This easy gluten free peanut butter cookies recipe, made crispy and crunchy and in the classic crosshatch style, is rich with tons of peanut butter flavor. For peanut butter lovers only!
And these cookies are made with simple GF ingredients you have on hand, including a simple all purpose gluten free flour blend. Just a few ingredients, a bowl, and a mixing spoon, and your whole house will smell like heaven!
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What makes these gluten free peanut butter cookies special?
Proper crunchy peanut butter cookies are made with a dense cookie dough that has more peanut butter than anything else. Every batch has almost a full pound of smooth peanut butter!
The original purpose of the crosshatch pattern in the top of the cookie was to ensure that the cookies are pressed properly, so they cook evenly.
I also like the little crispy bits on the top of each gluten free peanut butter cookie that the crosshatch creates during baking.
Briefly wet the tines of the fork each time you look to press them into the cookie. For some more sweetness and a beautiful look, dip the tines in sugar firstโor just sprinkle some sugar on top.
How to make gluten free peanut butter cookies
Make the cookie dough.
- These gluten free peanut butter cookies start by melting peanut butter and butter together first, so theyโre smooth and combined. Set the mixture aside to cool briefly while you whisk together the dry ingredients. This will prevent the cookie dough from being oily.
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the gluten free flour (including xanthan gum), baking soda, salt and granulated sugar. Mix in the brown sugar separately, since there will be clumps you have break up. I like to use the back of the mixing spoon to press out the lumps.
- Use the mixing spoon again to create a well in the center of the dry ingredients, and then add in the melted butter and sugar, then the beaten eggs and vanilla.
- The cookie dough should be soft and sticky, but not oily. If it feels greasy or oily, chill the dough for no more than 10 minutes so it doesnโt become stiff.
Shape the cookie dough.
- Pull off pieces of cookie dough about 2 tablespoons in volume. Shape them into rounds and then press them into disks.
- Make the crosshatch pattern on top of each cookie by wetting the tines of a fork and pressing them into the top of each disk. Rotate the tines of the fork 90ยฐ and press them again onto the cookie in the opposite direction for a # pattern.
- For some sparkle on top of the cookies, dip the wet tines in some granulated sugar before pressing them into the cookie.
Bake the cookies.
- Bake the cookies for about 15 minutes, or until theyโre pale golden all over. For crunchier cookies, bake for about 3 minutes more or until darker golden brown.
- When you take the cookies out of the oven, they will be very fragile. Let them sit, completely undisturbed, on the baking sheet for at least 5 minutes or until stable to the touch.
- Theyโll become crisp as they cool, so you have to judge doneness by color, not by touch.
How are these gluten free peanut butter cookies different from flourless ones?
This is a recipe for gluten free peanut butter cookies made with gluten free flour. Flourless peanut butter cookies are made without anything ground into a flour.
Flourless peanut butter cookies are naturally gluten free, since conventional flour is the main gluten-containing ingredient in most cookie recipes. In this recipe, you can use any of my recommended all purpose gluten free flour blends. And flourless recipes are a great place to start baking gluten free desserts if you don't yet have a flour blend on hand.
Flourless pb cookies also have a different texture than these classic cookies. They're crisp on the outside, but chewy in the center.
These gf peanut butter cookies are crispy and crunchy all the way through. If you under bake them a bit, these cookies can also be softer in the center.
But the outside of these cookies made with flour will always be crispier than a flourless cookie.
Is peanut butter gluten free?
Yes, in its purest form, peanut butter is made of peanuts and salt and is naturally gluten free. If you place peanuts (roasted or raw) in a high-speed blender, you'll have peanut butter when you're done.
The main ingredients in natural peanut butter, peanuts and salt, are gluten free. Most potential additives, like sugars and oil, are also naturally gluten free.
But commercially prepared peanut butter can be unsafe on a gluten free diet if itโs become contaminated at any point during the manufacturing process. So be sure to read product labelsโand know your brands.
