No Bake Cookies

Published July 12, 2018. Updated June 21, 2025

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No Bake Cookies are such a nostalgic childhood favorite! This recipe has that classic chocolate peanut butter flavor combo and the perfect chewy, fudgy texture. And I’m pretty sure they’re the easiest cookies on the planet to make!

No Bake Cookies

Easy No Bake Cookies

I’ve been making no bake oatmeal cookies for as long as I can remember. It’s one of the first things I learned how to make as a kid. I’d make them for my family on the weekends because my mom didn’t care much for dessert (be sure to supervise kids when making these, though!).

No Bake Cookies Video

 

They always filled the craving for something sweet, and they were ready to eat in no time. Plus, everyone in my family loved them, and I the most, I’m sure.

Chocolate and Peanut Butter Flavors

This is almost the exact same no bake cookie recipe I had when I was younger, but I did add in a little bit more cocoa and peanut butter here, because why not?? It’s a flavor combo I never can resist!

No Bake Cookies

Ingredients You’ll Need for This Recipe

  • Sugar
  • Butter
  • Milk
  • Unsweetened cocoa powder
  • Vanilla
  • Quick oats
  • Peanut butter

No Bake Cookies ingredients butter sugar milk cocoa powder quick oats peanut butter vanilla

How to Make No Bake Cookies

First, line two baking sheets with parchment paper (or just spread a long sheet of the parchment onto the counter), or have 29 cupcake liners set out.

Then, in a 2.5 – 3-quart saucepan, combine sugar, butter, cocoa powder, and milk.

No Bake Cookies mixing sugar cocoa powder butter and milk in saucepan

Set a saucepan over medium heat (I like to use the largest burner on the stove) and begin whisking. Cook and whisk frequently until it reaches a boil, then once it reaches a full rolling boil, stop stirring and let it boil for 1 minute.

No Bake Cookies boiling sugar cocoa mixture in saucepan

Remove the mixture from the heat, then immediately add vanilla, peanut butter, and oatmeal. And stir to blend well.

no bake cookies mixing in oats peanut butter and vanilla

Drop mixture onto prepared parchment, dropping 2 Tbsp at a time (a medium cookie scoop works well here, or just use two large spoons).

Let cookies set, then enjoy! If you want to speed up the setting transfer to the refrigerator. Store the cookies at room temperature in an airtight container (or in the fridge if you like them cold).

No Bake Cookies spooning mixture onto baking sheet

Tips for No Bake Oatmeal Cookies

After 20 some odd years of making these, I’ve learned a few things along the way.

  • Don’t just bring the mixture to a simmer (where the edges of the mixture bubble up); it needs to start fully boiling (bubbling up in the middle) before counting down those 60 seconds.
  • Don’t use old-fashioned oats, I think quick oats are a must. The cookies won’t set up quite the same, and they won’t be as tender.
  • The recipe should hopefully turn out perfect for you, but if they’re a bit too wet, boil 15 seconds longer the next time; if they came out dry, boil 15 seconds under. The amount of time the liquid is boiled will determine the way the cookies set up and also determine how moist they’ll be.
  • I prefer creamy peanut butter, but if you like the crunch of crunchy peanut butter, you can use that here, just add an extra 1/4 cup so the consistency isn’t affected. Other nut or seed butter will probably work (I know peanut allergy families have used almond butter), but you may have to play with the measurements for the right consistency.
  • Jif or Skippy peanut butter? We don’t need to start a war here. Use whichever you prefer!
  • Use real butter, never margarine. It has a bad flavor, which will affect the flavor of the cookies, and it has added water, so your end result won’t be as good.
  • Then, as listed in the recipe, stick with the bit of extra cocoa and peanut butter, it makes them a bit richer than you remember. I also cut back on the sugar by 1/4 cup, as is listed in the recipe.

What do You Call Them?

When I was a kid, we actually called these “uncooked cookies,” which is funny because they are still cooked. But now I’m thinking maybe they should be called “summer cookies” because there are just those days when we want a cookie, but it’s so hot no one wants to turn the oven on, right?

Of course, we’ll still stick with No Bake Cookies. But no matter what you call these decadent treats, everyone will always love them!

