Guess what? I have created a no bake homemade chewy granola bars recipe that is going to knock you off your seats!
I’m telling you.. this recipe is really good. I am a little angry at myself for not creating it sooner. After all, I have been making my own granola for years now to eat with yogurt and fruit. My kids love it, but it seems like they like these granola bars better. Maybe it’s because of the chocolate chips, not sure… either way these are really really delicious.
Have you seen the ingredients on store-bought granola bars? Lots of processed ingredients. But I wanted to make a more healthy granola bar, with real ingredients, and it needed to be kid friendly. This homemade granola bar had to be the soft chewy kind, and had to be easy. Lastly I wanted to make a large quantity so that I could freeze the bars and plop them into my kids lunches.
I played around with the ingredients that I wanted to use and made a few batches until I came up with the prefect concoction. Muwhahaha (that’s my evil scientist laugh). They tasted like heaven. My kids couldn’t get enough! I was worried that I was going to be in a lot of pain from eating so many — I really should have thought twice before inhaling that 8th granola bar. This was the actual thought that went through my head that night. I know, it’s quite sad.
I hope you and your family enjoy these no bake homemade chewy granola bars as much as we did.
No Bake Homemade Chewy Granola Bars
Ingredients:
1/2 cup raw sugar or brown sugar
1 1/2 cups honey (Buy some on Amazon here)
1/3 cup coconut oil (Buy quality Coconut Oil here)
1/4 tsp. fine sea salt (Buy on Amazon here)
1 cup 100% all natural crunchy peanut butter – ( I used the Adams brand)
2 tsp. vanilla extract
4 cups crisped rice cereal
2 2/3 cups old fashioned oats
2/3 cups ground flax seed
1/2 – 1 cups mini chocolate chips
Method:
In a large bowl, combine your oats, crispy rice cereal, and ground flax seed. Stir with a large spoon until well combined. Set aside.
Measure out sugar, honey, coconut oil, and sea salt and place in a sauce pan over medium heat. Bring it to a boil. Stirring the whole time, boil for exactly 1 minute so mixture combines and sugars dissolve. Take pan off the heat and add in the crunchy peanut butter and vanilla extract. Stir until smooth. Pour this Peanut buttery honey deliciousness over your bowl of oat/crispy rice cereal mixture.
Stir until well combined.
Let this mixture sit and cool for about 5-8 minutes. Meanwhile, grab a large cookie sheet or jelly roll pan (mine is sized at 12½ x 17½ by 1 inch), and some parchment paper. Place cookie sheet on a large piece of parchment paper and trace around the outside of it. Cut it out and place this on the inside of your cookie sheet. It should fit perfectly. This will help later to keep the granola bars in one piece before cutting up. Believe me on this. I tried greasing the pan and it didn’t work.
After the mixture has cooled enough that the mini chocolate chips wont melt upon contact, pour the granola mixture out onto the large cookie sheet.
Spread mixture out evenly.
Next, tear off another large piece of parchment paper and place this over your granola mixture. Take another jelly roll pan or cookie sheet the same size and place it on top of the parchment. Press down. This will help to compact the granola so that the bars will stay together and not fall apart. Little helpers love to do this part.
Remove cookie sheet and parchment, sprinkle mini chocolate chips evenly over the top and repeat the process above, taking the parchment paper and extra cookie sheet and pressing the two together so that the chocolate chips get pressed into the bars.
Remove parchment paper and cookie sheet. If you have fridge space, place cookie sheet in the fridge to finish cooling. If not, it can finish cooling on the counter just as well. Once the bars have cooled completely, slide solidified mixture out of your pan. Yell hallelujah and pat yourself on the back for using parchment paper. Didn’t that make things so much easier? At this point they should look like this….
Now take a cute knife… and yes, the knife has to be cute (don’t ask dumb questions), and cut the bars into the size of your choosing.
Here is a grid to help you see just how I cut mine.
Be prepared to be blown away. I was amazed at just how easy these were to make and how good they tasted. They are so soft and chewy and honestly, I don’t know if I will ever go back to store bought. Not only are my homemade chewy granola bars tastier, they are healthier too. I’d be willing to bet that bar to bar, they are cheaper than store bought.
To Freeze: Wrap each bar in plastic wrap.
Place in a freezer safe zip lock bag and freeze. In the morning, I pull out a bar and put it in my children’s lunches. By lunch hour they have thawed, becoming soft and chewy again.