Some brands, like Jif, will label its peanut butter (and other products) โgluten freeโ if it fits the U.S. definition of โgluten free.โ But it may have been prepared on manufacturing equipment it shares with gluten-containing products.
Most types of Skippy peanut butter are gluten free, except for those that contain mix-ins.
The safest peanut butter brands only make gluten free varieties, like Peanut Butter & Co, but they tend to be very expensive.
What is “natural peanut butter,” and can I use it here?
There are two types of peanut butter that are called “natural peanut butter.” The first natural kind you can't use here; the second you can.
Don't use drippy natural peanut butter
The first kind of natural peanut butter is the kind that is made of only peanuts and salt. Most of the oil separates out and sits on top of the jar.
The nut butter in this kind drips off the spoon at room temperature. You can't use that here.
If you use the drippy kind of natural nut butter, your cookie dough will be very greasy. That will make the dough very crumbly and nothing will look or bake like the dough you see here.
Use the no-stir type of peanut butter
To bake these gf peanut butter cookies, and virtually any other peanut butter recipe on this website, you'll need the “no-stir” type of peanut butter.
This second type of peanut butter, which is also sometimes labeled “natural,” is the no-stir kind of nut butter. It's usually blended with shortening and some sugar.
When you open a jar of no-stir peanut butter, you may find a little pool of oil on top. But there won't be much separated oil, and the nut butter will be fluffier and creamier.
Substitutions for gluten free peanut butter cookie ingredients
Gluten free dairy free peanut butter cookies
To make these gf pb cookies dairy free, too, you must replace the butter. My favorite nondairy butter replacement is vegan butter (Miyoko's Kitchen or Melt brand is best).
Since there are only 4 tablespoons butter in the whole batch, you might even be able to use Earth Balance buttery sticks. Skip the salt, though, and expect your cookie dough to be softer, though, and the cookies to spread more.
Gluten free egg free peanut butter cookies
There are 2 eggs in this recipe. You can try replacing each of them with 1 “chia egg” (1 tablespoon ground white chia seeds + 1 tablespoon lukewarm water, mixed and allowed to gel).
If you make these cookies both dairy free and egg free, they will also be gluten free vegan peanut butter cookies.
Gluten free nut butter cookies without rice flour
If you prefer to avoid an all purpose gluten free flour blend that is based primarily on different types of rice flour, try our recipe for almond flour peanut butter cookies. They're made with a blend of blanched almond flour and tapioca starch.
Gluten free peanut butter cookies without peanut butter
If you can't have peanuts, you can't have actual gf peanut butter cookies. But you can still have gluten free nut butter cookies.
This recipe works well with no-stir almond butter. I really love Barney Butter brandโbut it is ridiculously expensive.
Just like it won't work with the drip-off-the-spoon peanut butter, the recipe won't work with that sort of almond butter.
I do not recommend trying this recipe with Sunbutter, which is by its nature very drippy.
If you'd like to make a cookie with Sunbutter, try using one of my Nutella recipes. Here are some Nutella recipes that might work with Sunbutter:
- 3-ingredient Nutella cookies
- Chewy gluten free Nutella cookies
- Nutella monster cookies
And, of course, if you just want to learn all the basics of making gluten free cookies with tips and FAQs, we'll join you there.
FAQs
Classic peanut butter cookies like these, made with flour, are usually made with wheat flour, so they are not typically gluten free. These cookies are gluten free because they were designed to be made with a gluten free flour blend.
Did you bake the cookies until the color was golden all around? If not, you probably underbaked your cookies?
You probably added your melted butter and peanut butter mixture to the dry ingredients before it had had a chance to cool a bit first. Just refrigerate the cookie dough for about 5 minutes and/or let it sit, covered, at room temperature until the flour absorbs the oil.
If you chill your cookie dough, it becomes crumbly. Just let it warm up to room temperature again and you should be able to shape it properly into disks.
