Homemade Peanut Butter

This peanut butter recipe is easy to make in a food processor. Homemade peanut butter tastes fresh, creamy, and irresistibly nutty. Yum!

6 Reviews
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peanut butter recipe

Peanut butter lovers: Have you tried making your own? I donโ€™t know what took me so long to try it. Itโ€™s so easy to blend in a food processor and tastes incredible. Take your PB&J to the next level with homemade peanut butter.

Homemade peanut butter is lusciously creamy, with rich and irresistible peanut flavor. Notably, thereโ€™s no grit or annoying oil to stir into the container. Homemade peanut butter tops all the store-bought options in flavor and texture, and Iโ€™ve tried every natural peanut butter out there!

With homemade peanut butter, you have full control over the ingredients. Thereโ€™s no need for sugar if you prefer unsweetened peanut butter (though if you enjoy a little sweetness, I have options below). Thereโ€™s certainly no need for oils like hydrogenated vegetable oil or palm oil. My dry-roasted peanuts blended into creamy oblivion without any added oils.

If youโ€™re interested in making your own peanut butter, this recipe is for you! Youโ€™ll find tips, variations, and the full recipe belowโ€”plus a video so you can watch it come together.

Homemade Peanut Butter Tips

Peanut butter on toast has been a breakfast mainstay for as far back as I can remember. I once begged my mom to ship peanut butter across the ocean during a semester in France. Turns out, all you need is peanuts and a food processor to make your own.

Start with unsalted dry-roasted peanuts.

Typically, for nut butters, I start with raw nuts and roast them before blending. However, itโ€™s been difficult to find unroasted peanuts lately. Dry-roasted peanuts are the perfect option. While oiled nuts would work, youโ€™re introducing an unnecessary ingredient into your peanut butter.

Choose unsalted peanuts so you can control the salt level. Double-check the ingredients before buying (the only ingredient should be peanuts) and taste them before blending. Bad peanuts will make bad peanut butter.

Use your food processor, not a blender.

Iโ€™m still on team Food Processor for nut butters, peanut butter included. Nut butters are so thick that blenders, even great ones like my Vitamix, require a lot of manual help to get going. Itโ€™s easier to throw the nuts in my food processor and let the processor work it out.

Iโ€™m happy to report that peanut butter blends much more easily than my other nut butter recipes. Once you make peanut butter, youโ€™ll want to try the rest!

Watch How to Make Peanut Butter

peanut butter mix-ins

Peanut Butter Flavor Variations

Try just one or try them all! Crunchy cinnamon-honey peanut butter sounds wonderful to me.

Naturally sweetened peanut butter

Honey and peanut butter is perfection, but maple syrup is also fantastic. With homemade peanut butter, you have full control over the sweetness level. I found 1 teaspoon to be lightly sweet, 2 teaspoons noticeably sweet and barely honey-flavored (it thickens the mixture quite a bit!), and 1 tablespoon tastes like a treat, with light honey flavor. 

Cinnamon peanut butter

Try adding some ground cinnamon for some warming spice. Use 1/2 teaspoon for subtle flavor, or up to 1 tablespoon if youโ€™re a big fan.

Crunchy peanut butter

For some crunch, reserve about 3/4 cup of the peanuts. Blend the rest as directed, then add the reserved peanuts back to the processor and process just until they are broken into small bits.

Mixed nut butter

Substitute almonds, cashews, pecans, walnuts or pistachios for some of the peanuts.

Peanut Butter Serving Suggestions

I love peanut butter for breakfast. Itโ€™s hard to beat peanut butter on toast! To take it to the next level, drizzle it with honey. Stir a dollop of peanut butter into your morning oats to make them more heartyโ€”try my overnight oats, oatmeal, and steel-cut oats.

My toddlerโ€™s favorite snack is apple slices with peanut butter dipโ€”simply stir a generous spoonful into some Greek yogurt. Add honey or cinnamon if youโ€™d like.

Turn your peanut butter into something sweet, like Peanut Butter Oat Cookies, Monster Cookies or Chocolate Peanut Butter Crispy Bars. You can also use peanut butter to make my Easy No-Bake Granola Bars.

Peanut butter can lean savory, too. Make peanut butter dipping sauce and serve it with spring rolls or drizzle it over these mango burrito bowls. Or make Vegetarian Peanut Soup!

Of course, we canโ€™t forget the classic peanut butter and jelly sandwich, which is a regular in my daughterโ€™s lunch box. Youโ€™ll find more uses for peanut butter here.

More Nut Butters to Try

Please let me know how your peanut butter turns out in the comments! I love hearing from you.

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Homemade Peanut Butter

  • Author: Cookie and Kate
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 15 minutes
  • Yield: 16 ounces 1x
  • Diet: Vegetarian

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 5 from 6 reviews

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This peanut butter recipe is so easy to make in a food processor. Homemade peanut butter tastes fresh, creamy, and irresistibly peanutty. Youโ€™re going to love it! Recipe yields 16 ounces peanut butter (about 2 cups).

Ingredients

Scale
  • 16 ounces (3 cups) unsalted dry roasted peanuts
  • Up to ยผ teaspoon fine salt
  • Optional flavorings: 2 to 3 teaspoons honey or maple syrup, ยฝ teaspoon ground cinnamon

Instructions

  1. Transfer the peanuts to a food processor. Blend until the mixture is completely smooth and creamy, pausing to scrape down the sides as necessary, about 10 minutes. The peanuts will go from flour-like clumps to a ball against the side of the food processor, and finally, the mixture will turn lusciously creamy. If the mixture gets hot along the way or your machine seems tired, stop and let it cool for a few minutes.
  2. If desired, add a pinch or two of salt, honey and/or cinnamon. Blend until well mixed, about 30 seconds, then taste and add more if desired.
  3. Let the peanut butter cool to room temperature, then transfer the mixture to a mason jar and screw on the lid. Store in the refrigerator for up to 1 month.