Below I have added the printable version of this recipe. Enjoy!
no bake homemade chewy granola bars
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup raw sugar or brown sugar
- 1 1/2 cups honey
- 1/3 cup coconut oil
- 1/4 tsp fine sea salt
- 1 cup 100% all natural crunchy peanut butter
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 4 cups crisp rice cereal I used organic
- 2 2/3 cups old fashioned oats
- 2/3 cups ground flax seed
- 1/2- 1 cup mini chocolate chips
Instructions
- In a large bowl, combine your oats, crisped rice cereal, and ground flax seed. Stir with a large spoon until well combined. Set aside.
- Measure out sugar, honey, coconut oil, and sea salt and place in a sauce pan over medium heat. Bring it to a boil. Stirring the whole time, boil for exactly 1 minute so mixture combines and sugars dissolve. Take pan off the heat and add in the crunchy peanut butter and vanilla extract. Stir until smooth. Pour this Peanut buttery honey deliciousness over your oat/rice crispy mixture. Stir until well combined.
- Let this mixture sit for about 5-8 minutes. Meanwhile, Grab a large cookie sheet or jelly roll pan sized(mine is sized at 12½ x 17½ by 1 inch), and some parchment paper. Place cookie sheet on a large piece of parchment paper and trace around the outside of it. Cut it out and place this on the inside of your cookie sheet. It should fit perfectly. This will help later to keep the granola bars in one piece before cutting up.
- Next pour out granola bar mixture onto cookie sheet. Press with a second cookie sheet so it is flat. Then immediately spread your chocolate chips on the top and press again.
- Allow to cool. You can add it to your fridge or leave on counter to cool. Once the bars have cooled completely, slide solidified mixture out of your pan. Now take a knife and cut the bars into the size of your choosing. (I cut 5 bars across and 7 bars down making 35 bars total).
Notes
Nutrition
Loved this recipe?
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If you loved this recipe and are hungry for more check out the from scratch or freezer meals section of my website. Oh and if you try this recipe out please come back and let me know if you liked it too!
Comments & Reviews
Sara Gill says
I made them & they are delicious! Just one problem…they fall apart & don’t stick together in a bar. They are like clumps. Any advice?
Brandi says
I was wondering if these would turn out chewy if I omitted the sugar? Possibly more honey?
Mandy Vieyra says
I am allergic to Peanut Butter so I used natural Almond Butter and I love these. Although I think they do not stick together because AB is a different texture then PB. I read a few of these and am not sure what do add more off to make them stick together?
I think I’ll try PB next for my hubby and son – until I’m enjoying what I have.
PS It would taste amazing on ice cream!
Melanie says
I just made these substituting crunchy almond butter due to a peanut allergy in our household. Yum, Yum, Yummy (okay, the mixture was, the bars are still cooling). I do think I may reduce some of the sugar next time as they are quite sweet, but the sea salt combats it so I don’t think it is a flavor that my children will dislike (ha…children…disliking sweets!).
I was impatient to try these so thought rather than waiting to get mini chips I would just chop regular-sized ones in a food processor. I wouldn’t recommend it, quite a mess, but I’m sure they will still taste great.
I’m not convinced on the money saving, though. These seem like pretty premium ingredients and though I have plenty of coconut oil left (well I had some on-hand and still have lots left), I used it most of the jar of almond butter and more than one of the honey. I definitely think knowing what is in your food is more important than cost, though.
If they go over well I will try next time with some dried fruit, too. Thanks for sharing this recipe!
Mandi Davis says
I made this with Nutella since my son is a huge Nutella fan. It’s a BIG hit in my family! It tastes very similar to Little Debbie’s Star Crunch snacks all it would need would be a caramel drizzle for taste! My 6yr old and 1 yr old gobble these up fast! My son says he likes these way better than the Quaker brand chewy granola bars!
Happy.MoneySaver says
Thanks! We love it, too!
Happy.MoneySaver says
For those of you looking for a way to combat some of the sweetness of the honey—one of my friends tried making these granola bars using 3/4 cup honey and 3/4 cup corn syrup instead of just the 1.5 cups honey. She said they take out some of the sweetness of the granola bars and give it a firmer texture while still staying true to the flavors. I haven’t tried it as I don’t use corn syrup but for those that do it might be worth a try!
Waynette says
Could molasses be used instead of part of the honey?
Happy.MoneySaver says
I haven’t tried that before! Let me know if you do and how it turns out!
