I basically survived on granola bars in high school. Pre-packaged, too sweet, milk chocolate granola bars at lunch and before volleyball practice. Every day. Naturally, I’ve been pretty burnt out on granola bars for the past ten years.
Then my friend Sara (whom I met through the blog) texted me the ingredients list for a granola bar and requested that I recreate them. I trust Sara’s taste in granola bars and thought I’d better give these a shot, so I stopped at the nearest Kaldi’s Coffee shop to pick one up.
I made it out to my car before peeling off the packaging. One bite and I was hooked. This granola bar was unlike any other granola bar I’d ever encountered. I tasted honey, sea salt, dark chocolate, oats and cinnamon all at once—each flavor teetered on the edge of overwhelming the others yet somehow the sum was perfectly balanced. Plus, unlike those packaged, processed granola bars I’d grown up eating, these were legitimately healthy granola bars. I immediately added the ingredients listed on the back of the package to my grocery list and headed to the store.
It took me five tries to get these granola bars just right. I thought Kaldi’s granola bars were baked because the oats weren’t entirely intact, but my baked bars were all wrong. Then I tried no-bake bars with old-fashioned oats. While the flavor was pretty spot on, the texture of the oats was too distracting.
Finally, it occurred to me to use quick-cooking oats—oats that have been rolled out thinner and cook in about 60 seconds—to get the right texture. Quick-cooking oats did just the trick and I delivered a bag of pre-packaged bars to Sara as a belated birthday gift.
I think you guys will appreciate these, too. The bars hold together well, although each batch I’ve made has turned out slightly different. I suspect the differences boil down to slight measuring discrepancies between the batches. For the most firm bars, you might need to sprinkle a few more oats into the bowl—enough that you think it’ll be almost impossible to mix them all in. Once you put some arm muscle into it and get those oats mixed in, you’re in business.
You might also want to tinker with the amount of salt. I’ve been using unsalted Trader Joe’s almond butter, which is nice and spreadable, plus I can control the salt content. I like my bars a little salty (and therefore totally addictive), so I go with the full 3/4 teaspoon, but you might want to scale back to suit your preferences. Feel free to change up the mix-ins, too. Check the recipe notes for details!
Honey-Sweetened Almond Chocolate Chip Granola Bars
- Author:
- Prep Time: 20 mins
- Total Time: 20 minutes
- Yield: 14 to 16 bars 1x
- Category: Snack
- Method: No-bake
- Cuisine: Gluten free
Chewy, no-bake, gluten-free granola bars made simply with oats, almonds, almond butter or peanut butter and chocolate chips. This healthy granola bar recipe is so delicious and easy to make. Homemade granola bars are great to keep on hand for traveling or whenever hunger strikes! Recipe yields 14 to 16 bars.
Ingredients
- 1 ¾ cups quick-cooking oats (or old-fashioned oats, pulsed briefly in a food processor or blender to break them up)
- 1 ⅓ cup sliced almonds
- ⅔ cup mini dark chocolate chips
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ½ to ¾ teaspoon salt, to taste (decrease if your almond/peanut butter is salted)
- 1 cup creamy unsalted almond butter or peanut butter
- ½ cup honey
- 1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract
Instructions
- Line an 8 to 9-inch square baker with two strips of criss-crossed parchment paper, cut to size. In a mixing bowl, combine the oats, almonds, chocolate chips, cinnamon and salt. Whisk to combine.
- In a 2-cup liquid measuring cup, measure out the nut butter. Top with ½ cup honey and the vanilla extract. Whisk until well blended. If you must, you can gently warm the liquid mixture on the stovetop or in the microwave, but make sure it’s cool before you pour it into the dry mixture (the chocolate chips will melt).
- Pour the liquid ingredients into the dry ingredients. Use a big spoon to mix them together until the two are evenly combined and no dry oats remain. The drier the mixture, the more firm the bars will be, so stir in extra oats if the mixture seems wet.
- Transfer the mixture to the prepared square baker. Use your spoon to arrange the mixture fairly evenly in the baker, then use the bottom of a flat, round surface (like a short, sturdy drinking glass), covered in a small piece of parchment paper (see photo), to pack the mixture down as firmly and evenly as possible.
