These peanut butter swirl brownies are truly decadent and rich in every bite. They’re the ultimate fudgy dark chocolate brownies swirled with salty, creamy peanut butter on top!
This post is sponsored by Bob’s Red Mill and Bake from Scratch Magazine as part of their Better Baking Academy – but the opinions (and many devoured brownies during the testing process) are all mine.
Hello hello! We’re making super fudgy brownies today!
And not just any brownies. Peanut butter swirl brownies…oh yes. If you could pick my two favorite flavors in the world and bring them together, you would have peanut butter and dark chocolate…and these peanut butter swirl brownies would be the result.
Peanut Butter Swirl Brownies: Details
I’m so excited to share a peanut butter brownie recipe with you as my interpretation of this month’s Better Baking Academy recipe – The Ultimate Brownie. The Better Baking Academy is a totally free, online baking school developed by Bob’s Red Mill and Bake from Scratch Magazine. Each month they will release a new recipe focusing on fundamental baking skills, with with step-by-step photos and expert tips.
When Bob’s and Bake from Scratch reached out to me to play with their new recipe for The Ultimate Brownie, it was a no-brainer. I already have a few brownie recipes on here, including a flourless skillet brownie and my favorite fudgy brownies, but seriously, you can never have enough brownie recipes in your life.
If you want to hear me talk about all things brownies, chocolate, how I learned to bake and my double life as an attorney and blogger, I’ll be appearing this week on The Crumb Podcast with Brian Hart Hoffman and Kyle Grace Mills from the Bake from Scratch editorial team. I had so much fun talking to them about this peanut butter swirl brownie recipe and love their passion for baking! You can listen to it anywhere you get your podcasts.
Brownies are my go-to for any party, birthday, breakup, bad day, good day, and random Tuesday. They make everyone light up and never fail to satisfy that chocolate craving at the end of a meal…if they’re done correctly.
Unfortunately, there are way too many subpar brownie recipes out there. And let’s not even talk about the fact that most people rely on brownie mixes to do the job…some people don’t even think it’s possible to make a homemade fudgy brownie without a box mix.
Well I am here to say: false.
Tips for success: homemade fudgy peanut butter brownies
You can read the Better Baking Academy post for more detail on this, but for me after much trial and error, it comes down to the following:
- Melted, good quality chocolate. This adds moisture, flavor, fat, and that amazing mouthfeel we all crave. I like to use a dark chocolate with at least 60% cocoa for best flavor. In this recipe we are melting the butter and chocolate together for fudgiest results.
- Eggs. The proteins provide structure to the brownie as it bakes, but also richness and fat from the yolk. Often you’ll see recipes add an extra egg yolk for even more richness (it’s not needed here).
- Slightly under-baking. Anyone who has baked a box mix knows this, but if you bake brownies just a couple minutes under the recommendation, the fudge factor is massively higher. Don’t worry, everything is fully cooked by the time we take them out.
- Refrigeration. This was a new technique to me with this recipe, but it really works! After letting the pan cool for a couple minutes, we put the entire thing in the fridge (sitting on a tea towel to protect the shelf) until cold, and once cut, we store the brownies covered in the fridge too. It keeps the brownies from drying out and losing their richness.
How to make a peanut butter swirl on brownies
Now, let’s talk about the final element: the peanut butter on these peanut butter swirl brownies.
Is there a better pair than peanut butter and chocolate? I really don’t think so. But there’s definitely a limit to how much peanut butter one can use for the right balance.
I personally don’t want huge mouthfuls of peanut butter in my fudgy brownie, so I kept it to a thin swirl sitting on top of the batter. I used just 1/4 cup of room temperature, unsweetened, natural creamy salted peanut butter (the kind with just peanuts and salt as the ingredients – Trader Joe’s, Whole Foods, and most major grocery stores all have great versions).
You can also use shelf-stable peanut butter if you prefer. I tested with Skippy Natural and it definitely still worked, but because it has a thicker, less liquid texture, it didn’t swirl quite as prettily.
My best tip to getting a good pattern with the swirl is to dollop the peanut butter evenly in very small spoonfuls over top, then use a toothpick to randomly swirl it around. Don’t do it in a uniform way; rustic is best here. See the video for this post for my *highly scientific* swirling technique (haha).
For the cleanest cuts on the brownies, make sure they are completely cold and use a large, sharp knife like a chef’s knife so you can cut completely across the width of them. Wipe off the knife between each cut!
The best part is when you finally get to sink your teeth into that first bite of fudgy, peanut butter swirl brownie decadence. The richness and sweet chocolate depth of the brownie contrasts beautifully with the creamy, salty peanut butter.
These are definitely not diet food…but they are worth it.
