You can’t grow up around Ohio or Herd country without getting buckeyes shoved in your face. They were created by a graduate of Marshall University in 1964 named Gail Tabor Lucas. You can read her son’s blog about it here.
The long story short, her mother sent her a recipe for peanut butter balls and being OSU fans, when she dipped one part way she exclaimed to her husband how they looked like buckeyes. And a legend was born. In reality, it’s a half-covered peanut butter bon-bon. Still, they are lovely and wonderful.
Except…the original recipe still used around here today is absolutely grainy and sugary sweet. I can’t stand the amount of sugar and how dry they are but love peanut butter. So over the winter months, I started messing with ratios and tweaking ingredients. These are more expensive to make but much more pleasant to eat and better for you! I wait for sales and can usually make them for about $2 more a batch which makes about 72 small or 36 large ones.
Also, I highly recommend learning how to temper chocolate over the candy wafers and go for a semi-sweet or even a dark chocolate for an even more decadent dessert. If you are going to make buckeyes or Ohio’s peanut butter balls, you deserve the best.
Go Buckeyes! Ohio’s Favorite Candy
Ingredients
- 1 pound (454g) peanut butter
- 1 pound (454g) powdered sugar
- 12 ounces (340g) chocolate or chocolate candy wafers
- ½ cup (113g) softened butter
- 1 tsp (5mL) vanilla
- 1 tsp (5g) salt
Instructions
- Beat together butter, peanut butter, vanilla and salt until smooth.
- Gradually add sugar until a thick dough forms.
- Roll into 1" (20g) balls using your fingertips to avoid melting. Place on a baking sheet lined with wax paper or silicone.
- Cover and chill in fridge for at least 30 minutes (preferably overnight.)
- Insert tooth picks into the center.
- Melt chocolate or candy coating. If using a microwave, heat 15 seconds at a time and stir well. Repeat until chocolate is melted.
- Dip in peanut butter balls, leaving the top exposed and let excess chocolate drain off. Set on parchment, wax paper or a silicone mat.
- Chill in fridge until firm.
- Store in an air tight container up to 3 weeks or freeze up to 6 months. It's a tradition to eat these chilled.
0 Comments