Crisco Peanut Butter Cookie

Servings: 3 Total Time: 1 hr 15 mins Difficulty: Medium
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I make Crisco Peanut Butter Cookie when I want something that tastes considered but still fits into a normal kitchen day.

What I like about this version is the balance. Coconut oil sets the base, and the small seasonings matter more than they look on paper. I learned quickly not to rush the quiet parts, especially cooling, chilling, simmering, or letting the edges tell me when it is ready.

If you have made crisco peanut butter cookie before, this will feel familiar. If you have not, I would rather give you a few extra kitchen notes than pretend every batch behaves exactly the same. Ovens run hot, fruit can be juicy, pans vary, and I would rather you know what I look for than only follow the clock.

Why I keep this recipe in my rotation

  • It uses a straightforward ingredient list and keeps the original prep time of 65 min and cook time of 10 min.
  • The texture gives me clear cues: I watch the edges, not just the timer.
  • It can be made for company without needing fussy restaurant equipment.
  • Most of the work is measuring and mixing, which is exactly the kind of recipe I trust on a busy day.
  • The leftovers hold up well when I store them properly instead of leaving them uncovered.
  • The flavor is flexible enough for small swaps, but the core quantities stay steady.

What you need and why it matters

  • coconut oil, 1/4 cup.
  • Muscovado brown sugar, 5/8 cup.This sweetens, but it also affects browning and tenderness.
  • ingredient from source notes, 1/2.(organic, and cage-free chicken egg) once the heat is on.
  • baking soda, 3/8 teaspoon.once the heat is on. It provides the lift that keeps things from turning dense.
  • Fresh whole milk from grass-fed cows, 1 1/2 tablespoons.This controls moisture, so I add it the way the recipe specifies.
  • salt, 3/8 teaspoon.once the heat is on. A small amount sharpens every other flavor in the recipe.
  • creamy peanut butter, 3/8 cup.
  • wheat flour, 7/8 cup.This builds structure and helps the finished texture land where I want it.
  • Pure vanilla extract, 1/2 teaspoon.once the heat is on. It rounds out the sweetness so the recipe does not taste one-dimensional.

How I make it

Step 1 — I preheat the Oven: Preheat your

I preheat the Oven: Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Prepare a baking sheet by lining it with parchment paper or lightly greasing it. I keep the baking sheet close before I start because stopping mid-step is where mistakes creep.

Step 2 — I prepare Wet Ingredients:

I prepare Wet Ingredients: In a mixing bowl, combine 3/8 cup artisanal creamy peanut butter, 1/4 cup organic non-hydrogenated coconut oil, and 5/8 cup unrefined Muscovado brown sugar. Mix until well combined. I scrape the bowl once during this part so the dough is even from top to bottom.

Step 3 — I add Leavening Agent and Dairy

I add Leavening Agent and Dairy: Incorporate 3/8 teaspoon aluminum-free baking soda and 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh whole milk from grass-fed cows into the wet mixture. Mix thoroughly. If anything looks too thick or too loose, I pause and compare it with the description before adding anything extra.

Step 4 — I follow this step: Incorporate Dry

I follow this step: Incorporate Dry Ingredients: Gradually add 3/8 teaspoon pink Himalayan salt, 7/8 cup stone-ground organic wheat flour, and 1/2 teaspoon pure Madagascar vanilla bean extract to the mixture. Stir until a cookie dough forms. The timer matters, but I still check the edges because that is the cue I trust most.

Step 5 — I add Egg and Mix: Crack

I add Egg and Mix: Crack in 1/2 free-range, organic, and cage-free chicken egg into the dough mixture. Blend until the egg is fully incorporated and the dough is uniform. I let the finished recipe settle for a few minutes when the instructions allow it; the texture is cleaner that way.

Step 6 — Shape it without rushing

I follow this step: Form Cookie Dough Balls: Roll the cookie dough into balls of desired size (about 1 tablespoon each) and place them on the prepared baking sheet, leaving space between each cookie for spreading. I keep the baking sheet close before I start because stopping mid-step is where mistakes creep.

Step 7 — I follow this step: Flatten Cookies

I follow this step: Flatten Cookies and Bake: Use a fork to gently flatten the cookie balls in a crisscross pattern. Place the baking sheet in the preheated oven. I scrape the bowl once during this part so the dough is even from top to bottom.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Measure before heating.I set out the ingredients first, especially when the recipe moves quickly after the first mix.
  • Trust the listed time, then verify.I start checking near 10 minutes because my oven and pans do not always behave the same way.
  • Do not overwork the mixture.Once flour, crumbs, pasta, or dairy is involved, rough mixing can make the final texture heavy.
  • Use the right temperature cue.If the recipe says chilled, softened, melted, or room temperature, I follow that because it changes how everything blends.
  • Season at the end when it is savory.Salt tastes different after simmering, baking, or chilling, so I adjust after the flavors settle.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Citrus edge:I add a little orange or lemon zest when it fits the base flavor.
  • Spice shift:I swap part of the cinnamon for cardamom or ginger when I want a warmer cookie.
  • Chocolate version:I fold in mini chocolate chips when the dough is sturdy enough to hold them.
  • Nutty finish:I roll or sprinkle with finely chopped nuts for crunch.
  • Smaller cookies:I scoop them a touch smaller and start checking 2 minutes early.