Susan says
We finally got around to making these today. My toddler likes them. I like knowing all of the ingredients. For everyone concerned about sugar content, I have a toddler who is very sensitive to sugar in the sense that she gets very hyper and over emotional at the smallest amount. I decided to only put 1 cup of honey instead of 1 1/2. We did keep the raw sugar the same. The bars still stuck together great. In the end , if you follow Karrie.s directions you get 35 bars. They are not that large. I gave her one as a trial two hours ago and no adverse reactions. 🙂 she can not eat store bought granola bars without becoming a wild child… so thank you very much Karrie!
Seth says
Did some quick calculations to figure out the price per bar, and I came up with about 50 cents per bar. Not bad! Obviously, this number will be different depending on where you’re buying your ingredients and what types you’re getting, but it’s probably cheaper per bar in general. And probably better for you!
I agree that with 1.5 c of honey, they’re a little sweet for me. The next batch I make, I’m going to use less honey and more peanut butter and see how it turns out.
Trish says
I am looking for healthy treats to send to my son overseas. I wondered how long these would last. No, he would not be able to freeze them. I so want to make him cookies, but he won’t really eat them. lol Healthy does not always ship and last very well. Any suggestions would be appreciated!
Susan says
Trish,
I used 1 cup of honey instead of 1 1/2 so I can’t speak for the recipe exactly. But I know that when I had mine out of the fridge for a few hours they became soft. Not bad just really soft. It is about 64* in my house. I bring this up only because if you are sending them someplace really hot they might melt. At least mine would have. 🙂
RebekahDawn says
This was way too sweet for me and I love sugar. I think I would like it better with 1/2 to 3/4 cup honey and more peanut butter. Do you think the texture would be okay?
Happy.MoneySaver says
I haven’t tried it before but I don’t think it would change it too much. If anything it would probably just be more peanut buttery which is not a bad thing at all! It’s definitely worth a try. Let me know what you think!
Samantha says
Love these! Although I really made the recipe my own because i was to eager to wait till I can get to the store next. I left out the coconut oil and was a wee bit light with the honey, peanut butter and brown sugar. I also added dried cranberries, almonds and dark chocolate. I also had to substitute the rice cereal for my sons banana flavored rice based cereal. They turned out great with so many options. Awesome base thanks. Keep up the wonderful work. I am newly married and and so i inherited a small farm frton city to country we are working our way to being self sufficient.
Christina says
I’m glad to see yours turned out great without the coconut oil. I was planning to try this with sun butter, but was wondering if it was possible to leave out the coconut oil or use a different oil in it’s place…. My son has a tree nut allergy so he can’t have coconut (recently added to the tree nut list).
Mandy says
Wonder how the bars would hold up to using Stevia? I still have a ton of dried leaves from my last harvest. I try to stay away from using Sugar. Will let you know. : ) Great posts btw!
Sally says
Did you ever try the stevia?
Andre says
Hi , I subscribe to The Prairie Homestead, and your, ” NO BAKE HOMEMADE CHEWEY GRANOLA BARS” recipe appeared tonight. I have been on a ‘quest ‘ of sorts to find a healthy- delicious fruit and nut bar. I think this one is the closest that has come to fitting that description since I ‘ve begun looking . ITs also simple enough to substitute a few ingredients for others. I like the proportions of ingredients as well . Many thanks for posting and best wishes on the success of your blog.
Carin says
That is a lot of total sugar plus chocolate chips! Sounds more like a candy bar, no wonder your kids love them..
Lisa says
Couldn’t you substitute more peanut butter for the coconut oil? I don’t know – just a thought. I don’t really care for the taste of coconut.
Crystal says
Are they gluten free? I dont know because I need to make something for the family, they can’t have any gluten.
Karrie says
You would have to buy gluten free oats, chocolate chips, and make sure the ground flax seed is gluten free (not sure on that one?)
Megan says
These were easy and good! But I think I will reduce the vanilla and skip the brown sugar next time, they were very sweet, more like a no bake cookie than a granola bar. Not necessarily a bad thing depending what you’re going for : )
Karrie says
Is is weird that I love my own recipe so much that I have made this like 4 times already? It’s true. These are so good.
lei says
I think that’s great 🙂
Liz. beasley says
Is there something I could substitute for the coconut oil. One of my kids loves it, my other son does not. I’m allergic to it, and it’s one of the few I cannot cheat with. Sad day, because I was given a 5 gallon bucket full of pure coconut oil.
Heather says
I’d also like to know if there is a substitute for coconut oil as we are out and can’t go to the store for awhile!
Happy.MoneySaver says
I am not sure if there is a good substitute for the coconut oil. If you find something let me know! 🙂