Buckeye Candy

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Whether you consider these a cookie or a candy, Buckeye Cookies are a favorite of our entire family! So of course I have to make a double batch when I make these delicious peanut butter and chocolate dipped cookies that are not baked and have no eggs in them.

The ironic thing about these cookies is that when I was a child, we had a gigantic buckeye tree in our front yard. I can remember picking buckeyes up every year from that tree. I don’t think a year went by when that tree didn’t drop hundreds of buckeyes. Such a messy tree when the buckeyes dropped but the tree made beautiful flower blooms in the spring. We always made things out of the buckeyes, necklaces being my favorite. These cookies look exactly like the real buckeyes look.

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Ingredients

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In a large mixing bowl, cream

butter and peanut butter together.

Add vanilla and mix.

I do this with a mixer but it

can also be done by hand.

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Add and mix the sifted powdered

sugar 1/2 cup at a time until the

peanut butter mixture doesn’t

stick to your hands and

can be rolled into a ball.

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The mixture will be very soft so roll

gently for creamier Buckeye Cookies.

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Place waxed paper on a baking sheet.

Roll the peanut butter mixture into small

balls, about 1″.  Place the balls on the

waxed paper without touching each

other. Cover the cookies with plastic

wrap and place the entire tray in

a cold spot like the refrigerator

so the cookies will set up.

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In a double boiler over medium

low heat, melt the wax.

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Add the chocolate chips and stir until

completely melted and creamy smooth.

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Take about 10 cookies out of the

cold and lay them on a plate.

Take each cookie and place a

toothpick in the center pushing

it about half way into the cookie.

Remove the double boiler from the

heat and place it on a hot pad.

Hold on to the toothpick and dip the

cookie into the chocolate leaving a

circle area on top uncoated.

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Place the chocolate dipped cookies

onto a clean piece of waxed paper

on the counter top. Let sit for about

1/2 hour to set up. Place back onto

the baking sheet that is covered in a

clean sheet of waxed paper and put

back into the cold area again. After

an hour you can put the cookies

in an air tight bowl separating each

layer with a piece of waxed paper.

Refrigerate until ready to eat and serve.

Buckeye Cookies

  • Difficulty: Easy/Intermediate
  • Print

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Ingredients

  • 1 cup creamy peanut butter
  • 2 sticks butter, softened
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1-12 oz. bag of semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1# powdered sugar (approximately)
  • 1/2 block paraffin wax (optional it adds gloss and makes the buckeye sturdy)

Directions

  1. In a large mixing bowl cream the butter and the peanut butter (I use a mixer). Add vanilla and mix until combined. This can be done in a mixer or by hand.
  2. Sift the powdered sugar and add it to the peanut butter mixture 1/2 cup at a time, mixing well each time you add it. You will know you have added enough powdered sugar when you can pick up a clump of the mixture and it does not stick to your hand and it can be gently rolled into a ball. Roll the mixture into 1″ balls.
  3. Place the balls onto a waxed paper covered baking sheet making sure they do not touch. Cover the cookies with plastic wrap and place the tray in a cold location like the refrigerator for an hour or two.
  4. In a double boiler over medium low heat, melt the paraffin wax. Add the chocolate chips, stir until melted and the chocolate is creamy smooth.
  5. Put about 10 cookies on a plate for each cycle of dipping. The rest of the cookies need to be kept cold and firm in order to dip into the chocolate. If the toothpick doesn’t stay in the cookie to dip they aren’t cold enough.
  6. Lay a long sheet of waxed paper on the counter.
  7. Using a toothpick, stab the cookie and hold the toothpick to dip the ball into the chocolate, leaving a round circle uncoated at the top of the cookie to look like a buckeye. Place the chocolate dipped Buckeye onto the waxed paper on the counter. Repeat with the rest of the cookies. Let the cookies sit for 1/2 hour to set up.
  8. Place the chocolate coated cookie onto a clean waxed paper covered baking sheet. Place the tray back into the cold area to set up for about 1 hour.
  9. Store the cookies in an airtight container (with waxed paper between the layers) in the refrigerator until ready to serve.

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58 Comments »

    • Aw thank you so much! This is an amazing recipe! I have made it for about 40 years! They don’t last long and I always have to maker a double batch per family orders…lol

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