocolate and gooey, try this recipe!  It makes plenty, so you have enough for sharing!  And, if you do bake them, I’d love to hear your feedback!

From my home to yours, I wish you an occasional no-so-healthy, but homemade indulgent treat baked with love–just like Grandmother Helen!

P.S.  Thank you, Scott, for the inspiration for this recipe!

Double Chocolate Chip Cookie, gluten free

Ingredients:

2 ¼ cup all purpose flour (can use gluten free version)

½ cup cocoa powder* (I used Dutched-processed)

1 sachet of espresso powder, optional

1 teaspoon baking soda

½  teaspoon salt

½  cup butter, softened to room temperature (I use dairy-free version)

½  cup vegetable shortening*

¾  cup sugar

1 cup brown sugar*

2 large egg, room temperature*

1 tablespoon apple cider or white vinegar

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

2 cups chocolate chips, mixed varieties, including white chocolate chips, if desired

Directions:

*Please read notes below recipe before baking

(Set out butter and eggs 1-2 hours in advance to allow them to come to room temperature)

Preheat oven to 375 degrees

In a small bowl, combine dry ingredients: flour, cocoa, baking soda, salt, and espresso, if using. Set aside.

In a separate bowl, using a mixer, cream together butter and shortening until creamy 

Beat in both sugars and vanilla extract until creamy, scraping down sides of bowl as needed

Beat in eggs and vinegar for at least two minutes until creamy.

Gradually beat in dry ingredients until well incorporated

Gently fold in chocolate chips

Drop by rounded spoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheets

Bake 8-10 minutes until cookies are puffed

Allow to cool on pan for 2 minutes before transferring to cooling rack

Store at room temperature in airtight container for up to 5 day

Can freeze leftovers in airtight container for up to 3 months 

Makes 2-4+ dozen cookies, depending upon how big you make your cookies.

Baking Notes (In the order in which they occur in recipe):

*Can use a mix of traditional cocoa and Dutched cocoa powder, if preferred

*Can use 1 cup butter and NO shortening for a crispier cookie

*I prefer dark brown sugar in cookies for a deeper, richer flavor

*To replace egg, combine either 2 tablespoons of flaxseed or chia seed with 4 tablespoons of water and set in fridge for at least five minutes to set

Gluten-free Snickerdoodles (with vegan option)

“Baking cookies is comforting, and cookies are the sweetest little bit of comfort food. . . .”--Sandra Lee

Photo by cottonbro on Pexels.com

Years ago, back in the days of the VHS tape cassettes, when my daughter, Maddie, was quite young, she had her fair share of age-appropriate videos.  These were special treats as her TV time was limited. John, my husband, and I are both educators, and we strongly believed then–and still do–that screen time should be limited, especially before the age of five years.  Therefore, these videos were not watched daily, but rather saved for “special times,” such as holidays, sick days, and weekends. 

One of her favorites was Barney: Night Before Christmas.  It was 57 minutes of so much saccharine sweetness that John and I felt cavities forming, if not in our teeth, then in our minds! It used to drive us crazy with its terrible acting and poorly written script. Regardless, Maddie loved it, and she especially enjoyed singing along with the Barney closing jingle. I can still recall the way in which she would plead for her Dad and I to join her in singing it’s catchy refrain, followed by a group hug. 

One line from this video, ultimately became–and still remains–a running joke in our family.  Let me set the stage for you.  Magically, a flawlessly dressed and styled girl wakes up to find snow has fallen just in time for Christmas Eve.  Poof! Out of nowhere, a perfectly coiffed mom, garbed in stereotypical Christmas attire, emerges to hug her daughter at the window.  As Mother and daughter turn away from the window, in walks the doting Dad carrying boxes of Christmas decorations,“just in time for Christmas Eve too!”  Suddenly, Dad feigns hunger like Santa, so Mom suggests that she should bake cookies.

Ooo! Snickerdoodles cooling on a wire rack!

“Ooo–snickerdoodles?” says Dad, rubbing his hands together.

“Chocolate chip?” asks Daughter in a sing-song voice.

Mom smiles methodically in assent, as both parents make their way through the Christmas greeting card house and disappear behind a swinging door to presumably bake cookies.  Twenty or so minutes later, both parents will reappear, no worse for the wear, carrying a large Christmas basket filled with piles of Instagram worthy cookies–had social media been around then. 

The days of Maddie’s Barney obsession are long past; however, if I state that I am going to bake cookies, John, and/or Maddie, will both mimic the lines from the video.  John especially loves to say, “Ooo–snickerdoodles?” and dramatically rub his hands together as if teaching a primary science lesson on friction. As inside family jokes go, it never gets old! 

Gluten-free and vegan? Yes!

Therefore, this past Christmas week, I decided to be ironic and make those Barney dreams come true!  I researched and cobbled together my own version of gluten-free snickerdoodle cookies!  As an added twist, John inadvertently played the role of doting dad by scavenging stores for cream of tartar, the secret ingredient to these magical cookies, since it was out-of-stock at the store I most often frequent.  

Barney may have magic, but snickerdoodles have cream of tartar.

My family and I recommend giving these cookies a try.  At first glance, they may seem quintessentially Barney–simple and sweet. Unlike Barney, however, the cookies are not overly-sweet.  Instead, they are soft, pliable, and slightly complex in flavor due to the combined tang of the cream of tartar and the spice of the cinnamon.  Nonetheless, when you bake this recipe, don’t be surprised to discover that your home has been transformed into an idyllic world filled with singing dinosaurs, cued laughter, and a lovey-dovey theme song that won’t leave your head . . . “I love you, you love me . . . .

You get a cookie, and you get a cookie, and . . .

In the meantime, feel free to drop me a line anytime. Let me know your thoughts and/or suggestions. I always enjoy engaging with readers.

From my home to yours, I wish you sweet baking experiences!

A few of the tricks to making gluten-free, and vegan, snickerdoodles!
Blend the cinnamon and sugar first!

Gluten-free Snickerdoodles (with vegan option)

Ingredients for topping:

¼ cup sugar

2 teaspoons cinnamon

Ingredients for cookies:

1 cup softened butter (You can substitute vegan butter for this if desired.)

1 ½ cup sugar

2 large eggs (You can substitute with *flegg.)

1 tablespoon vinegar

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

3 cups all-purpose, gluten free flour

2 teaspoon cream of tartar

1 teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon salt

Directions:

If using flegg, mix first, and set aside.

Mix sugar and cinnamon together, and set aside.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Place parchment paper on a cookie sheet.

In a large mixing bowl, mix together butter and sugar until light and fluffy.

Mix in egg, vinegar, and vanilla, scraping down sides as needed, until creamed well.

Add in cream of tartar, baking soda, and salt until well blended.

Mix in flour, a cup at a time, until dough forms.

Using tablespoon, or cookie scoop, scoop out small amount of dough, and roll into balls

Roll each ball in cinnamon sugar mixture and place on the prepared cookie sheet.

If you prefer a flatter, crisper cookie, flatten each dough ball with a spoon, otherwise for fluffier, more soft cookies, leave as is.

Bake 8-12 minutes, depending upon how soft you prefer your cookies.

Allow cookies to cool 2-4 minutes on pan before removing to a cooling rack.

Store cookies in an airtight container.

*flegg=egg substitute: Per egg, mix 1 tablespoon ground flaxseed with 3 tablespoons water.  Set in refrigerator 15-20 prior to mixing dough

Are you hungry yet?