Homemade Peanut Butter

Learn how to make AMAZING homemade peanut butter! It's super smooth, creamy, and flavorful - you won't be able to stop eating it by the spoonful.

Homemade peanut butter

I start drooling just looking at the pictures of this homemade peanut butter! Jack and I have been all about cooking projects lately, churning out homemade bagels, pasta, tortillas, and more. We’ve loved all of them, but this homemade peanut butter recipe reminded us that cooking projects don’t have to be ambitious to be fun.

This peanut butter recipe calls for just 1 or 2 ingredients, and it comes together in under 10 minutes. Still, making it is a blast! You get to watch whole peanuts transform into the smoothest, creamiest nut butter you’ve ever seen. Its oozy texture beats any store bought brand I’ve tried, and its rich peanut flavor is out of this world. You won’t be able to resist eating it by the spoonful!

Jar of homemade peanut butter

Peanut Butter Recipe Tips

Ready to learn how to make peanut butter? There are a few things you should know before you start:

  1. Making this recipe is easy, but it does require patience. Your food processor will need to run for almost 10 minutes, including breaks, before the nuts become smooth and spreadable.
  2. You’re going to need to stop the food processor often. Making homemade nut butter can be hard on a food processor’s motor, so be sure to stop it every 30 seconds to 1 minute to give it a chance to cool off. This break is also a great opportunity to scrape down the sides of the bowl.
  3. The amount of peanuts you use should be proportionate to the size of your food processor. I use 3 cups of peanuts in my 7-cup food processor. If yours is much larger, you’ll need more nuts to create a smooth, creamy spread.
  4. You don’t need anything except for dry roasted peanuts, and maybe salt. You can use unsalted or salted peanuts in this recipe, but if yours aren’t salted, you’ll need to season to taste with salt at the end.

Peanuts in a food processor

How to Make Peanut Butter

Add the peanuts to the bowl of a food processor, and process until very smooth, pausing to scrape down the sides of the bowl every 30 seconds or so. When you first start grinding the peanuts, it might not seem like they’ll blend into a smooth nut butter. But trust me, they will! You don’t need to add any vegetable oil, I promise.

At the beginning, they’ll be chunky.

How to make peanut butter

Then, they’ll form a shaggy ball.

Peanut butter in a food processor

And finally, they’ll blend into creamy natural peanut butter! Let the food processor run as long as necessary to get the mixture really smooth. Store it in an airtight container or jar at room temperature or in the refrigerator for up to 1 month. Enjoy!

Homemade peanut butter recipe   Spoon of peanut butter

How to Use Homemade Peanut Butter

There are so many ways to use this homemade peanut butter! Here are a few of my favorites:

What’s your favorite way to use it? Let me know in the comments!

Peanut butter

More Homemade Basics

If you loved learning how to make peanut butter, try making one of these easy recipes for homemade basics next:

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Homemade Peanut Butter

rate this recipe:
4.97 from 118 votes
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Learn how to make AMAZING homemade peanut butter! It's super smooth, creamy, and filled with rich peanut flavor. You're going to want to eat it by the spoonful!

Ingredients

  • 3 cups dry roasted & salted or unsalted peanuts
  • sea salt, to taste, (if using unsalted peanuts)

Instructions

  • Place the peanuts in a medium food processor.* Process until very smooth, stopping every 30 seconds to 1 minute to scape down the sides of the bowl, as necessary, and to give the food processor's motor a break. The mixture will be chunky at first. Then, it'll thicken into a ball, and finally, it will become creamy and smooth. The whole process should take about 8 to 10 minutes.

Notes

Makes about 1 cup.
*Note: I use my 7-cup Cuisinart or KitchenAid food processor. If yours is much larger, you may want to increase the amount of peanuts so that there's enough quantity to blend well.

164 comments

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Rate this recipe (after making it)




  1. Donna Basaldua
    12.20.2022

    Hi, can you use the peanut butter to cook with? I want to make some no bake cookies with it. Has anyone tried it with no bakes?

  2. sonyab
    10.27.2022

    hey all!!
    super excited to try this recipe- we all love peanut butter in my house, so If I can make it from scratch and know exactly what’s in it-even better.
    Q: about how long will this last in my pantry? has anyone tried canning it?
    please LMK thanks!

    • Phoebe Moore
      10.28.2022

      The peanut butter should keep for 3 weeks to a month in an airtight container in the fridge. Hope you enjoy!

