Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (2024)

Published on | Updated on by Melissa

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This easy peanut brittle recipe is golden, buttery, and perfect as a treat or to package up for holiday gifts. This homemade candy is salty and sweet and only has six ingredients!

Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (1)

How to make Peanut Brittle

Homemade candy is a favorite during the holiday season – hard candy, crockpot peanut clusters, peanut butter fudge, and this old fashioned peanut brittle recipe.

I loved Planters Peanut Bars when I was little but I don’t think they make them anymore. This peanut brittle is similar and so easy to make yourself!

You do need to use a candy thermometer but don’t let that intimidate you. You’ll be fine as long as you don’t get distracted (speaking from experience).

Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (2)

Why you’ll love this Easy Homemade Peanut Brittle

Easy Recipe – Candy making doesn’t have to be intimidating, this one is a breeze! Even if this is your first time making candy, you’ll be fine.

Simple Ingredients – You only need a handful of ingredients, six to be exact, that you likely already have on hand.

Family Favorite – This candy recipe is great any time of year but makes a great holiday gift if you bag it up into treat bags to pass out.

Equipment you’ll need

  • Baking Sheet – Use a lipped baking sheet to keep the peanut brittle on the pan.
  • Candy Thermometer – Nothing fancy, you just need a basic one, but it is helpful to have a clip to hook to the pot.
  • Silicone Spatulas – I use these for everything in the kitchen.

Ingredients

Below is a list of the ingredients you’ll need to gather to make this recipe.Scroll all the way down for the full recipe card.

  • SUGAR – Granulated white sugar.
  • CORN SYRUP – Use light corn syrup. I use Karo syrup.
  • WATER
  • BUTTER – Unsalted butter, cubed.
  • BAKING SODA – The baking soda creates a chemical reaction causing little air bubbles to form. The candy becomes porous and brittle, making it easy to break into pieces.
  • PEANUTS – I like to use roasted peanuts for flavor but raw spanish peanuts were traditionally used.
Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (3)

How to make peanut brittle

This brittle candy is so easy to make, but it does require you to watch the temperature so don’t get distracted!

  1. STEP ONE: Grab a large cookie sheet with sides (like a jelly roll pan) and cover it with foil. Spray with nonstick cooking spray and set aside.
  2. STEP TWO: Stir together the sugar, corn syrup, and water in a medium saucepan. Bring the mixture to a boil and continue to boil until the temperature reaches 340 degrees F. It should be golden brown after about 15 minutes.
  3. STEP THREE: Remove the pan from the heat and add butter and baking soda. It will bubble up (that’s the chemical reaction) so work quickly stirring with a silicone spatula until smooth.
  4. STEP FOUR: Pour in the peanuts and stir to evenly distribute. Quickly pour the peanut brittle mixture onto the lined baking pan and spread it evenly into a thin layer.
  5. STEP FIVE: Let the candy harden, at room temperature (about 30 minutes), and then break into pieces and store in an airtight container.
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Which types of nuts should I use?

Peanuts are the classic choice to use in nut brittle. Roasted peanuts have great flavor. Raw Spanish peanuts were traditionally used but either work. You could also use almonds, cashews, macadamia nuts, pecans…just about any will work.

What does baking soda do to peanut brittle?

Baking soda might seem like an odd addition to the peanut brittle and not everyone adds it, but baking soda creates a chemical reaction that creates little air bubbles. It is added once the sugar mixture has cooked down and becomes acidic. The candy becomes porous and brittle, making it easy to break into smaller pieces.

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Why is my peanut brittle chewy?

There is where the candy thermometer becomes important. The biggest reason your peanut brittle is chewy and sticky is because you didn’t cook it long enough. It’s not something you can guess at, you need it to reach the hard crack stage. that means the strands of sugar break easily and feel dry, as opposed to sticky.

If you take it off the heat too soon, it doesn’t set up and makes a sticky mess, but let it cook too long and it becomes scorched and bitter.

Another possible cause might be humidity in the air.You should store finished peanut brittle in an airtight container so humidity doesn’t get to it.

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How long is it good for?

When stored in an airtight container, at room temperature, peanut brittle will keep for 6-8 weeks. Do not put it in the fridge as it as the moisture will cause the brittle to soften.

Itcan also be frozen and stored up to 3 months.

Need more homemade candy recipes? Try these:

Christmas Oreo Bon Bons
Grinch Christmas Cream Cheese MintsCrockpot Salted Caramel Fudge
Peanut Butter Balls
Crockpot Cinnamon Sugar Candied Almonds
Christmas “Crack”
Candied Pecans
Crockpot Candy

Click here to view my entire collection of candy recipes.

Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (8)

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Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (9)

Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe

Melissa Williams | Persnickety Plates

This easy peanut brittle recipe is golden, buttery, and perfect as a treat or to package up for holiday gifts. This homemade candy is salty and sweet and only has six ingredients!

4.77 from 17 votes

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Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Cook Time 20 minutes mins

Harden Time 30 minutes mins

Total Time 55 minutes mins

Course Dessert, Snack

Cuisine American

Servings 10 servings

Calories 390 kcal

Ingredients

  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • ½ cup light corn syrup
  • ½ cup water
  • 6 Tablespoons unsalted butter cubed
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 ½ cups roasted peanuts

Instructions

  • Line a lipped baking sheet with foil and spray with non-stick spray. Set aside.

  • To a medium saucepan, add the sugar, corn syrup, and water. Add in the candy thermometer to the pan making sure it touches the mixture but not the bottom of the pan. Bring the mixture to a boil over medium heat and then continue to boil until the mixture is golden brown and reaches 340 degrees. This should take about 15 minutes.