No Bake Cookies

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No Bake Cookies

 

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No Bake Cookies
4.94 from 429 votes

No Bake Cookies

A super fast, super easy to make cookie made with chewy oatmeal, rich cocoa and creamy peanut butter. They're perfectly fudgy and always just too good to resist! A childhood favorite that I'm still making all the time.
Servings: 29
Prep5 minutes
Cook8 minutes
Resting20 minutes
Ready in: 33 minutes

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Line two baking sheets with parchment paper or set out approximately 29 cupcake liners.
  • In a 2.5 to 3 quart medium saucepan combine butter, sugar, cocoa, and milk. 
  • Set over medium heat, and cook stirring frequently until it reaches a full boil. 
  • Allow mixture to boil 60 seconds without stirring. 
  • Remove from heat, immediately add in vanilla, peanut butter and quick oats. 
  • Stir mixture until well combined then, using a medium (2 Tbsp) cookie scoop or two spoons drop mixture onto lined baking sheets or into cupcake liners. 
  • Allow to rest at room temperature until set, about 20 - 30 minutes (to speed up setting refrigerate).
  • Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature.
Nutrition Facts
No Bake Cookies
Amount Per Serving
Calories 215 Calories from Fat 72
% Daily Value*
Fat 8g12%
Saturated Fat 3g19%
Cholesterol 9mg3%
Sodium 57mg2%
Potassium 170mg5%
Carbohydrates 33g11%
Fiber 3g13%
Sugar 15g17%
Protein 4g8%
Vitamin A 105IU2%
Calcium 23mg2%
Iron 1.6mg9%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Nutrition values are estimates only. See full disclaimer here.

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1,157 Comments

  • Michelle

    Mom called these summer cookies and thus so do I. When my brother was like a preteen he dubbed them poop-too-hards. They are a little tricky as it is easy to overcook or undercook. But they are a hit at parties.

    • Cassie

      It’s a little late now but the recipe says 1/2 c. salted butter. However, it looks like the video shows a half stick 🙃
      Could you please let me know if the video is deceiving? Half a stick of butter or half a cup?

      Five dozen of these babies for a bake sale and they aren’t setting up on the counter 😜 now to make room to chill them!

      Thank you!

      • Jaclyn

        Jaclyn Bell

        It’s is 1/2c or 8 tbsp. Sorry for any confusion. Hope they turn out well!

  • Cindy Orley

    Loved these! They were darker in color than other recipes I’ve tried and everyone loved them.

  • LINDA GAIL BROWN WARD

    I made these without the peanut butter once for my niece/nephew and greats and they asked me to make them with the peanut butter and oh my goodness it’s now my go to recipe for them.

  • Lynn

    Am wondering if I could use old fashioned or regular rolled oats but put it into the milk, sugar, cocoa and butter mixture and boil the oats a bit, the sixty seconds, to soften them up some?

  • Laura Marsala

    Under your tips for making no-bake cookies: “Use real butter, never margarine. It has a bad flavor which will effect the flavor of the cookies and it has added water so your end result won’t be as good.”
    Please learn the difference between effect and affect. Affect is the verb and correct in this instance, not effect.

    • Kylie

      Laura,

      Please learn the difference between constructive and pointless criticism. No one is bothered by this typo except you. The success of the recipe is unaffected. I can assure you that the creator of this recipe does not care. Making a good cookie does not require grammatic perfection.

    • Kate

      Hi, as a major grammatical stickler myself, I also noticed and was bothered by this mistake. However, the way you wrote your comment, while being excellent in syntax, came across to others and myself as rude. I don’t intend to be rude myself, only educational, which I’m sure was your intent as well, so I apologize for any offense. This is the way I would frame the correction (using the ‘sandwich’ method of giving constructive criticism, and with entirely true thoughts as a framing mechanism) :

      Hi there! While reading your recipe in preparation for a bake sale, I noticed a grammatical error in your post. In your caution against margarine, you wrote, “effect the flavor of the cookies”, as opposed to “affect”, which is actually the correct word. I highly doubt that this affects the readability of your text for anyone other than apparent dinosaurs such as myself, but I thought that I would mention it just in case you do care and didn’t catch it. In other news, I really appreciate the recipe, and am very excited to see how it turns out compared to other cookies of this type I’ve made. I think it will be a massive hit at the bake sale!

      We sticklers may be a dying breed, and we may be reluctant to go down without a fight, but we can at least do the rest of the world the courtesy of being as nice as possible about it. I’m sure that it wasn’t your intention to be at all rude, but I decided that I may as well offer constructive criticism (using, I hope, an effective example of the ‘sandwich’ method). If you haven’t read *Eats, Shoots and Leaves* by Lynne Truss, then you absolutely should, as it’s in my opinion a crucial manifesto for punctuation (and grammar in general) sticklers everywhere, and I wish you an excellent and grammatical day/rest of your life/[insert time period here].

      Best,
      Kate

      • deni

        Know what’s even better than your formatting the criticism? Send it in and email rather than the comment section!
        Grammar doesn’t affect the recipe at all!

  • Wanda Bax

    Where I was raised, in the country, in SE Tennessee, we always called them “cow patties”…not a very appetizing name, but kids thought it was hilarious 😂

  • Ruth Hollandsworth

    By far, the best no bakes I’ve ever made. Love the easy recipe with all the ingredients already in my pantry and frig! So YUMMY!!