- Cover the baker and refrigerate for at least one hour, or overnight. Use a sharp knife to slice the bars. For portability, you can wrap individual bars in plastic wrap or parchment paper. Bars keep well for a couple of days at room temperature, but I recommend storing individually wrapped bars in a freezer-safe bag in the freezer for best flavor.
Notes
Recipe adapted from Sally’s Baking Addiction and Smitten Kitchen.
Make it gluten free: Be sure to buy certified gluten-free oats.
Make it vegan: Substitute maple syrup for the honey and use dairy-free chocolate chips.
Make it dairy free: Use dairy-free chocolate chips.
Change it up: Feel free to substitute chopped, toasted nuts for the sliced almonds, and chopped, dried fruit for the chocolate.
If you love this recipe: You’ll also love my honey almond granola, maple peanut butter chocolate chip oatmeal cookies and gluten-free chocolate chip cookies.
▸ Nutrition Information
Kate Elizabeth
Looks delicious! I really like the dark blue/black cloth, it really works as a backdrop in the photos. Have you ever tried English flapjacks? They’re similar to granola bars but chewier, squishier, oatier and (in my biased opinion) even more yummy! I think you would like them!
Kate
Thanks, Kate! That’s actually a cheap black chalkboard. No, I haven’t tried English flapjacks, but now I really want to!
dana
These look AMAZING friend! I’m definitely pinning them for when a granola bar craving strikes. Gorgeous photos!
Kate
Thanks, Dana!
Sam @ PancakeWarriors
love the ingredient list and u adore chewy granola bars. I think these would be the perfect preworkout snack. Thanks for sharing!!
dixya@food, pleasure, and health
granola bars are looking delicious!!!!
Liz @ Floating Kitchen
These look delicious, Kate! Love having homemade granola bars around the house (and stashed in my purse and car!).
jaime : the briny
i think i ate too many lifeless packaged granola bars growing up, too, because i tend to regard them less than favorably. but these sound really simple and good… salty chocolate and almonds yesyesyes!
Kate
Thanks, Jaime! “Lifeless” is a good way to describe those other granola bars.
Abby @ The Frosted Vegan
I was SO in the same boat, I ate a ton of those Quaker Oats granola bars, but these look so so much better! : )
Amanda @ Positively Amanda
Yum! look very tasty!
Marcie
My son is allergic to nuts. Do you think sun butter would work instead of the almond/peanut butter? I tried another recipe and it was really crumbly so was looking around for something else & these look great!
Kate
Hi Marcie! That’s a really good question and I wish I could say “Yes!” with absolute certainty, but I don’t have much experience with sunbutter. Here’s a recipe that looks promising: http://www.sondibruner.com/2014/02/14/no-bake-sunbutter-chocolate-chip-granola-bars/
Amanda
I don’t know about sunbutter but tahini worked great.
I’ve made two batches of bars using the proportions from this recipe but varied based on ingredients I’m trying to use up before a cross-country move.
The first batch substituted tahini in place of the nut butter and used a combination of honey and molasses. Instead of chocolate I used raisins and chopped candied ginger and added some whole sesame seeds for more texture. The Molasses and ginger gave them a nice gingerbread flavor. And the oats and tahini and almonds made them hearty enough for breakfast. My 2-year old loved them.
The Second batch used s’mores leftovers: Chopped up marshmallows, hershey bars and graham crackers went in along with peanut butter, oats, vanilla extract. I mixed a bit of water into some brown sugar to replace the honey. This batch tastes more like a cookie.
These are a great treat to make in summer when you want a home made treat but don’t want to heat up the house baking.
Kate
Thank you for sharing your results, Amanda! I’m craving both of your varieties now. Brilliant!
Ana
Yes, sunbutter will work great. I’ve made granola bars subbing sunbutter (homemade as well) for peanut butter and absolutely no difference. Sunbutter behaves the same as peanutbutter, melts the same etc. My kids are not allergic but school is nut free zone and friends niece is allergic and eats those without problems.
★★★★
Kate
That’s great to know! Thank you, Ana.