  • Remove the pan from the heat and quickly stir in the butter and baking soda until smooth. Then stir in the peanuts until evenly distributed.

  • Pour the mixture onto the prepared baking sheet and spread evenly with a silicone spoon, working quickly, as it will start to set.

  • Let harden at room temperature, about 30 minutes, and then break up into pieces.

Notes

Use a candy thermometer to make sure your sugar mixture reaches 340 degrees. Hook the thermometer to the side of the pan so it touches the mixture but not the bottom of the pan.

Store in an airtight container.

Nutrition

Serving: 1gCalories: 390kcalCarbohydrates: 57gProtein: 6gFat: 18gSaturated Fat: 6gCholesterol: 18mgSodium: 170mgPotassium: 170mgFiber: 2gSugar: 53gVitamin A: 210IUCalcium: 26mgIron: 1mg

Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.

Tried this recipe? Tag me!Mention @melissa_pplates or tag #persnicketyplates!

Sharing of this recipe is both encouraged and appreciated. Copying/pasting and/or screenshots of full recipes to any social media is strictly prohibited. Content and photographs are copyright protected.

Originally published December 13, 2020.

This recipe first appeared on Yellow Bliss Road.

Easy Peanut Brittle Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you make easy peanut brittle? ›

Melt butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Stir sugar and salt with melted butter to dissolve completely. Remove saucepan from heat, add peanuts, and stir to coat completely; immediately pour onto prepared pan and spread into an even layer. Refrigerate until brittle, at least 30 minutes.

Why didn't my homemade peanut brittle get hard? ›

The main reason why peanut brittle doesn't get hard and have the crunch we expect is because the sugar was not cooked long enough. The sugar needs to be cooked to what is called the hard crack stage, 300ºF.

Why does my homemade peanut brittle stick to my teeth? ›

It's what's missing — corn syrup. A common brittle ingredient, Asare said, corn syrup causes brittle to go all gooey, gummy and tooth-clingy as it melts in your mouth, whereas sugar crunches, crumbles and dissolves.

What does baking soda do in peanut brittle? ›

Baking soda is a crucial ingredient that can't be substituted in this recipe. Just as in homemade syrup or caramel corn, baking soda causes a unique chemical reaction (basically a lot of rising foam) that is crucial in creating the right texture in peanut brittle.

How do you keep peanut brittle crispy? ›

#1 - Store in an airtight container

It should come as no surprise that storing your peanut brittle in airtight containers is one of the best ways to store peanut brittle. Keeping air out helps maintain your brittle's freshness by minimizing the amount of moisture that might come into contact with your sweet treat.

What makes peanut brittle too hard? ›

Why is it too hard? Using baking soda usually prevents peanut brittle from being too, well, brittle. However, if you cook the candy past the set temperature or overwork the candy once you spread it out onto the cookie sheet, that can cause it to become very hard and difficult to bite through.

What makes brittle hard? ›

What Makes it Brittle? The sugar will be cooked to 300ºF (149ºC)—hard crack stage; which when set up would be hard like a lollipop. But peanut brittle is delicate and you can easily bite into it—how? The secret is in the baking soda.

Why is my peanut brittle not fluffy? ›

It is important to coat cookie sheets with butter and put in the freezer to get them really cold before you need to pour the brittle. After you pour the candy you should put the pans in the fridge or outside if it is cold, so the brittle will set up quickly and stay fluffy.

Can you use parchment paper when making peanut brittle? ›

You will want the cookie sheet to be non-stick. Use parchment paper, a silicone baking sheet or a greased cookie sheet. Spread the peanut brittle as thin as you can. Immediately add your sea salt.

Why is my microwave peanut brittle chewy? ›

Adding baking soda when making peanut brittle makes the hot sugar syrup foam, creating lots of tiny air bubbles that give the candy the porous, crispy honeycomb texture it's known for. Why didn't my peanut brittle turn out? If your peanut brittle is light in color and chewy, it was not cooked long enough.

Why did my peanut brittle crystallize? ›

When candy cools slowly on a stone slab, more crystals have a chance to form. With a higher number of micro-crystals, the sugar has more sites on which to crystallize, and so crystallization ultimately happens faster.

How Long Will homemade peanut brittle keep? ›

How long will homemade peanut brittle last? This peanut brittle recipe will keep for up to 2 months if stored in an airtight container in a cool, dry place. I recommend placing pieces of wax paper or parchment paper between the candy pieces to keep them from sticking together.

What is the best pan for making peanut brittle? ›

Heavy 6 quart Dutch Oven pot. Mine is an old 1970's Club Aluminum. It's perfect! You need a heavy THICK pot so it won't scorch.

Why is my peanut brittle not airy? ›

The mixture will foam and grow so make sure to stir constantly to completely incorporate. Working quickly, pour into prepared 10×15 pan. To keep the brittle light and airy, do not spread or flatten the mixture. Instead, let it flow freely.

Can you use parchment paper for peanut brittle? ›

Place a piece of parchment paper over the hot brittle and use a rolling pin to roll the peanut brittle into a 3/8-inch thick flat layer.

How to make peanut without frying? ›

directions
  1. Place raw peanuts, in shell or shelled, one layer deep in a shallow baking pan. Sprinkle salt over.
  2. Roast in a 350 degree F oven; 15 to 20 minutes for shelled and 20 to 25 minutes for in shell peanuts.
  3. Remove from heat just short of doneness desired, as peanuts continue to cook as they cool.

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