What’s the Project? This yummy chocolate peanut butter fudge recipe is amazing! A layer of chocolate on the bottom topped with a layer of peanut butter fudge and sprinkled with Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups on top. You’re going to love it!
Once upon a time, I didn’t love fudge. (I didn’t dislike it-it just wasn’t my favorite.)
And then my mother in law invented this chocolate peanut butter fudge recipe and my world changed. This stuff is gooooood!
You knew if you combined chocolate and peanut butter it had to be though right? And it’s topped with crushed Reese’s.
It’s a perfect Christmas treat. Make it for a party, make it for your neighbors, or eat it yourself!
The bottom layer is chocolate and then the top layer is peanut butter, sprinkled with Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups.
Trust me, if you are at all inclined to the chocolate and peanut butter combination you will love this!
And if you’re a fudge lover, try these too!
But for now let’s make this chocolate peanut butter fudge recipe!
Chocolate Peanut Butter Fudge Recipe:
This recipe will make one 8 x 8 inch pan full of fudge. I often double it and pour it into a 9 x 13-inch pan. It will completely fill (to the very top) a 9 x 13-inch pan.
Chocolate Peanut Butter Fudge Recipe
Ingredients
For the chocolate bottom layer:
- 2 C Sugar
- 11 large marshmallows
- 3/4 C of evaporated milk
- 1 pkg. milk chocolate chips just a regular size
- 1 stick butter
For the top peanut butter layer:
- 2 C Sugar
- 11 large marshmallows
- 3/4 C of evaporated milk
- 1 pkg. peanut butter chips just a regular size
- 1 stick butter
- 8 large Reese's peanut butter cups optional
Instructions
- Combine the sugar, marshmallows, and milk in a large pan. Heat and bring it to a soft boil. Boil (soft boil) for 6 minutes. Turn off the heat. Add chocolate chips and butter and stir until completely combined.
- Pour into well-greased pan.
- Place in refrigerator for several hours until completely set. Then proceed to the peanut butter layer.
- Follow the same instructions that you did for the bottom layer, simply substituting peanut butter chips for the milk chocolate ones
- Pour the peanut butter fudge on top of the chocolate.
- Allow the fudge to cool and set for about 10-15 minutes, then sprinkle the crushed Reese's on top and place in the refrigerator again.
- You can also freeze this.
Slice, eat and enjoy this chocolate peanut butter fudge recipe!
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Kait says
Great recipe – can you use icing sugar or is it best to stick with granulated sugar?
Thanks for sharing.
Kait
Amber says
I would say stick with granulated.
Julie says
Sounds delish! How much butter is in a stick? It’s not sold that way in Canada.
Amber says
It’s 4 oz
Lori says
Diane-i would like the recipe your aunt and mother perfected if you would be willing to share
Nancy says
This is a great recipe. I’ve made it for years using marshmallow fluff instead of the marshmallows. It’s not Christmas at our house without it!
Felicia says
What size can of evaporated milk? This sounds amazing! Can’t wait to try it!
Amber says
12 fluid oz
Jerri says
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful receipt. This is one of my favorite kinds of fudge… I love the straight chocolate but I am allergic to chocolate but I can have small amounts so again thanks a bunch for sharing…….
megan says
Is it possible to add peanut butter instead of peanut butter chips? And how many mini marshmallows would 11 regular marshmallows be?
megan says
Sorry I meant to make this an actual comment not a reply!
Amber says
I don’t know and I don’t know. Sorry! I just know how to make it the way I made it!
Diane says
Maybe you didn’t like fudge because it wasn’t good fudge, too gritty. I make home made fudge and it requires a special temp it has to boil up to and cool down to and then beat it. It is the smoothest fudge and is the best in my opinion. However, can’t make it when the barometric temp goes up or if it is snowing.
This is a fudge my aunt and mom perfected, so to give the method isn’t easy.
Need a flat candy thermometer, sugar, baking chocolate, pure vanilla, dark Karyol syrup and some butter (real ingredients are what makes it special). Next a heavy duty pan to cook it in. I use an old pressure cooker pan. Then boil up to the exact temp, let it cool down and at that time you add the butter and vanilla. Then you have to beat it and that is another trick, it goes from glossy shine to flat, you have to put nuts in right away (I like it without nuts) and then get it out of the pan on to paper. We store it in a tin can. Now if you really want the ingredients I will share, but I imagine most will not want to go through all that work. Beating can take work let me tell you. My mom would put it out in the snow to cool down and I think she let it get too cold while cooling down because we would have to beat it to death, where still warm and cooled in the house whips up and turns pretty fast. So maybe I perfected it a little more.
Betty Lou says
This the way my mother made it over 70 years ago and I lost the recipe that used to be on the Hersheys Cocoa box. Thank you for the recipe.
jph says
“…Now if you really want the ingredients I will share…”
Diane, thank for offering to share your family recipe.
Yes, please would share it with me? I don’t make sweets very often, but when I do I like to use classic versions. Thank you!