More Brownie Recipes
- Small Batch Brownies in a Loaf Pan
- My Favorite Fudgy Brownies
- Flourless Almond Butter Skillet Brownie
- Salted Brownie Cookies
- Dark Cocoa Powder Brownies aka Midnight Brownies
Peanut Butter Swirl Brownies
Equipment
- 8×8 inch pan
Ingredients
- 4 oz dark chocolate, chopped (112g – about 3/4 cup)
- ½ cup unsalted butter (113g)
- ½ cup granulated sugar (100g)
- ½ cup brown sugar, packed (100g)
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract (4g)
- ⅔ cup all-purpose flour (80g)
- ¼ cup cocoa powder (21g)
- 1 teaspoon salt (3g)
- ½ teaspoon espresso powder (1g)
- ¼ cup natural salted creamy peanut butter**, warmed until pourable (67g)
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 325 degrees F. Grease an 8×8 square pan or line with parchment paper. Set aside.
- In a large bowl set in the top of a double boiler, or in the microwave in 30 second increments, melt the dark chocolate and butter, stirring occasionally, until smooth and glossy. Turn off heat, whisk in granulated and brown sugar, and let cool slightly.
- Whisk in the eggs one at a time until fully combined, followed by the vanilla.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, salt, and espresso powder.
- Add dry ingredients to the wet and stir together just until a stiff batter forms (this is thicker than normal brownie batter!).
- Scrape the batter into the prepared pan. Dollop small spoonfuls of the peanut butter evenly over the batter, then swirl with a toothpick until desired pattern is reached.
- Bake brownies for 35-40 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with just a few crumbs attached.
- Let brownies cool for a few minutes, then transfer to the fridge on top of a tea towel to cool completely in the pan. Store in the fridge for maximum fudginess!
Video
Notes
Like this peanut butter brownies recipe? Please rate it and leave a comment or tag me on Instagram @katiebirdbakes, and sign up for my email list to receive my recipes straight to your inbox every time I post!
Hi Katie! I’d like to make a big batch of these in advance, is it possible to freeze the sliced brownies after baking, then reheat them in the oven? Or would you suggest another method? Thanks!
Hi Lia – you definitely can freeze them, but I would just leave them out at room temperature for 6-8 hours before serving so they have a chance to defrost! No need to rebake them, I think that would dry them out. Enjoy!
Loved the PB swirl brownies….my family loved them a lot. Brownies disappeared in minutes.
Love from India!!
Yay! Thank you Aniza!!
SO. GOOD.
I was looking for a PB swirl brownie that didn’t require me to mix in additional melted butter or sugar etc with the PB – and this was it! I doubled the recipe for a 9×13 pan, used AP flour only and omitted the espresso powder. Love the fudgy brownie centers, and love that the PB swirl stays creamy after baking.
I shared the brownies with some friends and wish I had kept more for myself!
Thank you SO much for the amazing review, Joey! Wish I had you for a friend 😉
I want to try these, but would it change the flavor a lot if I leave the expresso powder out? They sound delicious! I just don’t do coffee or much caffeine.
Nope – won’t affect the recipe! You can totally leave it out. Enjoy!
Thank you! I will give them a try for Christmas!
I want to try these, but would it be ok to leave the expresso powder out? They sound really good..
Would chunky natural peanut butter work? Or do you recommend smooth? Thanks!
I think chunky natural PB would work! Hope you love the recipe!
Love them! I use chunky natural pb, since that is the only pb I ever use. Delicious, and easy!
Love that! I bet the texture from the chunky PB is awesome.
If I don’t have chickpea flour do I use an additional 1/4 cup of all purpose?
Yes, that’s exactly what you should do! Hope you love the brownies!
I heard about this recipe through The Crumb podcast. Made it with AP flour only and omg it was so good and the very definition of fudginess + so pretty thanks to the swirl 😍
Thank you Ori!! So glad you enjoyed!
Looks awesome! Would I be able to use oat flour instead in this recipe?
I think it would work! Let me know if you try it!
I left a similar question on your IG for this recipe, but I don’t know which one you might see. I want to use dried cherries, pretzels, chocolate chunks and peanut butter to add up to the 1 1/2 cups the original recipe calls for. Obviously a half cup of peanut butter weighs more than a half cup of pretzels or dried cherries, so how do I do the math? It would be so easy if the recipe said, “your mix-ins should weigh 150g ,” but instead it uses 1 1/2 cups. Please help a clueless not-quite-newbie baker.
Hey Laurie – I know we talked on Instagram about this but wanted to leave a written comment here in case anyone else has the same question – this is a halved scaled down version of the original recipe, so if you want to do add-ins I would limit them to 3/4 cup. So you should do 1/2 cup mix of the other mix-ins and then the 1/4 cup of peanut butter swirled over top. Thanks!