These homemade peanut butter cookie sandwiches combine crisp & chewy peanut butter oatmeal cookies with a thick peanut butter filling. They taste just like Nutter Butters!
If there’s a serious lack of peanut butter in your life, you should double up. There’s always a time and a place for peanut butter cookie sandwiches stuffed with more peanut butter. Today’s cookie sandwiches are ridiculously peanut buttery—just like my peanut butter cookies, they’ll have you reaching for a cold glass of milk!
These Peanut Butter Cookie Sandwiches Are:
- Just like Nutter Butters but totally homemade
- Crisp on the edges
- Super chewy with soft centers
- Sweet and a little salty
- Filled with a thick peanut butter filling
How to Make Peanut Butter Cookie Sandwiches
We’ll take two peanut butter oatmeal cookies and sandwich them together with a deliciously thick peanut butter filling. I recommend using a non-natural peanut butter, like Jif or Skippy. (Natural or homemade varieties are a little too oily.)
- Make the cookie dough. The cookie dough will be thick.
- Scoop the dough into balls. Use about 2 heaping teaspoons of dough per cookie (almost 1 Tablespoon—any size around here is great). Place them onto a baking sheet.
- Slightly flatten each cookie dough ball. This helps the cookies spread a little as they bake. Use the back of a measuring cup or drinking glass to gently press down on each dough ball.
- Bake. Bake the cookies until the edges are lightly browned and appear set.
- Make the peanut butter filling. Beat the ingredients together until smooth.
- Sandwich together. Once the cookies are completely cool, spread the frosting onto the flat side of one cookie and sandwich with the other. You can also use a piping tip to do this. I used piping tip #12 to pipe the frosting onto the cookies before sandwiching.
No Chill Cookie Recipe
This is a no-chill cookie recipe. No waiting around for cookie dough to chill! This dough is pretty sturdy and won’t over-spread in the oven, so that’s why it’s okay to skip the chilling step. In fact, these cookies need a little nudge in the spreading direction. What I like to do is take a measuring cup or the bottom of a glass and gently press the dough balls down before baking. (Watch how I do this in the video above. So simple.)
I have plenty more no chill cookie recipes like giant chocolate chip cookies, black and white cookies, pumpkin oatmeal chocolate chip cookies, and lace cookies. Shortbread wedges are another option that don’t even require any dough shaping either—they bake up right in a cake pan!
P.S. Do you like Oreo cookies? Try my homemade Oreos next, for another homemade version of a familiar packaged cookie.
Peanut Butter Filling
The peanut butter cookies are incredible, but the filling is the center of attention. Made with 3 simple ingredients—peanut butter, confectioners’ sugar to thicken, and honey to smooth it out. I added the honey at the last minute and I’m so glad I did! This peanut butter filling is super peanut buttery and doesn’t taste overly sweet like frosting. Rather, it’s like a very thick and smooth peanut butter.
You can spread or pipe the filling between two cookies. I used my Wilton #12 round tip. Honestly, it tastes good no matter how it’s slathered on.
More Peanut Butter Recipes
- Peanut Butter Cupcakes
- Peanut Butter Balls (truffles)
- Peanut Butter Easter Eggs
- Peanut Butter Banana Cream Pie
- No-Bake Peanut Butter Bars
- Peanut Butter Swirl Brownies
Who needs jelly?
PrintPeanut Butter Cookie Sandwiches
- Prep Time: 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 10 minutes
- Total Time: 50 minutes
- Yield: about 20 sandwiches
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: American
Description
These chewy peanut butter cookie sandwiches taste like nutter butter cookies! Filled with a thick peanut butter filling, they’re irresistible.
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (94g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled)
- 1 cup (85g) old-fashioned whole rolled oats
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/3 cup (5 Tablespoons; 71g) unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
- 3/4 cup (150g) packed light or dark brown sugar
- 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
- 2/3 cup (170g) creamy peanut butter*
- 1 large egg, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Frosting
- 1 cup (250g) creamy peanut butter*
- 1 Tablespoon (21g) honey
- 1/4 cup (30g) confectioners’ sugar
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F (177°C). Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats. (Always recommended for cookies.) Set aside.
- Whisk the flour, oats, baking soda, baking powder, and salt together until combined. Set aside.
- In a large bowl using a handheld or stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar together on high speed until completely smooth and creamy, about 2 minutes. Add the peanut butter, egg, and vanilla extract and beat on high speed until combined, about 1 minute. Scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl as needed to combine. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix on low until combined.
- Scoop cookie dough into balls, about 2 heaping teaspoons of dough per cookie (almost 1 Tablespoon—any size around here is great), and arrange 3 inches apart on the baking sheets. Using the back of a measuring cup or drinking glass, gently press down on each dough ball to slightly flatten. Bake for 10-11 minutes or until edges are lightly browned and appear set.
- Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheets for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely before sandwiching.
- Make the frosting: In a large bowl using a handheld or stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the frosting ingredients together until combined and smooth. Spread the frosting onto the flat side of one cookie and sandwich with the other. (Or you can use a piping tip—I used piping tip #12 to pipe the frosting onto the cookies before sandwiching.) Repeat with remaining.
- Cookies will stay fresh covered at room temperature for 3 days or in the refrigerator for 1 week.
Notes
- Make Ahead Instructions: You can make the cookie dough and chill it in the refrigerator for up to 2-3 days. Allow to come to room temperature before continuing with step 4. Baked cookie sandwiches freeze well for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and bring to room temperature, if desired, before serving. Unbaked cookie dough balls will freeze well for up to 3 months. Bake frozen cookie dough balls for an extra minute, no need to thaw. Here are my tips and tricks on how to freeze cookie dough.
- Special Tools (affiliate links): Baking Sheets | Silicone Baking Mats or Parchment Paper | Glass Mixing Bowl | Whisk | Electric Mixer (Handheld or Stand) | Cooling Rack | Piping Bag (Reusable or Disposable) | Wilton Piping Tip #12
- Peanut Butter: I don’t recommend a natural or homemade peanut butter for the cookies or filling. You want a thick, non-oily creamy peanut butter such as Jif or Skippy.
- Be sure to check out my top 5 cookie baking tips AND these are my 10 must-have cookie baking tools.
I use nutter butters in my home made banana pudding! The grandchildren love it! Now we also get to bake the cookies for the pudding!
These are absolutely delicious and they turned out just like the photo! So easy to make!
Excited to try these, but I’m gonna sub the peanut butter with cookie butter instead!
I use Sally’s recipes constantly, and found this one had the most troubleshooting out of any I’ve tried yet. The cookies turned out completely flat, instead of fat & thick as shown in the pictures. Had to play around with different oven temps and bake times to try and get any thickness on the cookie. It’s possible maybe my butter had gotten too warm before mixing in. The filling for these cookies was another challenge – despite following the recipe exactly, I didn’t get a smooth, spreadable filling, but instead basically lumpy peanut butter. None of my tricks for thinning it out and getting it smoother worked.
Despite all that, I did manage to make cookie sandwiches (they just didn’t look as picture-perfect) and they were delicious – the flavor was way better than just a plain peanut butter cookie. Made a few with a dollop of raspberry jam in the middle, and it was an instant hit, albeit a bit messier to eat.
It’s worth making these cookies, but be prepared to troubleshoot.
What will the impact be if I ommit the oats? Is their anything I can use on place of the egg? A vegan version of the recipe?
Hi SaundraMae, The cookie’s wet to dry ingredient ratio will be off without the oats and the cookies will spread in the oven. We recommend sticking with the recipe or you can try using our regular peanut butter cookies instead. We haven’t tested a vegan version of this recipe, but let us know if you do any experimenting.
was wondering if this filling would work in a two layer cake? Love the peanut butter
sandwich cookies, delicious!
Hi Marlyn, that should work just fine, or you might enjoy this peanut butter frosting instead. Glad you enjoy this recipe!
This is a terrific recipe! I surprised my husband with it. I used Skippy. The “frosting” or filling makes a lot. Be generous when spreading. Great cookie to bake as the hurricane Ian moves through. Still have power, thankfully.
These are my favorite peanut butter cookies! This recipe made 18 sandwich cookies using a small cookie scoop. I used a teaspoon for the filling and it worked well. Thanks for another great recipe, Sally!
These are excellent, easy to mix up, quick to bake, look like they came from a bakery.
These are amazing! I love peanut butter and they came out great. I love the filling/frosting. I love having a large amount of peanut butter, but I think you could make a bit less of it for a lot of people’s taste.
hi! can I omit the oats? thanks. can’t wait to try this one 🙂
Hi Abby! The cookie’s wet to dry ingredient ratio will be off without the oats and the cookies will spread in the oven. We recommend sticking with the recipe or you can try another peanut butter cookie instead!
Can you help me modify the center frosting to chocolate? Requested per my son in law. Thank you! Always feel like a pro when I make your cookies!
Hi Laura! You could use either chocolate buttercream or chocolate ganache (regular or whipped) in the centers. Let us know how it goes!
These were fabulous. I used hi-protein oats and 1 cup of coconut palm sugar to 1/2 cup of light brown sugar in the cookie dough. And then I used agave syrup instead of honey for the filling. I also used my small cookie scoop for both the dough and the filling. The use of hi-protein oats and palm sugar in many recipes gives me higher protein and lower glycemic index which meets my nutritional needs.
