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Monster Cookies

Monster cookies are the kind of bake that disappear fast because they hit every note at once: chewy oats, salty peanut butter, melty chocolate, and candy-coated crunch in every bite. ... Read more

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Monster Cookies

Monster cookies are the kind of bake that disappear fast because they hit every note at once: chewy oats, salty peanut butter, melty chocolate, and candy-coated crunch in every bite. The edges bake up golden and set while the centers stay soft, which is exactly what you want in a cookie this thick. They don’t need flour, which keeps the texture hearty and gives the oats room to do their job.

What makes this version work is the balance. Peanut butter carries the dough, brown sugar keeps it soft, and the eggs hold everything together since there’s no flour to provide structure. The trick is not to overbake them. These cookies finish setting on the pan, so pulling them when the centers still look a little underdone gives you that soft middle instead of a dry, crumbly cookie.

Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most, including how to keep the cookies thick, what to swap if you need to, and how to store them without losing that chewy texture.

The cookies baked up thick and chewy, and the oats gave them that perfect monster cookie texture without making them dry. I pulled them at 11 minutes and they set up exactly like the recipe said.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

These monster cookies are the ones to pin when you want thick, chewy peanut butter cookies packed with oats and colorful M&Ms.

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The One Thing That Keeps Monster Cookies Thick Instead of Crumbly

The biggest mistake with monster cookies is treating them like a standard drop cookie. There’s no flour here to build a delicate structure, so the texture depends on the peanut butter, oats, and eggs working together in the right ratio. If the dough feels loose, the cookies spread and bake up flat. If you overmix after the oats go in, they can turn dense and tough instead of chewy.

The dough should look thick, sticky, and scoopable, not runny. Quick-cooking oats matter because they soften fast and blend into the dough without leaving the cookies dry and bulky. The short rest happens in the oven and on the pan, so pulling them at the right moment is what keeps the centers soft.

What the Peanut Butter, Oats, and Candy Each Bring to the Dough

Monster Cookies chewy peanut butter colorful
  • Creamy peanut butter — This is the backbone of the recipe. It gives the cookies their richness, salt, and structure. Use a standard creamy peanut butter like the kind you’d spread on toast. Natural peanut butter can work, but if it’s oily or separated, the dough can turn greasy and spread more than you want.
  • Quick-cooking oats — These soften just enough in the oven to give the cookie its signature chewy bite. Old-fashioned oats will work in a pinch, but the cookies will be a little chunkier and less cohesive. If you use them, don’t increase the amount.
  • Brown sugar — This keeps the cookies soft and adds a deeper caramel note that plays well with peanut butter. Granulated sugar alone would make them drier and crisper. The mix of both sugars gives you edges with just enough snap and centers that stay tender.
  • M&Ms and chocolate chips — The M&Ms give the cookie its classic monster-cookie look and a candy crunch that doesn’t melt away. The chocolate chips add pockets of melt. Using both mini and regular chips gives better coverage so every cookie feels loaded without becoming hard to scoop.

Getting the Dough Mixed and the Cookies Baked at the Right Moment

Building the Base

Start by beating the peanut butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar until the mixture looks smooth and slightly lighter in color. That step helps dissolve some of the sugar and gives the cookies a better texture. Once the eggs, vanilla, and baking soda go in, mix just until the dough turns glossy and uniform. If you keep beating after that, the dough can tighten up and the cookies won’t spread evenly.

Bringing in the Oats and Mix-Ins

Stir in the oats until every bit is coated, then fold in the M&Ms and chocolate chips. The dough will be thick, and that’s what you want. If it starts to look dry, keep mixing only until the oats disappear into the base; overworking it can make the cookies feel heavy. A quick fold is enough to distribute the candy without breaking it up.

Shaping for Thick Centers

Scoop the dough into 2-tablespoon portions and flatten each one slightly with your palm before baking. That small press helps the cookies bake into round, thick discs instead of mounds that stay too tall in the center. Leave space between them because they do spread a bit as the peanut butter warms. If your dough is sticking to your hands, lightly dampen your palms instead of adding more flour or oats.

Knowing When They’re Done

Bake until the edges are set and lightly golden, but the centers still look a little underbaked. That’s the sweet spot. They finish cooking on the hot pan during the first few minutes out of the oven, and that carryover heat is what keeps them chewy. If you wait until the centers look fully baked in the oven, the cookies will set up too dry once they cool.

