Recipes>Chocolate Recipes

Peanut Butter Brownies

by James Morton from How Baking Works

Easy

Makes enough for one 8-inch square tin

This delicious recipe from James Morton uses dark chocolate, which James found works much better than white. Ideally made with crunchy peanut butter with some extra peanuts too, this delicious combination of salty and sweet, gooey and crunchy, makes for one of the best brownie bakes you’ll ever find.

Discover more delicious Chocolate recipes

From fudgy brownies to light mousses

From the book

How Baking Works

James Morton

How Baking Works

Learn to use the science of baking for great results

Simple, step-by-step recipes

Stunning, inventive cakes and bakes

Buy From

Introduction

This recipe was inspired by the delightful Rachel Allen, who I believe created or at least propagated this simple method of making a brownie-like dessert. When I complimented her on her recipe, she recommended I didn’t bake them for any school fairs, because she had been knocked back due to the presence of peanuts in the past. Fair advice. Still, these are great to make in a hurry.

This version is a little different to hers, of course. After much experimentation, I found peanut butter works so much better with dark chocolate than white. You should ideally use crunchy peanut butter, but also add some extra peanuts too. Try to get the unsalted variety, though salted ones that have been washed and dried will be fine.

Tags

Ingredients

100gsoftened, unsalted butter
150gcrunchy peanut butter
150gcaster sugar
1egg, beaten
1 tspvanilla extract
100gself-raising flour
50gunsalted peanuts
100gdark chocolate, chopped

Essential kit

You will need an 8-inch square tin.

Method

Watch James show you how to make his delicious brownies in our video tutorial:

  1. Preheat your oven to 170°C/150°C fan/Gas 3. Stuff a ripped-off square of baking paper into an 8-inch square tin.

  2. In a large bowl, beat the butter, peanut butter and sugar together until paste-like. There is no need to cream as you would for a cake.

  3. Add the egg and vanilla and beat until combined. Again, there is no need to develop air.

  4. Add the flour, peanuts and chopped chocolate, stirring gently to combine. Dollop the mixture into your cake tin and spread out to the edges, for it should be quite tough.

  5. Bake in the oven for 25–30 minutes or until golden brown on top and moderately resistant when pressed. A skewer inserted should come out clean.

Reviews

Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.

Cancel reply

Your review

Name *

Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.

Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .

Be the first to leave a review

Ingredients
Method

More Chocolate Recipes

View all

Mary Berry’s The Ultimate Chocolate Roulade

by Mary Berry from Mary 90: My Very Best Recipes

Pistachio Yule Log

by Philip Khoury from Beyond Baking

More James Morton recipes

View all

Soft or Crusty Rolls

by James Morton from Brilliant Bread

The Best Chocolate Cake

by James Morton from How Baking Works

More Cake Recipes

View all

Mary Berry’s The Ultimate Chocolate Roulade

by Mary Berry from Mary 90: My Very Best Recipes

Pistachio Yule Log

by Philip Khoury from Beyond Baking

Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week