Just wondering could you use quick oats instead of old fashioned oats? I don’t usually have old fashioned oats.
Hi Melissa! You can, yes, but the cookies may not spread as much since the oats are finer and more powder-y.
These cookies were very good. I made part of them by dividing the balls in half to make mini sandwich cookies which my son liked even better. He took these cookies (full size) for his soccer team after a game. There were no complaints! I plan to make the mini version of these for his graduation party.
how well will these cookies ship?
Hi Marlyn! Cookies stay fresh at room temperature for 3 days, so they would be fine for quick shipping. Here’s our tips for shipping cookies.
Im heading to the store to get me some rolled oats! This will be the first cookie recipe I have tried from you. I have been baking bread, pretzels and pizza dough and my family is GAGA over them. THank you so much for putting recipes out there that actually turn out good!
THANK YOU
These are fantastic! We didn’t need the full batch of frosting, probably about 2/3 of it would’ve been plenty. We also added jelly on a couple of them which was even better! I am a big baker and usually stay away from recipes with fillings and such but these were easy and soooo worth it.
I’m curious whether you think wowbutter could be used to make these peanut free? I’m not sure whether it would have the right amount of fat compared to peanut butter. Thoughts?
Hi Shannon, We haven’t tested this recipe with Wowbutter but let know know if you do!
These were soooo good. A little chewy and not dry at all. Thanks Sally for always being so consistent in your recipes! I’ve made several of yours and they’re so reliable to be good!!
I love your recipes Sally! I am 66 and have been baking for many, many years but I have learned so much from you by reading your hints and baking guides. My husband is delighted as he said the last three batches of cookies I have made were the best ever…and they were all your recipes!
These are delicious! I made them exactly as the recipe states and they turned out perfectly. My husband loves Nutter Butter cookies and told me these are 100 times better! I feel good about having fresh cookies without all the preservatives in store bought. The process to make these was easy. Will definitely make this again, probably many times!
This recipe got rave reviews at my house! I used half maple syrup and honey in the filling. Every recipe I have ever used from your site has always been the best version of any desert I am preparing. The “Best Ever Banana Cake”, “Carrot Cake” and the “Key Lime Cheesecake” are the most requested for family gatherings. Thank you so much for covering all topics regarding baking. I used your “soften butter to room temp” today!
Kindest Regards,
Coming back to leave a second review of this recipe. Having recently given up gluten and dairy I’m working my way back through some of my favorite “Sally recipes” and adapting them. So for anyone else in my boat I’ve found great success using vegetable shortening and cup for cup gluten free flour (Bob’s red mill) in many of Sally’s cookie recipes. This being my favorite so far. Cookies and cookies with oatmeal in particular seem to have the best texture when baking gluten free.
I made these for Valentine’s cookie bags, and they are delicious and sturdy! No one would guess they have oats in them. I liked them much better than standard peanut butter cookies, so I expect to make them again.
These cookies have great flavor, though mine turned out a bit crumbly (my fault for making them too big. I ended up with 8 sandwiches, rather than the expected 20). Also, when I tried to make the frosting, it seized up and ended up being very, very thick (more like a spread). I didn’t use natural peanut butter (not skippy or JIF, but similar store brand). Any idea why this might have happened?
Once again – another excellent recipe. I made these and they are delicious. You don’t really taste the oats – but they give them such a pleasant texture. These are for peanut butter fanatics!
Thank you for sharing this recipe. I made these cookies tonight, very good!! Family loved them too! It didn’t make that many so if you have a large family or a cookie monster on the loose, double it, you’ll thank me later. One tip, if you don’t have honey in the house, use corn syrup like Karo.
The flavor was wonderful however they were dry and crunchy. What did I do wrong? I used a small cookie scoop. Maybe cooked to long amd didn’t roll into balls ??
Hi Terryann, Thank you for trying this recipe! We used about 2 heaping teaspoons of dough per cookie, for smaller cookies the bake time will be shorter. If you try this recipe again, baking for a minute or two less should help. Also, check to see what kind of peanut butter you are using. Natural style or oily peanut butters often result in crumbly cookies – see recipe note.
Hi Sally, I don’t have any honey in the house and don’t use it much so I hesitate to buy any. Would the omission significantly affect the filling?
Thank you for such an enticing recipe! I’ve been having a hankering for peanut butter cookies and your arsenal of peanut butter recipes is amazing.
Hi Carole, We use the honey to sweeten and smooth out the filling, you can leave it out with no other changes. You could also try using the same amount of maple syrup if you wish. Let us know what you try!
Decided to add these to my holiday cookies this year and they are amazing. I sampled one and I’m hoping that I won’t be tempted to eat them all. I will be freezing these cookies and was wondering if they will get soggy after defrosting? I’ve never frozen baked and filled cookies before so was just curious what to expect.