  3. Jo
    10.06.2022

    5 stars
    I used honey roasted peanuts and added some dark chocolate towards the end. I call it peanutella! Now my family wants me to make it all the time. I have mixed feelings about that! XD

  4. Nick
    10.02.2022

    Hi,

    I’m trying to make the butter but at 15 minutes in the nuts are still crumbly. I roasted them in oven and have salted them prior. It’s the first time this happened. Any thoughts as to why this may he happening?

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      10.08.2022

      Hi Nick, it can depend on your food processor or the nuts might be too dry. I would drizzle in some oil until it starts to blend more.

      • Peter
        11.18.2022

        Thanks for the recipe, this is ideal for my Frenchie as shop bought can contain hidden dangerous chemicals

    • Lucy
      12.05.2022

      Maybe that’s why they didn’t turn out if you roasted your already bought as roasted salted peanuts. If this is the case you would have dried them out.

  5. Phanes
    09.16.2022

    5 stars
    I like to do this with shelled Spanish peanuts I’ve roasted in a skillet with peanut oil to a medium-dark brown so they taste very well roasted. Then I salt them with powdered sea salt sprinkled through a mesh teaballer. And I like to leave the skins on because they add a flavor I love more than “naked” peanuts. It comes out a dark peanut butter, but it tastes so good. To me, if a peanut still tastes sweet, it hasn’t been roasted long enough. Not to say I won’t eat a good peanut, but I like fairly dark peanuts that are almost on the verge of becoming bitter. If there is a hint of bitterness, that’s fine, too. I like the coffee-like flavor of peanuts pushed a little beyond medium roast.

    While it’s still in the dry, but finely chopped stage, it makes a fantastic topping for ice cream. And it’s also good to just eat the stuff with a spoon.

  6. Adam
    09.01.2022

    5 stars
    Wow ! I’m so glad a normal food processor works. I used to make this using a top of the line Braun machine which had 10 speeds. But that machine broke years ago, so I stopped making my own peanut butter. I was under the false impression that it only works if the blades move slowly. Thanks for sharing this!

    I don’t like store bought cause all the brands available in my area contain palm oil uggggh!

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      09.02.2022

      I’m so glad it came out well for ryou!

    • Adam
      09.02.2022

      5 stars
      Follow up: Oh my gosh ! I just made the purest, healthiest peanut butter in my humble food processor. I just used lightly salted peanuts (many of which had their skins- the skins have antioxidants and disappear in the blend). For years I’ve not had peanut butter because everything I find contains palm oil or other hydrogenated oil, which are nasty (bad for cholesterol). They are added as “stabilizers” to prevent the oil from separating – but they also give peanut butter that smooth Nutella-like spreadable quality. Although Nutella is much worse since it actually contains more than 50% palm oil! And less than 10% chocolate & hazelnut combined. Back to peanut butter, your description & photos are amazingly accurate. You did a great job explaining what will happen. At one point, I just reached a peanut meal stage and thought “this is it… It won’t liquify”, but just like you said, it started clumping then formed a ball (I jumped when I saw the “ball”) then before I knew it, it turned into a paste and finally a runny peanut butter. Runny only due to the heat. It solidifies once cooled. This is the most useful recipe and is literally life changing in my case. Thanks again!!!

      • Jeanine Donofrio
        09.06.2022

        Hi Adam, I’m so glad your peanut butter was amazing!

  7. Sandy
    07.25.2022

    Just read the recipe for peanut butter. Anxious to try it and other nut butters. Thanks!

  8. Kimberly
    07.06.2022

    4 stars
    Turned out very good by itself. I wanted it for PBJ sandwiches, but its not good that way. Jam changed the texture completely and I didn’t taste the peanut butter at all. My advice would be to eat it plain like on an apple or just a piece of bread. Don’t mix it with anything. I’ll give 4 stars because it is good , but not good enough for what I really needed it for.

  9. Shannon
    06.29.2022

    Can I use a ninja or blender to make the peanut butter I do not have a real food processor

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      07.02.2022

      Hi Shannon, I don’t have one so I’m not sure. I’ve made it in my vitamix before but it’s harder because you have to keep stirring it at the bottom for it all to incorporate.

    • Sherese
      07.18.2022

      I did amd mine came out good still

    • Lesley Olbrys
      08.09.2022

      Hi, I made it in my Vitamix blender. It took about 1 minute. It may take just a little longer in another blender.

