Homemade Peanut Butter Buckeyes Recipe - On Sutton Place (2024)

I am taking a very short break before Christmas so my daughter, Elizabeth, has agreed to share her homemade peanut butter buckeyes recipe along with her hard-earned tips and tricks!

Every year at Christmas, my grandmother, Margaret Drake, invited my brother and me over to her house to bake cut-out cookies. We’d help her roll out the dough and cut the cookies. While they were in the oven, she would play her piano that was next to a big bay window in the living room and the three of us would sing Christmas carols. (I can still vividly see the Christmas tree she put in front of that window and decorated each year – she covered the entire tree in silver tinsel. By the time Christmas was over, most of it was on the carpet.) Once the cookies were ready, Margaret would let us ice them and decorate with sprinkles. We’d take ours home and Margaret would distribute the ones she made to her group of friends.

Homemade Peanut Butter Buckeyes Recipe - On Sutton Place (1)(Here I am with Margaret on my first birthday.)

One of those friends was Jane Feller. Jane and her late husband Lyle were best friends with my grandparents for most of their lives. Jane made buckeyes at Christmas and buckeyes were the treat she swapped with Margaret. If Margaret received 20 buckeyes, I probably ate 18 of them. Every year. I have absolutely no self-control when it comes to a combination of chocolate and peanut butter!

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Margaret passed away in 2007 when I was 23. I have her cookie cutters in my pantry and use them each year to make my own cookies. But a few years ago I mentioned to my boyfriend Darren that I missed Jane Feller’s buckeyes. He suggested we try to make them ourselves, so off to Pinterest I went to find a recipe.

Long story short, the recipe I found on Pinterest left out an ENTIRE step in the process. That attempt ended in what people on the internet call a #pinterestfail. The peanut butter balls were falling off the toothpicks and melting in the chocolate. No matter how careful I was, I couldn’t get the buckeyes to look pretty once they were dipped and trying to cool. Darren likes to refer to this unfortunate day as “Elizabeth’s Great Buckeye Meltdown.”

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I threw the “ruined” buckeyes in the kitchen sink. I swore. I cried. It was all ugly – my reaction and the failed buckeyes. Darren actually got in his car and left for about 15 minutes and called his dad. I’m told the conversation went something like this:

Darren: I will never understand women!

Darren’s Dad: Son, I’ve been trying to figure women out for over 60 years. I’ll let you know if I ever get there.

Darren came back, took me to a local restaurant for two pear martinis, and then we went back to my house to start again. The second go-round was much more successful because we decided to add a step that wasn’t in the original recipe. So, I’m here today to share how we learned to make buckeyes.*

Homemade Peanut Butter Buckeyes Recipe

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups creamy peanut butter
  • 2 sticks butter, softened
  • 2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 lb bag of powdered sugar
  • 4 packages of Baker’s baking chocolate bars (we use semi-sweet)

Step 1:

In a large bowl, cream together the peanut butter, butter, and vanilla.

Step 2:

Add powdered sugar. The dough might be crumbly at first, but it should all come together after everything is evenly mixed.

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Step 3:

Refrigerate dough for 30 minutes. Your buckeye balls will have a more even shape if you form them with chilled dough.

Step 4:

Use a small cookie scoop to form round balls with the peanut butter dough. Roll the balls in your hands to smooth. Place the balls on a cookie sheet or paper plate lined with waxed paper and insert a toothpick in each ball.

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Step 5: THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT STEP!

Freeze or refrigerate the balls for at least 30 minutes. This will allow the toothpick to freeze into the ball and will make dipping them in chocolate much more successful.

Step 6:

Once your peanut butter balls are cold, use a small saucepan to melt the chocolate. Stir constantly and do not let the chocolate reach a boil.

Step 7:

While holding the toothpick, dip each peanut butter ball into the chocolate, covering about ¾ of the ball. Place the buckeyes on a cookie sheet lined with waxed paper. Refrigerate again until the chocolate is set.

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Peanut Butter Buckeyes Tip

Once the peanut butter balls are dipped, we remove the toothpicks and use a small spoon to smooth the peanut butter over the hole in the buckeye left by the toothpick. If the hole doesn’t bother you, feel free to skip this part!

