Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (2024)

Yes. Yes, it’s true.All your problems are solved now that this information has come into your life.

Homemade cookie butter from any cookie! I hope you appreciate the hours I’ve spent with cookies over the last couple of days—all the tasting and sampling of cookie after cookie. It was all for you guys!

But seriously, we wanted to bring you a recipe that would work for any cookie. So we searched until we found the perfect base for our cookie butter, and I think we found it!

You can either make one of our many delish cookie recipes to use for this, or you can buy some at the store to get started.

Related: Cookie Dough Dip, Oreo Dip, Dunkaroo Funfetti Dip, and 30+ Easy No-Bake Desserts.

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (1)

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (2)Cookie Butter (with any cookie!), makes 1 1/2 cups
Adapted from Buttercream & Chantilly Factory

2 cups cookie crumbs
1/2 stick butter
1/2 cup sweetened condensed milk
1/4 cup evaporated milk
water as needed
jars with lids for gifting/storage

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (3)First, you’ll want to make your cookie crumbs. If you have a cookie with no creamy middle filling (like a chocolate chip or sugar cookie), then you can put them straight into the food processor.

If you do have a filling (like an Oreo or Nutter Butter would), then you’ll want to open the cookie and scrape out the filling with a butter knife first. You want a dry crumb to work with, so the filling has to be removed.

Some cookies have a solid middle that you can’t open and get to (like a Milano cookie), but I think that would be OK since the chocolate chip cookies have some chocolate bits mixed in and they turned out fine.

Place your cookies into a food processor and blend until it forms a very fine powder.

You’ll need 2 cups, so just keep blending cookies until you get there (since all the cookies are different sizes or have two sides per cookie, the number of cookies needed won’t be the same).

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (4)Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (5)In a small saucepan, heat the butter over low heat until melted, and then stir in your sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk until it’s all melted together.

Starting with 1/2 cup of the liquid, pour it into your cookie crumbs and mix together with a spoon. Keep adding small amounts of the liquid until the cookie butter is just wet enough to stay together.

Depending on how dry the cookie is to begin with, you’ll need more or less liquid. Really buttery cookies (like the sugar cookies) didn’t need nearly as much as the drier Oreo cookies, so just keep checking and stirring as you add the liquid.

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (6)Once your cookie butter is blended, allow it to cool in the fridge for an hour or two. If you want to, you can actually stop at this point, and it will taste delicious.

But if you want to make the cookie butter smoother and easier to dip things in, then remove the cookie butter from the fridge and stir very small amounts of water (start with 1/8 teaspoon) into the dough.

At first it will look like the water is separating from the dough, but just keep stirring and mashing.

You should start to notice that the cookie butter loosens up a bit as you stir in more water. Keep adding and stirring until you get to a consistency you like and refrigerate the mixture again.

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (7)Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (8)Store your cookie butter in the fridge and it should be good for at least a week or two. It may be good for even longer but it usually doesn’t last long enough to find out! And here’s a quick video tutorial of the process:

I love all my cookie butter children equally, buuuut, the Oreo is my secret favorite. I am addicted to chocolate-covered pretzels, so you can imagine how good dipping pretzels into the Oreo cookie butter is. Elsie ate it with apples one morning for breakfast!

And of course, spooning the cookie butter into jars (these small jars with wooden lids are really cute for gifting) and adding a simple paper label makes your homemade treat the perfect gift!

If you’d rather just skip to the eating part, you can also just buy some already made cookie butter and get to the good part faster.

If you are gifting these, they would be a great gift with a cute apron or some pretty kitchen utensils, too. What cookies would you use to make yours? xo. Laura

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an easy homemade cookie butter recipe (using any cookie!)

Yield 1.5 cups

Ingredients

  • 2 cups cookie crumbs
  • ½ stick butter
  • ½ cup condensed milk (sweetened)
  • ¼ cup milk (evaporated)
  • water (as needed)

Instructions

  • First you’ll want to make your cookie crumbs. If you have a cookie with no creamy middle filling (like a chocolate chip or sugar cookie), then you can put them straight into the food processor.

    If you do have a filling (like an Oreo or Nutter Butter would), then you’ll want to open the cookie and scrape out the filling with a butter knife first.

    You want a dry crumb to work with, so the filling has to be removed. Some cookies have a solid middle that you can’t open and get to (like a Milano cookie), but I think that would be OK since the chocolate chip cookies have some chocolate bits mixed in and they turned out fine.

    Place your cookies into the food processor and blend until it forms a very fine powder.

    You’ll need 2 cups, so just keep blending cookies until you get there (since all the cookies are different sizes or have two sides per cookie, the number of cookies needed won’t be the same).

  • In a small saucepan, heat the butter over low heat until melted, and then stir in your sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk until it’s all melted together.

    Starting with 1/2 cup of the liquid, pour it into your cookie crumbs and mix together with a spoon.

    Keep adding small amounts of the liquid until the cookie butter is just wet enough to stay together. Depending on how dry the cookie is to begin with, you’ll need more or less liquid.

    Really buttery cookies (like the sugar cookies) didn’t need nearly as much as the drier Oreo cookies, so just keep checking and stirring as you add the liquid.

  • Once your cookie butter is blended, allow it to cool in the fridge for an hour or two. If you want to, you can actually stop at this point, and it will taste delicious.

    But if you want to make the cookie butter smoother and easier to dip things in, then remove the cookie butter from the fridge and stir very small amounts of water (start with 1/8 teaspoon) into the dough.

    At first it will look like the water is separating from the dough, but just keep stirring and mashing.

    You should start to notice that the cookie butter loosens up a bit as you stir in more water. Keep adding and stirring until you get to a consistency you like and refrigerate the mixture again.

  • Store your cookie butter in the fridge and it should be good for at least a week or two. It may be good for even longer but it usually doesn’t last long enough to find out! And here’s a quick video tutorial of the process:

Course Dessert

Cuisine American

Keywords cookie butter

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts

Homemade Cookie Butter

Serving Size

1 cup

Amount per Serving

Calories

1307

% Daily Value*

Fat

76

g

117

%

Saturated Fat

37

g

231

%

Polyunsaturated Fat

13

g

Monounsaturated Fat

20

g

Cholesterol

121

mg

40

%

Sodium

858

mg

37

%

Potassium

566

mg

16

%

Carbohydrates

142

g

47

%

Fiber

2

g

8

%

Sugar

86

g

96

%

Protein

17

g

34

%

Vitamin A

1394

IU

28

%

Vitamin C

3

mg

4

%

Calcium

366

mg

37

%

Iron

4

mg

22

%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notice: Nutrition is auto-calculated, using Spoonacular, for your convenience. Where relevant, we recommend using your own nutrition calculations.

Make Homemade Cookie Butter (With Any Cookie!) (2024)
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