Graham @ Glazed & Confused
These look so delicious! I definitely survived off of granola bars too for the majority of my childhood, so I’m REALLY digging these.
cheyenne
this recipe looks perfect. i’ve been looking for one that doesn’t use a kitchen machine to mix everything up. thanks for sharing, definitely giving this a try soon!
xo, cheyenne
Amy @ Thoroughly Nourished Life
I have been looking for a naturally sweetened, and easily made gluten free granola bar recipe! These will be perfect for a post run breakfast with a pot of Greek yoghurt. Thanks for keeping my mornings fuelled Kate :)
Lilly
They look yummy, love almond butter. How long will they keep? At room temperature? Or fridge? Thanks.
Kate
Hey Lilly, check the last step of the recipe for details! I’m sorry, I know it is easy to miss… in summary, I recommend storing bars in the freezer for best flavor.
Kate @ Almond Butter Binge
These look great! Love the flavor combination :) I’m short on snacks lately and sick of buying prepackaged bars, so I’m definitely going to have to try these.
I lived off of Nutrigrain bars and this short-lived Quaker product called “fruit bites,” which were basically bite-sized Nutrigrain bars. I still can’t look at one without shuddering. Yikes.
jenna @ just j.faye
Oh my, these look fabulous!
kristie {birch and wild}
These look so perfect for sunday tea with the girlfriends I can’t wait to make them :)
Medeja
Looks healthy and delicious!
Cara's Healthy Cravings
I adore making my own granola bars, it’s part of my weekend routine. I will pin this one to try out this coming weekend. Mmmm!
Kristine @ Kristine's Kitchen
I LOVE experimenting with homemade granola bars! These look fantastic, and I know I’ll be trying them soon. Simple ingredient lists are the best!
Sara
These were fantastic! They are a perfect afternoon pick-me-up. Thank you thank you!
Gaby
What a perfect on the go snack! I love it!!
Elizabeth
I LOVE granola bars but always make a homemade baked version; I am going to try the no-bake version next time. Chocolate chips still a must though!
Katrina @ Warm Vanilla Sugar
Pretty sure these are about to become my fav. Love the almond butter and chocolate mix.
Lori
I am going to make them today using cacao nibs only because I don’t have chocolate chips on hand. Can’t wait to eat them. Thanks.
Kate
Hope your cacao nib bars turned out great, Lori!
lisa @Garlic+Zest
I’ll have to make these for my daughter – she’s a sucker for granola bars – and chocolate chips!
Jennifer @ Show Me the Yummy
Salty, peanut buttery, dark chocolately perfection. Yessss!
Sarah @ People, Places & Plates
Ha I also overdosed on granola bars back in school, and now still can’t stand the look of them! These however…..
Angela @ Eat Spin Run Repeat
These sound wonderful, Kate! I’ve been working on a granola bar with cacao nibs and peanut butter lately, and I totally know what you mean about having to do a few iterations before getting the quanitites just right – which I’ve yet to do! I’m sure you’re probably far more talented in the baking department than me, but I still love granola making… it’s sort of therapeutic in a way, as weird as that sounds!
Ella
These sound delicious! I burned myself out for a few years after too many Quaker chocolate chip granola bars. Realized they weren’t ACTUALLY healthy- haha! These look sooooo good, I’m excited to try them :)
http://www.youtube.com/sparklesandsuch26
Kelly
I love almond butter! These granola bars look like the perfect snack for me and my kids. Thanks! Pinning now!
Add In?
They look delicious! What do you think about adding coconut? Weird with the nut butter?
Kate
Nope, coconut would not be weird at all if you like Almond Joys!
Laura
I love a good homemade granola bar adventure and that hot tip on quick cooking oats is so smart. These have all the things I love in a bar too, but mainly that salty and sweet mix. Addictive, just as you say. That 5th shot down of the individual bars on paper is so great too! xo
Kate
Thanks, Laura! These granola bars were giving me hell during our photo shoot, so I really appreciate your compliment. xo!
Sonja
I also lived on packaged granola bars once upon a time! They’re just too easy and too addictive. These days I’ve lost my appetite for overly sweetened things, but I think these look great! I love the parchment-paper-over-bottom-of-glass trick, too.
Joanne
How did you know I’ve been looking for the granola bar recipe OF MY DREAMS?! And here it is, right in front of me. So happy right now.
Kate
Delicious recipe Kate,! I added coconut and dried cherries to the mix (because I can never just follow a recipe!), and found that I needed a full teaspoon of salt to get all the flavours to pop.