How to make gluten free peanut butter cookies step by step
BEST Gluten Free Peanut Butter Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 ยฝ cups (385 g) smooth no-stir peanut butter
- 4 tablespoons (56 g) unsalted butter, chopped
- 1 ยฝ cups (210 g) all purpose gluten free flour blend (I used Better Batter; click for details)
- ยฝ teaspoon xanthan gum omit if your blend already contains it
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ยผ teaspoon kosher salt
- ยฝ cup (100 g) granulated sugar
- ยฝ cup (109 g) packed light brown sugar
- 2 (100 g (weighed out of shell)) eggs at room temperature, beaten
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- Granulated sugar for dipping or sprinkling optional
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 350ยฐF. Line large rimmed baking sheets with unbleached parchment paper and set them aside.
- In a small, heavy-bottom saucepan or a microwave-safe bowl, place the peanut butter and chopped butter. Place the saucepan over medium-low heat (or in the microwave for about 45 seconds on high) and stir until melted and smooth (about 2 minutes). Set aside to cool briefly.
- In a large bowl, place the flour, xanthan gum, baking soda, salt and granulated sugar, and whisk to combine well. Add the light brown sugar, and whisk again to combine, working out any lumps.
- Create a well in the center of the dry ingredients, and pour in the melted peanut butter and butter mixture. Mix to combine.
- Add the beaten eggs and vanilla, and mix again to combine well. The cookie dough will be soft and sticky.
- If the cookie dough is too sticky or soft to handle, or it feels particularly greasy, cover it and refrigerate it for 10 minutes or less. If you refrigerate it for too long, the dough will become crumbly.
- Pull or scoop off pieces of dough, each about 2 tablespoons in volume. Roll each piece of dough into a round between your palms.
- Press the ball into a disk about 1/2-inch thick and place about 1 1/2-inches apart on the prepared baking sheets.
- Wet the tines of a salad fork, dip in the optional extra sugar, and press the tines firmly into the top of each cookie. (See Recipe Notes)
- Wet the tines again, and press them again into the top of the same cookies in the opposite direction to make a crosshatch pattern.
- Place the cookies, one baking sheet at a time, in the center of the preheated oven and bake.
- For less crunchy cookies, bake until pale golden all over (about 15 minutes). For very crunchy cookies, bake until uniformly golden brown all over (about 18 minutes).
- Remove the baking sheet from the oven and allow to cool on the baking sheet until set (at least 5 minutes) before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
- The cookies will be very fragile when they first come out of the oven, so it is very important to let them sit on the baking sheet until they are set. They will crisp as they cool.
Notes
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Thanks for stopping by!
Hi, Iโm Nicole. I create gluten free recipes that really work and taste as good as you remember. No more making separate meals when someone is GF, or buying packaged foods that arenโt good enough to justify the price. At Gluten Free on a Shoestring, โgood, for gluten freeโ just isnโt good enough! Come visit my bio!
Lynn says
This GF Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe is nearly identical to grandmaโs! As a lunch- lady she knew how to make the best cookies!
I used King Arthur Measure-to-Measure flour, no xanthan gum, and scooped with a small icecream scoop and did the classic criss-cross fork. Baked about 10-11 minutes and got the nice soft chew akin to grandmaโs.
Cheryl Smith says
I have always made the flourless recipe. Anxious to try this new recipe.
Amelia says
Baking SODA? But where’s the acid for it to react with? Peanut butter isn’t acidic.
Nicole Hunn says
Yes, Amelia. Brown sugar is acidic. Even chocolate chip cookies use baking soda, not baking powder, and in both circumstances, baking soda helps brown the cookies. It’s in most basic cookie recipes you’ll find.
Melody says
I tried to make these sugar free by using stevia and stevia brown sugar but they came out very dry. I only took off a star because it may have been my substitutions that caused it. However, I wanted to leave a comment in case anyone else thought of trying this for GF and SF.
