These homemade chocolate peanut butter eggs are easy to make, and they taste just like classic Reese’s peanut butter egg Easter candies!


Copycat Reese’s chocolate peanut butter eggs
Dear Easter Bunny,
I want just one thing for Easter: a basket filled sky high with these chocolatey, peanut buttery homemade chocolate peanut butter eggs.
Do you think you can do this for me?
I will be your best friend.
In return, I will make you a giant batch of Healthy Carrot Cake Cupcakes.
I will do your laundry for a month. You can keep the other candy.
Peeps shmeeps.

Homemade vs. store bought
The first great reason to make your own chocolate peanut butter eggs at home is to save money.
Just one package of Reese’s king size peanut butter eggs costs close to three dollars at the grocery store. In contrast, you can whip up an entire batch of DIY chocolate eggs for the same price.
And unlike the famous yellow packaged version, these homemade Reese’s peanut butter eggs include dairy free, nut free, vegan, gluten free, added sugar free, low carb, and oil free options, with no artificial flavors.
The best part is that the homemade chocolate eggs taste almost exactly like the ones you know and love from childhood!
It is so simple to make your own at home that you may never want to buy a package of chocolate peanut butter eggs again.
Craving peanut butter? Make Peanut Butter Cheesecake


Ingredients in chocolate peanut butter eggs
You need just four to five ingredients for these chocolate peanut butter Easter eggs.
Peanut butter – Choose your favorite smooth or crunchy peanut butter. Both natural and traditional jars work equally well.
For the best flavor, I recommend either going with a salted nut butter or stirring in about an eighth of a teaspoon of table salt.
Feel free to use a different nut or seed butter instead of peanut. Try almond butter, cashew butter, pistachio butter, Homemade Nutella, or allergy free sunflower butter.
Protein powder – Thicken and bind the candy eggs with your favorite flavored or unsweetened protein powder, oat flour, or almond flour.
Due to the difference in thickness among these three ingredients, you may need to either add more flour or more peanut butter to achieve the correct texture.
You may play around with other flours like spelt or coconut flour. However, I only stand behind the above options I have personally tried in my own kitchen.
Maple syrup – Pure maple syrup and honey or agave add sweetness to the Easter candies. I also include a keto version in the recipe box below, for those who prefer to use a powdered sweetener with no sugar added.
Chocolate – You have two options for the chocolate coating. The first option is to simply use melted dark or semi sweet chocolate chips. The second is to make a healthier chocolate sauce with cocoa powder, coconut oil, and maple syrup or stevia.
Chocolate peanut butter egg recipe video
Above – watch the step by step video.

How to make peanut butter eggs
If your peanut butter is not already soft and easy to stir, gently warm half a cup in the microwave or on the stove top to soften.
In a medium mixing bowl, stir together the softened peanut butter, protein powder or flour, and optional salt.
Mix in the pure maple syrup to form a crumbly dough.
Some nut butters and protein powders are drier than others, so you may need to add more peanut butter if the dough is too dry or more flour if it looks too wet.
Once the mixture achieves a peanut butter cookie dough texture, use your hands to shape oval eggs, rabbits, or other shapes of your choice.
Place the no bake chocolate eggs on a large plate lined with parchment paper or wax paper. Then refrigerate or freeze the plate while you prepare your chocolate sauce.

Chocolate covered peanut butter eggs
To make a chocolate coating using chocolate chips, carefully melt the chips in a microwave safe bowl or with the double boiler method. For a smoother sauce, stir in an optional teaspoon of coconut or vegetable oil after melting.
An alternative chocolate sauce: mix two tablespoons each of unsweetened cocoa powder, coconut oil, and pure maple syrup or honey (or two tablespoons water and stevia to taste) until completely smooth.
Take the peanut butter eggs from the refrigerator and cover them in melted chocolate with a spoon. Or dip each egg into the coating with a fork or a skewer.
Return the plate to the refrigerator or freezer for at least ten minutes. This step will set the chocolate shell.
I recommend refrigerating or freezing leftovers and enjoying them cold. However, you can leave the chocolate eggs out on the counter for a few hours in a cool place if serving at a party or for Easter dessert.