I love that it was so quick – 15 minutes from start to finish, including clean up! I have a habit of late night baking and with this recipe I still managed to get to bed on time. Thanks Kate!
★★★★
Kate
Awesome, thanks Kate! Your version sounds so tasty.
Wendy
These are amazing – delicious, easy, healthy, and my boys (and I) love them! Thank you so much!
Kate
That’s fantastic! Thanks, Wendy!
Laura
I’ve been making homemade granola bars for over a year. Mark Bittman’s recipe is similar but the bars don’t always stick together, which is fine over fruit salad. I am going to try adding more oats to see if that holds them together. I’m also going to try cashew butter as an alternative flavor to chunky peanut butter. Thanks!
Kate
Sounds like a good plan, Laura! I definitely found that the more oats I packed in there, the more firm the bars ended up being.
Laura
Oh, and I love your site!
Annie
Hi Kate!
I get these bars almost every time I go to Kaldi’s coffee! Do you know how many calories per bar? i could probably figure it out with some time, but if you already know I thought I would ask. :)
Annie
★★★★★
Kate
Hey Annie! No, I’m sorry, I haven’t calculated nutrition facts (I almost never do). If you look them up, feel free to share them in the comments section. I suspect these bars have fewer calories than Kaldi’s because Kaldi’s bars include butter and sugar.
Amelia
Hi this is great and all your foods are great i just wanna know is it ok not to use peanut butter? or any other butter!?
Kate
Hey Amelia, I’m afraid that your granola bars won’t stick together without nut butter. Sorry!
Amelia
Hi , yes i made it without any oil and butter they stick a little but not enough to hold all then i put them in the oven i was hoping that works but they didnt and they turned into a granola haha! x thanks for answer too!
★★★★★
Emily
Made these last night!! They are SO GOOD. Perfect amount of chocolate to almond to peanut butter ratio. I’m sure they’ll be gone in no time. Thank you!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks, Emily! Glad to hear it!
Carrie Zinnecker
These look easy and delicious. I think they’d make the perfect snack for my kids (and me!). Can’t wait to try them.
Sadye
Hands-down the best homemade granola bar recipe I’ve tried. I don’t know much about coconut butter, except that it exists — does anyone have a sense for whether it would function like the PB? Thanks!
★★★★
Ruby
Hi Kate,
These were so good!! (no surprise there)
Quick question- do you think the bars would still hold together if I use half the amount of honey?
thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks, Ruby! Glad you enjoyed them! I’m not sure about using less honey. You could try using half the honey and if you can get all of the oats mixed into the liquid (you’ll probably have to put some muscle into it), then I bet the bars will stick together. If not, you’ll need to add honey (or maybe more nut butter) until its moistened throughout.
Angela orozco
Recipe sounds wonderful! But why do you have to criss cross strips of parchment paper? Can raisins be added?
Kate
Hi Angela, I suppose you could probably get by with just one strip of parchment paper if you cut the bars in your square dish. Two sheets provide more leverage and a stronger, flatter surface if you want to lift them out. Yes, you could definitely throw in some raisins!
Katherine
Wonderful recipe! I’ve been looking to replace store bought granola bars in my kids’ diet for some time now. The first batch I made exactly as you wrote the recipe and they turned out good to my palate, but my little miss picky thought they were too dense. So the next batch I used whole oats but toasted them first in 1.5 tablespoons of coconut oil, and added in about 2 cups of puffed brown rice (Whole Foods). Both my kids love them and I had to freeze them so I wouldn’t eat them all before they could get packed in lunches! I love your site — it’s my favorite for fresh, whole food inspiration :)
Kate
Thanks, Katherine! I’ll have to try your puffed brown rice version sometime, they sound great!
Kate McIvor
Kate,
These bars are way.too.good! I just put my third batch into the fridge. I make my own almond butter with roasted almonds. It is the perfect consistency right out of the food processor — super creamy and a little warmer than room temperature. Since my almond butter contains no salt, I add a little more than a full teaspoon of salt to enhance the addictiveness! Thank you,
Another Kate
Kate
Thanks, Kate! so glad you’re enjoying the granola bars. I bet they are extra tasty with your fresh almond butter!
Liz
These are the best! Kids love them and my husband. So easy to make too.
