{reference my notes below for an explanation of that glob of chocolate...}
My friend Kerstin introduced me to these via the blog A House in the Hills. It's a beautiful blog - check it out when you have some time! The recipe on the blog, however, is vegan. I'm absolutely not saying there's anything wrong with that, but I did tweak my version of the recipe and it's most certainly not vegan. Here's my version...
Salted Peanut Butter Cups
1/2 cup unsalted butter
3/4 cup peanut butter (I missed the 'crunchy' part of her ingredient... I recommend that you use it!)
3/4 cup graham cracker crumbs
1/4 cup raw sugar
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1/4 cup unsweetened almond milk
sea salt to sprinkle on top
Line a mini muffin tin with papers. You certainly could use a regular size muffin tin, but I'm warning you, these babies are sweet and rich... More power to you if you can eat a regular size!
Melt the butter in a sauce pan over medium heat and then stir in the peanut butter, graham cracker crumbs, and sugar. When it's melted and mixed, spoon the mixture into the muffin tins.
In a separate pan, combine the chocolate and milk. Stir over medium heat until the chocolate has melted.
Spoon the chocolate over the peanut butter, filling the papers almost to the top.
Sprinkle with sea salt and then refrigerate.
Taylor's Notes:
Ok, like I mentioned, mine aren't vegan or good for you (well, not good in terms of healthy at least), but man... they are delicious. Here are a few things I found...
- The peanut butter mixture didn't set up on it's own (refer to picture above where the chocolate started sinking into the peanut butter). I ended up sticking them in the refrigerator for about 15 minutes or so before I poured the rest of the chocolate on.
- I do think that actually using crunchy peanut butter may have helped that. I suppose I'll have to make them again to try out that theory. Darn.
- I made another half-batch of chocolate based on Sarah's notes. You can tell how that affected the peanut butter to chocolate ratio. You can definitely play with it based on how you like your chocolate and peanut butter to play together.
- These are best eaten right out of the refrigerator. Actually, better yet, out of the freezer. I served them at a party and the longer they sat out, they got a little soft and were kind of difficult to eat.
Other than that, these are way too easy to make and I'm going to try to forget that I ever made them. Yeah right.
Enjoy!
Side note... Baxter's face looked exactly like this the entire time I was making these. He's a huge fan of peanut butter, too. I'm sure he'd love chocolate as much as me, too, if I'd let him...