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Old fashioned peanut butter cookies with iconic fork marks and a crisp-yet-tender bite! This award-winning family recipe is effortless to make and ready in under 20 minutes.


A Quick Look At The Recipe
This is a brief summary of the recipe. Jump to the recipe to get the full details.
Jump to RecipePrep Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
10 minutes
Total Time
20 minutes
Servings
96 small cookies
Difficulty
Easy—perfect for holiday baking, cookie swaps, or weeknight treats.
Calories *
65 kcal per serving
Technique
Cream butter and sugars, beat in eggs, vanilla, and peanut butter, then gently mix in dry ingredients and press with a sugared fork before baking.
Flavor Profile
Sweet, nutty cookies with crisp edges, tender centers, and classic roasted peanut flavor.
* Based on nutrition panel
Made these with crunchy peanut butter; it was the only peanut butter I had in the house. And I topped the cookies with sugar in the raw before criss-crossing the fork on top. They were crunchy and full of flavor, a perfect peanut butter cookie.⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Mara
Why This Recipe Works
- No chilling required. Mix, scoop, and bake—this is an easy recipe you can make start-to-finish in under 20 minutes.
- High peanut butter ratio. More peanut butter means bold flavor and the right crumb.
- Balanced sugars. Granulated sugar creates crunchy edges, while dark brown sugar adds moisture for a tender interior.
- Classic technique. The fork press ensures even baking and that nostalgic look.
Table of Contents
- Why This Recipe Works
- Ingredients & Substitutions
- Variations on this Old-fashioned Peanut Butter Cookies Recipe
- Professional Tips
- How to make old fashioned peanut butter cookies from scratch?
- Professional Chef Tip
- Recipe FAQs
- Recommended Easy Peanut Butter Cookies
- Old Fashioned Peanut Butter Cookies Recipe
- Before You Go
These are my great-grandmother RoRo’s prize-winning old fashioned peanut butter cookies, and yes—they won at the Clark County Fair in Virginia. RoRo sent each family member home with their favorite treat: I always asked for pecan tassies, my mom loved old fashioned date pinwheels, and my dad never wavered—these peanut butter cookies were his favorite.
Join the lineage! Passed down from my great grandmother, this is the same recipe my grandma baked every holiday. And, if you’re already in a peanut butter mood, don’t stop here. These cookies fit right alongside peanut butter blossoms, reese’s peanut butter cookies, or a single-pan pizookie when you want something extra indulgent.
Ingredients & Substitutions
- All-purpose flour: Measure carefully by fluffing, spooning, and leveling. Too much flour will make dry cookies.
- Baking soda: Check freshness—expired baking soda won’t give proper lift.
- Unsalted butter: The butter should be softened to room temperature so it creams smoothly with the sugars.
- Granulated sugar: Adds sweetness and helps create crisp edges.
- Dark brown sugar: Adds moisture and subtle molasses flavor, similar to what I use in peanut butter chocolate chip cookies.
- Large eggs: Bind the dough and create structure.
- Smooth peanut butter: I use Jif for consistent texture and flavor. You’ll see the same preference in reese’s peanut butter blondies. I don’t recommend natural peanut butter here; it can cause crumbly cookies.
- Vanilla & kosher salt: The amount of salt here is intentional—it sharpens the peanut butter flavor..
See the recipe card below for full ingredient quantities.
Variations on this Old-fashioned Peanut Butter Cookies Recipe
- Add mix-ins. RoRo occasionally added butterscotch chips. For inspiration, see butterscotch chews or go all-in with a monster cookie recipe.
- Use crunchy peanut butter. Adds texture without affecting bake time.
- Dress them up. Frost with chocolate buttercream or peanut butter buttercream. You can even serve them with salted caramel sauce or apple butter for dipping!

Professional Tips
- Use peanut butter you enjoy. Peanut butter is the dominant flavor—quality matters.
- Soften butter properly. It should be pliable but not greasy.
- Sugar the fork. Dipping the fork between cookies prevents sticking and adds crunch.
- Cool completely. Crisp cookies finish setting as they cool.
How to make old fashioned peanut butter cookies from scratch?
These homemade peanut butter cookies are award-winning for a reason: flavor, texture, and speed. Further details and measurements can be found in the recipe card below.
Step 1: Preheat oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
Step 2: Mix dry ingredients. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and kosher salt. Set aside.
Step 3: Cream butter and sugars. In a large bowl with an electric mixer or in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat butter with granulated and dark brown sugars until combined. Add eggs and vanilla and beat until light and creamy, about 2–3 minutes.
Step 4: Add peanut butter. Reduce mixer speed to low and mix in the peanut butter until fully incorporated.
Step 5: Add dry ingredients. Stir the flour mixture into the wet ingredients in several additions, mixing just until combined. Do not overmix.
Step 6: Portion and press. Drop dough by the teaspoon onto prepared baking sheets, spacing about 2 inches apart on the cookie sheet. Dip fork tines in granulated sugar and press twice in a crisscross pattern, re-dipping between cookies.
Use spoons to portion the dough for rustic cookies.
Step 7: Bake cookies. Bake for about 10 minutes, until lightly golden brown and matte on top.
The short baking time keeps these cookies crisp but not dry.
Step 8: Cool completely. Cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool fully.