Kate
Thanks, Liz! Glad you all enjoy them!
kathryn
Can you substitute agave syrup for honey? If so, which kind (color) and do you think the measurement should be the same as honey? These look delicious! I can’t wait to try them.
Kate
I think so, but I haven’t tried. The amount should be the same since you’ll still need the same amount of liquid for the oats to stick together. I’m not sure how the level of sweetness will compare. Maple syrup would be a better bet!
Kris
I made these yesterday and had my kids do a taste test of store bought vs homemade. These won unanimously! So good and simple to make. I posted a link to these tasty bars on my blog…hope you don’t mind!
Amanda
I just made these and they are AMAZING. I didn’t have any almonds in my pantry, so I used raw Chinese pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds instead. I also used butterscotch chips instead of chocolate (because it’s what I had) and I am trying to control myself and not eat the whole pan. Great recipe!
Kate
Oh man, your granola bars sound fantastic! Thanks, Amanda!
liz
Can I substitute oat bran for oats?
★★★★★
Kate
That’s a really good question. I bet you can! Please let me know if you give it a shot.
Mell
I just want to say this is now my go to recipe! I had been searching for a while for a healthy, easy, cheap, and tasty granola bar recipe and I just found it! Thanks so much :-D
★★★★★
Kate
Hooray! Happy to hear it, Mell.
Jessica
These sounded so delicious, I tried them right away! They do taste divine, but mine crumbled badly. We are happily munching on granola bar crumbs, but I wondered if you had any idea why this would happen?
Kate
Hmm, Jessica, I’m sorry to hear that! Did you change the amounts of sweetener or oats at all? It sounds like you either didn’t have enough liquid or you didn’t press the granola together well enough. Using the bottom of a jar to press down on the mix really makes the difference.
Cynthia
This may be a stupid question, but I’m assuming the oats need to be cooked, no? Nowhere does it say that, and these never go in the oven so I’m not sure.
Kate
Hi Cynthia! I’m sorry for the confusion. No, the oats do not need to be cooked. The bars turn out fantastic as written!
Susan
Could you tell me how many calories is in the Granola Bars????
Kate
Hi Susan! I’m sorry, I don’t provide nutritional details for my recipes because home cooking can vary so much. Please feel free to run the recipe through myfitnesspal.com for an estimate.
Jackie
These are AWESOME. I was looking for a recipe w/o added sugar… and these did the trick, tastes like dessert :D
So many store-bought ‘nola bars have milk in them & I can’t do lactose. I am very glad I found this yummy recipe.
I subbed the almonds for a mixed combo of almonds, walnuts & cashews. Can’t wait to experiment with other things (esp. dried fruits) next time!
When I posted to Instagram, all of my running friends asked for the recipe STAT. Thank you!!
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great to hear! Thanks, Jackie! I’ve been living off these granola bars this week. Can’t complain. :)
Grace
Made these and love them! Wondering about nutrition facts cause I’m tracking my calories
Kate
Hi Grace, glad to hear it! I’m sorry, I don’t offer nutrition facts because I offer so many recipe variations, but feel free to run the recipe through a calculator like myfitnesspal.com!
Shelly
OMG these are amaaaazing! SOOO much better than store bought! I made the original recipe above and another with some changes and both are excellent! Not dry at all, very moist!
My change up recipe:
I ran out of almonds so used sunflower seeds
In place of almond butter, used organic peanut butter
Also added dried cranberries
this was very good. My son said maybe a little too nutty flavored but I loved it!
Too hard to eat right from the freezer but if I pack frozen bars in lunches, perfectly thawed by lunch!
Thx for recipe!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Shelly! Happy to hear it!
Vinitha
Hi
I tried out the healthy almond chocolate chip granola bars and it was super yummy so I was hoping you can tell me the calorie content per bar?
★★★★
Kate
Hi Vinitha! I’m sorry, I don’t provide nutrition details. Please feel free to run the recipe through a nutrition calculator like myfitnesspal.com!
Vinitha
Hi
Thanks for your reply. I wanted to feature the recipe on my health blog www.lunchboxlicense.wordpress.com with all credit to you and your website. I hope that is ok
Kate
Hi Vinitha, I don’t allow other websites to publish my recipes, but you’re welcome to link over to my post! Thank you.