Nicole Hunn says
It most definitely was your substitutions that caused dryness, Melody. Alternative sugars are always drying, and that must be accounted for. Making substitutions like that creates something of a new recipe, and no one could guarantee results.
Jennifer says
Made these yesterday! Fantastic recipe! Now my favorite person can have his favorite cookie!
Nicole Hunn says
I’m so glad, Jennifer! Giving your favorite person his favorite cookie is literally the whole point of this entire blog. :)
Susan Bergin says
No wonder I follow this site. YUMMY – Sampling one that has just cooled off. Very easy to make and yes sprinkle a bit of sugar on them as suggested. I was so much craving a good peanut butter cookie and these are them! Thanks Nicole for yet another to add to my baking rotation.
Nicole Hunn says
Hahaha, Susan, so glad you love them, too. I just had one last night, and they are a peanut butter lover’s dream!
Emily says
This was really good! Mine came out harder than I would have liked. And darker. Didnโt look like the picture. But I definitely want to try them again!
Nicole Hunn says
It sounds like you overbaked them, Emily! Check to see if your oven runs hot (most do), and as always, if you made any substitutions and measured by weight, not volume.
Angela says
Really nice cookies and easy to make! Thanks for this recipe.
Cecilia Conway says
Thank you, looking forward to making them tomorrow…can’t wait to have them with a cup of tea!
Nancy Latimer says
I just made these cookies but I only had natural (major stir-n-break your wrist kind of) peanut butter on hand. The recipe still works but the dough was more crumbly and more work than if I had used Nicole’s exact ingredients. But the cookies were still lovely and yummy.
Cecilia Conway says
Can I use all natural peanut butter instead?
Nicole Hunn says
As Nancy discovered above, Cecilia, the cookie dough will be much more difficult to handle and the cookies themselves much more fragile/dry.
Maggie says
We use to make peanut butter cookies and added peanuts to the dough. Am making these on Friday sweet tooth is loose around here again. Thank you for sharing can have cookies and other foods and not have side effects of the gluten.
Thank you.
superfcbear says
I am wondering if SUNBUTTER will work?
Jennifer Sasse says
You can try it. I tried it in the chocolate peanut butter chip cookie recipe. The dough was very greasy, but the end result was like a regular cookie. I am not used to sunbutter, so the taste was just ok to me. Good luck!
Nicole Hunn says
Thanks a million for jumping in, Jennifer!!
xoxo Nicole
Michelle says
These look like they would be a perfect after school snack! When I was a kid, we used to dip the fork in granulated sugar before making the cross hatches- it adds a little sparkly crunch. Thanks for another great recipe!
Michelle says
I made these today, and they are fast, easy and fabulous. I am very popular around my house right now- there is talk of a parade. Thanks!
Jennifer Sasse says
I am also on this cookie cook book band wagon (or as betty crocker in the 50’s or 60’s said “cooky” cook book!). I would love for you to put all these cookies in one book, and honestly, you have a ton of great cookies on here but you’ve only scratched the surface my friend. You would have a whole section on holiday cookies made over, the classics, cookies made into bars, you could even go paleo and complete allergy friendly in a section. Oh oh or what about cookies made with your cake batter recipes? would love that too. I remember seeing in a regular cookie cook book, a base recipe and then there were tons of variations you could do with that one base. People love that! so as you can see, I think the possibilities are endless when it comes to GF cookies. I’m tired of buying GF cookies at the super market and they taste like complete crap and they also have no imagination at all. Same old kinds over and over again….I totally see this as a new venture for you… you could even solicit suggests on here – everyone has a favorite cookie from their childhood or before going GF that they would want made over. Ok. I’ll get off my step stool now.
Thanks for this recipe – it is a classic and soooo yummy. would love to see a nutella version in your new cookie cook book! teehee! : )
MIchelle says
What Jennifer said!
John Lachett says
Cook-IE-Book!
Cook-IE-Book!
Cook-IE-Book!
Your GFF,
John L