Notes

Raw peanut option: To roast your own peanuts, preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Spread shelled peanuts across a large, rimmed baking sheet and toast the peanuts for 10 to 20 minutes, until nicely fragrant, stirring every 5 minutes. Let the peanuts cool until theyโ€™re just warm to the touch (not hot) before blending.

Crunchy peanut butter: Reserve about ยพ cup of the peanuts. Blend the rest as directed, then add the reserved peanuts back to the processor and process just until they are broken into small bits.

Make it vegan: Donโ€™t add honey. Sweeten with maple syrup, if desired.

Nutrition

The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionistโ€™s advice. See our full nutrition disclosure here.

Kate and Cookie

HELLO, MY NAME IS

Kathryne Taylor

I'm a vegetable enthusiast, dog lover, mother and bestselling cookbook author. I've been sharing recipes here since 2010, and I'm always cooking something new in my Kansas City kitchen. Cook with me!

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Comments

  1. claire

    in your experience, does homemade peanut butter end up being more expensive than store bought?

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Hi Claire, good question! Homemade peanut butter is generally less expensive, but not significantly. I make it for the superior flavor and the fact that I donโ€™t have to stir it up before spreading! I can buy 16 ounces dry-roasted peanuts at Whole Foods (not organic) for $2.79, and one 16-ounce jar of Skippy peanut butter is $2.99. I can buy organic peanuts for $6.42โ€”which is actually more than the 365 brand of organic peanut butter for $4.20, but less than Maranatha for $6.99.

  2. Davida

    The Peanut Butter video was one of the first I have had the pleasure to watch since you launched your new website and I gotta sayโ€ฆ.this video has the best music ever. Look forward to dancing around the kitchen while the food processor does the work!

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Haha, I love it! Thank you, Davida! Enjoy the peanut butter.

  3. Catherine Cox

    Hi Kate! I love making my own pnut butter and i, too, use dry roasted pnuts. I prefer the salt free ones since I really watch my salt intake. I add a bit of extra virgin olive oil and cinnamon or natural vanilla are two of my favorites. Thanks for another great recipe!!

  4. Glen from Herefordshire

    Having read your recipe Iโ€™m determined to give it a go. Up until now Iโ€™ve used shop bought peanut butter in my homemade granola and Iโ€™ve been frustrated at the lack of the non palm oil varieties available.

    Thank you for your suggestion which deserves five stars in its own right.

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Thank you, Glen! I hope you love your homemade peanut butter!

  5. Earl

    I love homemade nut butters. I never thought to add cinnamon or maple syrup. Took my nut butter up to the next level. Love your recipes. Thanks so much

  6. Victoria

    I love peanut butter! Excited to try this. Why does it need refrigeration? Thx.

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Hi Victoria! Iโ€™m just suggesting the refrigerator out of an abundance of caution. Iโ€™ve never had my peanut butter go bad at room temperature if itโ€™s used in a reasonable time frame.

  7. Rebecca

    It was perfect at first but my husband thought it needed more honey. After adding honey, the mixture seized like chocolate. What did I do wrong? It tastes really good but I like the softer texture better.

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Hi Rebecca, the honey does thicken the mixture quite a bit. I only tested adding up to 1 tablespoon. I hope it softened with time so you could still enjoy it!

  8. Shelley

    Sorry, meant to give it 5 stars!

  9. Trilety

    This was a game changer especially since itโ€™s hard to find peanut butter without added oils lately. My peanut butter came together in half the time at 5 minutes. Thank you for this recipe! I had no idea it could be so easy.

    Also, weโ€™ve been making your healthy granola recipe for ourselves and for gifts for years!

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Hooray! Iโ€™m so happy to hear it. Thanks for letting me know.

  10. suem

    I will be trying the peanut butter today โ€“ sounds so easy! Please post how long it will remain good (with honey added) and if it should be refrigerated. Many thanks for the great job you do in providing such deliciously, healthy recipes!

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      I hope you love it! I suggested storing the peanut butter in the fridge out of an abundance of caution, but I think it would be fine at room temperature for up to 1 month.

  11. Lin

    Kate how long does the peanut butter keep please and can it be stored at room temperature? Thank you for all your wonderful recipes. We have enjoyed so many of them.

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Hi Lin, I suggested storing it in the refrigerator out of an abundance of caution, but it is probably fine up to 1 month at room temperature. Obviously, discard it if you see or smell any signs of mold.

  12. De

    Note ~. Please heat up nuts before putting them in the processor. The warmth from the nuts leave a natural oil and brings out the full flavor of the nuts leave in addition to that once you put them in the processor the blending be a little easier for the nuts to blend. Perfect nut butter will be the end result !!!

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Thank you for your suggestion! I have found that to be true for all of my other homemade nut butter recipes. Store-bought dry-roasted nuts blended so well (and deliciously) without the heat that I didnโ€™t suggest it here. I couldnโ€™t find raw peanuts!

  13. Michelle

    Wow so simple and tasty.

    1. Kathryne Taylor

      Thank you, Michelle!

  14. debbie

    Great recipes for peanut butter and making it ourselves โ€“ thank you soooo much

  15. personal recipe book

    This homemade peanut butter recipe looks amazing! I love how simple and customizable it is. Canโ€™t wait to try it with a touch of cinnamon.

  16. Gayle Smith

    How long witll the recipe last out of the refridgerator?