    • Adam
      09.02.2022

      5 stars
      Hi Shannon. I’m sure it will work in a Ninja. I did mine in a basic food processor which has 2 speeds only – nothing fancy . I put it on high speed. And I didn’t have to even stir it or mix it at all. Just don’t let your machine over heat too much. The wires or the plastic starts to melt. Just Stop when you feel it’s overheating . Pausing won’t affect the progress of your peanut butter. Then start again after letting the machine cool down. The process took me less than 10 minutes . A ninja may take up to 10 minutes. Just be patient & have faith that it will work. Believe me it works! At first u see it as powder … then a couple minutes later it starts to clump & turn to paste. It starts to transform at the base first – closer to the blades … you’ll see it get smoother and smoother. Enjoy! (Ps: reason I’m sure a Ninja works is I used to have a Braun Multi- part processor which had a grinder I used to make peanut butter. It was an upside down glass bullet shape which couldn’t be opened. So I couldn’t stir. I just had to be patient and wait for paste to form eventually – only difference was that machine had 10 speeds & I used the slowest speed. Now I know speed is irrelevant. I just made PB on high speed)

  10. Carmen A
    06.24.2022

    5 stars
    How do I store this creamy peanut butter

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      06.26.2022

      Hi Carmen, in a jar either at room temp or in the fridge.

  11. allie
    06.22.2022

    I want to use unsalted blanched peanuts. I am going to roast them but do I need to soak first? thank you!

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      06.22.2022

      Hi Allie, you shouldn’t have to soak them.

      • Precious
        07.21.2022

        Can I use normal groundnut to do it

        • Jae
          08.23.2022

          You can.

          Groundnuts are peanuts, it’s just a different name.

  12. Jeff
    06.11.2022

    5 stars
    Love it with slices of apples or bananas

  13. Kary M
    05.25.2022

    5 stars
    Just made this and aside from the ease, it’s definitely some smooth tasty peanut butter. I halved the recipe, added some honey using my Cuisinart Mini-prep food chopper instead of dragging out the big processor. Alternated back & forth from chop to grind, giving it a rest as recommended in recipe. Thank you for sharing your recipe

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      05.26.2022

      I’m so glad you loved it!

  14. Maria Bastone
    05.09.2022

    What kind of nuts do I use to make homemade peanut butter

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      05.09.2022

      Hi Maria, just regular peanuts.

  15. Vicki Ioannidou
    03.27.2022

    I always make my own peanut butter. I’m a pushover for anything sweet, so in goes a good dollop of honey ir maple syrup as well. Probably not vegan, sorry.

  16. Mike
    02.11.2022

    5 stars
    Glad I found this recipe. Really easy to make and the resulting peanut butter tastes great! But you definitely have to let the food processor rest and cool off.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      02.13.2022

      Hi Mike, I’m so glad you enjoyed it!

  17. Papi/Maricela
    01.24.2022

    5 stars
    Everyone post but no one’s explaining what recipe that they’re talking about I scroll up and I see all types of love and lemons recipes like for instance true example I looked up peanut butter just to see what you had in recipe for him for something as basic as peanut butter and all of a sudden all these recipes below it pop up which is wonderful then I look at the comments which I always do and you guys are talking about things but it doesn’t signify exactly which recipe the way it’s explained sounds like a different recipe each time who knows maybe I’m overthinking it but it would be nice to to know which recipe and point it out ,….Please and Thank you

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      01.26.2022

      Hi, the comments in each post go along with the main recipe page you are on… not the other small recipe images.

  18. Charlene
    01.22.2022

    5 stars
    This recipe is very easy to make with clear and concise instructions! Because I like the flavor of cashews, I used 1/2 cashews, half dry roasted peanuts. After making it, I was amazed that the batch yielded 3 1/2 jars of peanut butter.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      01.23.2022

      I’m so glad you loved it!

      • Precious
        07.21.2022

        Can I use normal groundnut to do it

  19. Karen
    12.01.2021

    How long does it last at room temp?

  20. Ness
    11.17.2021

    5 stars
    I think its best if you can add the nutrition facts on your recipe. Thanks! Looks amazing

A food blog with fresh, zesty recipes.
Photograph of Jeanine Donofrio and Jack Mathews in their kitchen

Hello, we're Jeanine and Jack.

We love to eat, travel, cook, and eat some more! We create & photograph vegetarian recipes from our home in Chicago, while our shiba pups eat the kale stems that fall on the kitchen floor.