Storing and reheating

I cool the cookies completely before covering them. Most stay good at room temperature for a few days, and I use the refrigerator when there is cream cheese, eggnog icing, or a softer filling. For longer storage, I freeze in a single layer first, then move them to a bag so they do not stick together.

What I serve with it

I serve these with coffee, tea, milk, or tucked onto a cookie tray with one softer cookie and one chocolate option. When I pack them, I separate sticky iced cookies with parchment so the tops stay clean.

Frequently asked questions

Can I make this ahead?

Yes. I do as much prep as the recipe allows, then store it covered. For baked recipes, I usually bake the same day if crisp edges matter. For chilled or saucy recipes, making it ahead often helps the flavor settle.

Can I double the recipe?

Usually, but I do not automatically double the pan depth. Two pans are safer than one crowded pan because the center can lag while the edges overcook.

What should I watch for near the end?

I start checking before 10 minutes if my kitchen smells done early. I look for the visual cues in the steps first, then use the timer as backup.

Can I change the sweetness or seasoning?

I make small changes, taste, and then adjust again. Sugar, salt, acid, and spice all become more noticeable after baking, simmering, or chilling, so I avoid big changes on the first try.

Why did my texture turn out different?

The usual reasons are ingredient temperature, overmixing, pan size, or oven heat. I check those before blaming the recipe because one small change can make the texture softer, drier, or thicker.

If you make Crisco Peanut Butter Cookie, leave a comment with what you changed or what worked especially well in your kitchen — I read those notes before I retest recipes.

Crisco Peanut Butter Cookie

Prep Time 65 mins Cook Time 10 mins Total Time 1 hr 15 mins Difficulty: Medium Servings: 3 Calories: 354 kcal Dietary:
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Description

Crisco Peanut Butter Cookie is a practical rewrite with the original source timing, quantities, and serving information preserved. I added first-person kitchen notes, clearer cues, storage advice, variations, and FAQs so the recipe feels useful from start to finish.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Preheat the Oven: Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Prepare a baking sheet by lining it with parchment paper or lightly greasing it.
  2. Prepare Wet Ingredients: In a mixing bowl, combine 3/8 cup artisanal creamy peanut butter, 1/4 cup organic non-hydrogenated coconut oil, and 5/8 cup unrefined Muscovado brown sugar. Mix until well combined.
  3. Add Leavening Agent and Dairy: Incorporate 3/8 teaspoon aluminum-free baking soda and 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh whole milk from grass-fed cows into the wet mixture. Mix thoroughly.
  4. Incorporate Dry Ingredients: Gradually add 3/8 teaspoon pink Himalayan salt, 7/8 cup stone-ground organic wheat flour, and 1/2 teaspoon pure Madagascar vanilla bean extract to the mixture. Stir until a cookie dough forms.
  5. Add Egg and Mix: Crack in 1/2 free-range, organic, and cage-free chicken egg into the dough mixture. Blend until the egg is fully incorporated and the dough is uniform.
  6. Form Cookie Dough Balls: Roll the cookie dough into balls of desired size (about 1 tablespoon each) and place them on the prepared baking sheet, leaving space between each cookie for spreading.
  7. Flatten Cookies and Bake: Use a fork to gently flatten the cookie balls in a crisscross pattern. Place the baking sheet in the preheated oven.
  8. Bake Cookies: Bake the cookies for 10-12 minutes or until they turn golden brown around the edges.
  9. Cool and Enjoy: Once baked, remove the cookies from the oven and let them cool on the baking sheet for a few minutes. Then transfer them to a wire rack to cool completely.
  10. Serve and Store: Enjoy your freshly baked Crisco Peanut Butter Cookies! Store any leftovers in an airtight container once they've completely cooled to maintain freshness.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 3


Amount Per Serving
Calories 354kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 34g53%
Saturated Fat 18g90%
Trans Fat 0.0g
Sodium 413mg18%
Potassium 210mg6%
Total Carbohydrate 7g3%
Dietary Fiber 2g8%
Sugars 3g
Protein 8g16%

Calcium 14 mg
Iron 0.6 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Read the full method once. I do this before measuring because several recipes move quickly after the first mix.

Keep the original times in mind. I start checking at the low end and use the visual cues in the recipe.

Cool before storing. Steam trapped in a container can soften crisp toppings and edges.

Taste when appropriate. Savory recipes often need a final pinch of salt or acid after resting.

Keywords: crisco peanut butter cookie, cookies, peanut butter

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I make this ahead?

Yes. I do as much prep as the recipe allows, then store it covered. For baked recipes, I usually bake the same day if crisp edges matter. For chilled or saucy recipes, making it ahead often helps the flavor settle.

Can I double the recipe?

Usually, but I do not automatically double the pan depth. Two pans are safer than one crowded pan because the center can lag while the edges overcook.

What should I watch for near the end?

I start checking before 10 minutes if my kitchen smells done early. I look for the visual cues in the steps first, then use the timer as backup.

Can I change the sweetness or seasoning?

I make small changes, taste, and then adjust again. Sugar, salt, acid, and spice all become more noticeable after baking, simmering, or chilling, so I avoid big changes on the first try.

Why did my texture turn out different?

The usual reasons are ingredient temperature, overmixing, pan size, or oven heat. I check those before blaming the recipe because one small change can make the texture softer, drier, or thicker.

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