Click HERE for a printable version of my Homemade Peanut Butter Buckeyes Recipe.

Making buckeyes has now become a Christmas tradition. While it’s a little time consuming, it does get easier each year. We’ve started packaging the buckeyes in festive holiday tins and we give them to friends and family with their gifts, just like Jane Feller did for my grandmother.

Now all I need is a house with a big bay window, a piano, and some silver tinsel for my Christmas tree.

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*Lest you think my love for homemade peanut butter buckeyes makes me an Ohio State fan, I want to add that this recipe post is in no way an endorsem*nt for the Ohio State University or its football program and their upcoming bowl game. (Sorry Darren.) Football season is always interesting around here!

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Homemade Peanut Butter Buckeyes Recipe - On Sutton Place (2024)

FAQs

How long can you keep buckeyes in the fridge? ›

Storage Tips

Make sure your buckeyes stay fresh for as long as possible! The buckeyes should be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator to keep them nice and fresh. Stored in this way, they will keep for about 1 month (although good luck keeping them that long without eating them all, ha!).

Can you leave buckeyes out? ›

Buckeyes are fine to sit out at room temperature on holiday cookie plates for up to 24 hours, though if you're keeping them around for longer than that, store in an airtight container in the refrigerator where they'll stay fresh for up to 2 weeks. Buckeyes also freeze super well.

What is the history of peanut butter buckeyes? ›

The buckeye candy originated in Ohio (a.k.a. the Buckeye State). According to legend, sometime in the 1960s, Ohio resident Gail Tabor invented buckeyes while trying to dip peanut butter balls in chocolate.

How do you preserve buckeyes? ›

Soaked buckeyes for 8 hours in water at the beginning. Then re-soaked 6 hours at 1 month in and re-soaked again for 45 minutes at 2 months in. Cut them open for assessment at 3 months.

Can you store buckeyes in the freezer? ›

Yes! You can freeze buckeyes for up to two months.

How long do Buckeye nuts last? ›

Remove the nuts from the leathery husks and store them in the refrigerator for 120 days.

Why are my peanut butter balls runny? ›

Confectioners' Sugar: Confectioners' sugar binds everything together and adds sweetness. Without this powdery sugar, the peanut butter filling will be too liquid.

Why do people keep buckeyes? ›

During September, buckeyes, which are large, shiny brown seeds, can be found underneath Aesculus trees. According to legend, carrying a pocketful of buckeyes brings good luck. Early Native Americans called these seeds buckeyes for their resemblance to the eyes of male deer, known as bucks.

Did Native Americans eat buckeyes? ›

Many indigenous groups utilized buckeye seeds for food, often when other plant food sources were scarce. These tribes included the Costanoan, Salinan, Kitanemuk, Serrano, Wappo, Sierra Miwok, Coast Miwok, Chumash, Kawaiisu, Northern Maidu among others.

Are buckeyes good to eat? ›

Poisonous Plant: All parts of the plant (leaves, bark, fruit) are highly toxic if ingested – because of the glycoside aesculin, the saponin aescin, and possibly alkaloids. Symptoms are muscle weakness and paralysis, dilated pupils, vomiting, diarrhea, depression, paralysis, and stupor.

What candy is Ohio known for? ›

By: Jessica Brown

Buckeye candies are Ohio's official state candy. Due to the state's large production of buckeyes, they are a favorite snack of locals and travelers alike.

How long do buckeye nuts last? ›

Remove the nuts from the leathery husks and store them in the refrigerator for 120 days.

How long do buckeye trees last? ›

They can live 250 years.

How long can you keep a buckeye seed? ›

Seeds of Ohio buckeye should not be allowed to dry out. They can be stored for short periods (1 year) in air tight containers in the refrigerator if not allowed to dry out.

Do peanut butters need to be refrigerated? ›

According to The National Peanut Board, an unopened jar of peanut butter can last six to nine months at room temperature. Once opened, they say that it can last two to three months in the pantry before you should move it to the fridge, where it can maintain quality for another three to four months.

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