Professional Chef Tip
For consistently crisp cookies, avoid underbaking. These cookies should look matte—not glossy—when they come out of the oven. They will firm up significantly as they cool, so resist pulling them early.
Recipe FAQs
These cookies are delicate. For shipping, choose sturdier options like linzer cookies or pfeffernüsse.
Peanut butter dough resists spreading. The fork press flattens the dough evenly and creates the classic pattern.
Old fashioned peanut butter cookies bake for about 10 minutes at 350°F. They are done when the tops look matte and lightly golden, not shiny, and will continue to crisp as they cool.
Recommended Easy Peanut Butter Cookies
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Reese’s Peanut Butter Cookies
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Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Monster Cookie Recipe
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Peanut Butter Cup Cookies
If you tried this recipe and loved it please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it goes in the comments below. I love hearing from you; your comments make my day!

Old Fashioned Peanut Butter Cookies
Ingredients
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 cup unsalted butter softened
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup dark brown sugar packed
- 2 eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1 cup smooth peanut butter
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
- Whisk flour, baking soda, and salt together in a medium bowl.
- Beat butter with both sugars until combined. Add eggs and vanilla and beat until light and creamy.
- Mix in peanut butter on low speed until smooth.
- Add dry ingredients in several additions, mixing just until combined.
- Drop dough by the teaspoon onto prepared baking sheets. Press with a sugared fork in a crisscross pattern.
- Bake for about 10 minutes, until cookies are golden and matte.
- Cool on baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
Video
Notes
- Yield: 96 small cookies
- Presentation: For perfectly round cookies, roll dough into balls before pressing.
- Flavor Tips: Use a peanut butter you enjoy—the flavor shines through.
- Storage: Store in an airtight container for up to one week or freeze for two months.
Nutrition
Before You Go
I hope you enjoyed baking this nostalgic peanut butter cookie recipe. Explore more classics in my full collection of cookie recipes, including favorites from my 25 easy Christmas cookies and this complete curation of christmas cookie recipes.






















This looks like a great recipe, and I’ll be making them soon. I like to add about a cup of finely chopped peanuts to my PB cookies – I wonder if that will work? Oh, and I eliminate the fork issues by using a potato masher. With a light touch. It works great. Thanks for the good recipe.
I hope you do! I bet that would be great with the chopped peanuts! One of my Aunts just told me that RoRo used to add butterscotch chips sometimes! Just make sure you dip the potato masher in sugar it’s what makes these the best!! Or you could probably sprinkle some on top afterwards.
I always use a standard scoop, form the dough into a ball, then roll them in sugar. And yes, the potato masher also needs to be dipped in sugar. Peanut butter-butterscotch does sound good!
Oh that does sounds delicious! I love a cookie rolled in sugar! The potato masher is a great idea!
Lindsey, this is such a sweet tribute to your Dad. I too am a huge fan of chewy cookies. These peanut butter cookies look delicious!
Thanks, Cindy!
ha ha ha I just realized we have the same theme, great minds think alike. Are you finding really easy to use. I love it. After all the trouble I had, I have found it great and really easy to use.
So we do! I’ve only had it for 3 days, so I am very new! So far I am loving it!
Your Dad sounds like an amazing man. And these cookies look super yummy. I really want some:)
He is 🙂 These cookies could have used some Sophia staging and photography to give them that Old World feel.
not at all they are perfect, so perfect I want to lick my screen just to get a taste.
Thanks, Sophia! That method is not recommended 😉
lol, no I’m sure it wouldn’t taste half as good as the real thing.
The cookies look great! Sounds like your dad is a great guy! And I love the new theme – looks awesome! 🙂
Thanks, Lindsay!! So far I’m loving the new theme too!
Look at your pictures, total swoon worthy! I am craving a few of these cookies right now!
{blush} Thanks, Pamela! I can warn you from experience that just a few won’t do!!
they do look addicting!
What a lovely tribute to your dad. I think I’d become a huge fan of these cookies, too, with just one nibble. I’m overdue to bake up some pb cookies…and these have certainly stood up to the test of time!
Thanks, Liz! These definitely have longevity on their side! I love baking heirloom recipes!