The best Easter candy
Chocolate peanut butter eggs have always been my favorite Easter treat. And it seems I am far from alone.
According to national sales numbers and polling data, Reese’s Milk Chocolate Peanut Butter Eggs are the most popular and highest selling Easter candy.
Year after year, chocolate peanut butter eggs beat out chocolate bunnies, marshmallow Peeps, Cadbury eggs, M&Ms, jelly beans, and Hershey’s Kisses.
Whether store bought or homemade, chocolate eggs are consistently number one in popularity for a good reason.
No one can resist these thick peanut butter candies with their smooth chocolate shell.
Serve a batch at your next Spring or Easter brunch, or keep them all for yourself!

*Pro Tip: This chocolate peanut butter egg recipe is great for other holidays too.
Use mini heart shaped cookie cutters to create chocolate peanut butter hearts for Valentine’s Day, chocolate pumpkins for Halloween, or festive Christmas trees and snowmen in December.

Chocolate Peanut Butter Eggs
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup peanut butter or allergy friendly substitute
- 1/4 cup protein powder or oat flour or almond flour
- 1/8 tsp salt (optional)
- 1 tbsp pure maple syrup (Here's a Keto version)
- 1/2 cup chocolate chips (or the healthy chocolate sauce recipe above)
Instructions
- If peanut butter is not already soft, gently warm it until easy to stir. Combine nut butter, flour, optional salt, and pure maple syrup to form a dough. Depending on the specific ingredients you choose, you may need to add more peanut butter if the mixture is too dry or more flour if too wet. Use your hands to form eggs or shapes of choice. Refrigerate while you carefully melt the chocolate chips or prepare the chocolate sauce. Dip eggs into chocolate, place on a parchment lined plate, and chill to set the coating. These chocolate peanut butter eggs can be left out on the counter in a cool place for a few hours. It is best to store leftovers in the refrigerator or freezer.View Nutrition Facts
Video
Notes


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I wanted to avoid extra sugar so I used almond butter originally and to make it less gooey, I used powdered peanut butter (PB2). Turned out pretty well…I’m just impatient and couldn’t wait long enough for the PB to freeze, haha. This girl doesn’t care though–yummy!
would be great if a Share link was at top of the recipes. Id love to share many of your recipes.
Thank you so much! I’m not sure how to do a share link, but I can definitely put it on my list of things to try and figure out! In the meantime, you can always copy the recipe link from your browser and paste it into a Facebook status update or a tweet. 🙂
i was wondering with the copycat peanut butter cup eggs if you knew of any substitutes for the powdered sugar, that would fall into the catagory of paleo? My 14 year old daughter has Juvenille Rhematoid Arthritis and she is on the Paleo diet and cannot have processed sugars. Its easter and im looking for something i could make for her easter basket.
Thank you, Lisa
Try just leaving it out, or use stevia drops or honey?
I love you
I have made chocolate peanut butter eggs; aka reeses peanut butter eggs/copycat peanut butter eggs for over 45 years. the recipe has been passed down through the family for more than 100 years, from family members in hungary. I use only 2 to 4 ingredients for the egg, & 2 ingredients for the shell/coating. not a lot of sugar or sugar subtitutes either. I know that reese’s Hershey introduced their copycat chocolate peanut butter egg in 1928, without permission to use recipe.
awesome recipe! love leaving these out of the freezer for a bit and they melt so nicely mmmm!
deffo a chocolate girl!
Yum! I have been looking for a recipe like this one, thank you! Can’t wait to try it 🙂 I absolutely love this blog!
Used PB2 for this recipe and worked out great just had to do a little trial and error until the proportions came out right. I used about 7 tbsp of Pb2, 3 tbsp water, 1/2 cup powdered sugar and it made 18 small eggs at about 46 calories per egg. Definitely satisfies my urges for something sweet.
this chocolate food looks good
i would try to make this at home with my family and i will make it to see if it also looks tastes good the way it looks
To bad they will put me In the HOSPITAL Artificial Sweeteners is one thing I can not have they are what triggers my Seizures. To Bad I saw the Words healthy “Reeses egg” LOL its Not so Healthy if it puts you in the Hospital for 2 days…
There is no artificial sweetener called for in this recipe whatsoever. Google what the ingredients are to find out more. But Katie does not use artificial sweeteners in her recipes, including this one.