How to Change the Mix Without Losing the Chewy Center

Gluten-Free Monster Cookies

This recipe is naturally gluten-free as long as your oats are certified gluten-free. The texture stays the same because the oats are doing the structural work here, not flour. Just check the label on the M&Ms and chocolate chips if you need to avoid cross-contact.

Nut-Free Version

Swap the peanut butter for sunflower seed butter in the same amount. The cookies will still be chewy, but the flavor shifts a little earthier and the color can darken during baking. Use a no-stir sunflower butter for the most reliable texture, since oily varieties can spread too much.

Extra Chocolate Monster Cookies

If you want a more chocolate-forward cookie, increase the mini chocolate chips a little and reduce the M&Ms slightly. That gives you more melt without making the dough too crowded to scoop. Don’t add too much extra chocolate or the cookies can lose their chewy peanut butter balance.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days. They stay chewy, though the M&Ms will firm up a bit.
  • Freezer: These freeze well. Freeze baked cookies in a single layer, then transfer to a container for up to 2 months. You can also freeze scooped dough balls and bake from frozen with an extra minute or two.
  • Reheating: Warm a cookie in the microwave for 8 to 10 seconds if you want the chocolate soft again. Don’t overheat them or the oats will dry out and the centers lose that soft bite.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use old-fashioned oats instead of quick-cooking oats?+

Yes, but the texture changes. Old-fashioned oats make the cookies a little chunkier and less cohesive, while quick oats soften into the dough and give you that classic chewy monster cookie bite. If you swap them, keep the amount the same.

How do I keep monster cookies from spreading too much?+

Use a standard creamy peanut butter and measure the oats carefully. If the dough seems loose, let it sit for 5 to 10 minutes so the oats can absorb some moisture before scooping. Also, don’t skip the parchment paper, since bare pans encourage more spreading.

Can I make monster cookie dough ahead of time?+

Yes. You can refrigerate the dough for up to 24 hours, and the texture actually improves a little because the oats hydrate. Let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before scooping if it feels too firm.

How do I know when monster cookies are done baking?+

The edges should look set and lightly golden, but the centers should still look a little soft. They’ll finish setting as they cool on the baking sheet. If you wait until the center looks fully baked, the cookies will end up dry instead of chewy.

Can I freeze monster cookies after baking?+

Yes, and they freeze well. Cool them completely first, then freeze in a single layer before packing them into a container or freezer bag. That keeps the M&Ms from sticking together and helps the cookies keep their shape.

Monster Cookies

Monster cookies are thick, chewy peanut butter no-flour-style cookies loaded with M&Ms in every color, plus chocolate chips and visible oats. Bake until the edges are set and the centers look slightly underdone for a soft, golden-edged bite.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Total Time 27 minutes
Servings: 24 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 260

Ingredients
  

peanut butter
  • 1.5 cup creamy peanut butter
brown sugar
  • 1 cup brown sugar, packed
granulated sugar
  • 0.5 cup granulated sugar
eggs
  • 3 large eggs
vanilla extract
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking soda
quick-cooking oats
  • 3 cup quick-cooking oats
M&Ms
  • 1 cup M&Ms (red, white, and blue for patriotic version)
chocolate chips
  • 0.5 cup chocolate chips
mini chocolate chips
  • 0.5 cup mini chocolate chips

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and preheat
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
Make the dough
  1. Beat creamy peanut butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar together in a large bowl until combined.
  2. Add large eggs, vanilla extract, and baking soda, then mix until smooth.
  3. Stir in quick-cooking oats until fully incorporated.
  4. Fold in M&Ms (red, white, and blue for patriotic version), chocolate chips, and mini chocolate chips until evenly distributed.
Shape and bake
  1. Scoop the dough into 2-tablespoon balls and place them 2 inches apart on the prepared baking sheets.
  2. Flatten each dough ball slightly with your palm so they bake evenly.
  3. Bake for 10–12 minutes at 350°F until the edges are set but the centers still look slightly underdone, with a golden edge.
Cool
  1. Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack so they firm up as they cool.

Notes

For the thick, chewy texture, underbake just slightly: pull the cookies when edges are set but centers still look a bit soft. Store airtight at room temperature for 3 days or refrigerate up to 1 week. Freeze baked cookies for up to 2 months. If you need nut-free, substitute the peanut butter 1:1 with sunflower seed butter, keeping the rest of the recipe the same.
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