Nadine
Can you make these with splenda? I cannot have sugar or honey.
Kate
That’s a good question, Nadine. The honey helps the bars stick together, so I’m not sure. If you give it a try and the mixture isn’t sticking together, adding a little more almond butter might do the trick.
Elizabeth
Hi Kate
My daughter ryen & I found your recipe while looking for healthy snack recipes to take to school. We cannot wait to try & bake these together & more so to eat them!!! Can you provide the nutritional value by any chance? Calories/fat/sugar
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Elizabeth! I’m sorry, I don’t provide nutrition information since the numbers depend so much on actual ingredients used.
Maggie Delancey
I love this recipe. I didnt have quick oats, but dry toasting rolled oats worked just fine. Also, we are cutting back on sugar, so instead of the chocolate chips, I threw in about 1/3 cup of pretzel sticks (snyders has no added sugar)
These are fantastic!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks, Maggie! Pretzels sound like a really tasty addition.
Ellen
yum! just made these with….. chopped banana chips instead of the almonds. perfect combination! I also used a cookie scoop to drop potions into a cupcake tin with paper liners, then I pressed them firmly in with a small cup bottom. I can easily throw them in my kids lunches. one recipe made 24 kids sized granola-bar cupcakes.
thank-you!!!!
Kate
Well, your banana chip version sounds stellar! And great idea to scoop portions into a cupcake tin!
Ayme
My 10 year old daughter (also a Kate) has been wanting to try her hand at homemade granola bars. This was our first recipe to try and we are hooked! Ours were a little bit crumbly but we will just add more oats next time. I have a feeling this batch won’t last long :) Thanks for sharing a great recipe!
Kate
Ayme, that’s so fun to hear! Thank you for letting me know!
Megan-Drew
Storing in the freezer sounds perfect, but how do you like to eat them after that? Do you take one out and let it come up to room temp? Do you eat them frozen? Or do you microwave/bake them briefly to take away the chill.
Developed an adult-onset peanut allergy and really missing my snacks, so I’m looking forward to trying this recipe!
Kate
Hi Megan! The bars are pretty rock-solid once frozen, so they need a little time to defrost. You can leave them at room temp or microwave very briefly (maybe 10 seconds at a time).
Sally
These are great snacks for my kids, thanks! My four year old wanted to make granola balls and cookies, so we rolled them and smooshed them instead of the bars. This was perfect for little hands. My toddler had a hard time with the sliced almonds so the next time I make these I will try to substitute rice crispies for the nuts. I’m assuming that will be an ok substitution? I love your recipes – thank you!
Kate
Hi Sally! I love that idea. I wonder if the rice crispies will retain their texture—might be worth a try!
Mackenzie
One of my friends made this recipe just the other day. She and her husband ended up melting down some dark chocolate and dipping the bars in them. Holy cow were they delicious! So delicious in fact that I have a batch hardening in the fridge right now. Thank you for this awesome recipe!
Kate
Well, that sounds like a great idea to me! Thanks, Mackenzie! I can’t get enough of these, either.
Robin
I made these for the first time last week and loved them. I had trouble getting everything mixed together. Wondering if I didn’t have enough liquid. Thoughts? Also, where do you find mini dark chocolate chips? I can’t find any in our local stores. Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Robin! These should be a little tough to mix, but you could add more almond butter or honey next time to make it work. I can’t remember where I found mini chocolate chips… I think at Target? Another option is to process regular chocolate chips in a food processor until they’re roughly halved in size. Too big, and they’ll make it hard to slice the bars evenly.
Robin
I don’t have trouble finding semi-sweet or milk chocolate mini chips, just not dark chocolate. Guess I’ll keep looking – or try your idea in a food processor. Thanks!
barbara@zestnutrition.ca
These look amazing. Have you ever used pumpkin butter? I am tempted to try as most schools are nut free.
Thanks
Kate
No, I haven’t! I think pumpkin butter in addition to honey would make very sweet bars. Check my recipe notes for nut-free suggestions!
Pat Manis
The taste of these is wonderful, but as every other granola bar it falls apart! I would like to know the secret for making granola bars firm enough to not fall apart but not be hard.
★★★
Kate
I’m sorry to hear that, Pat! Did you really press the ingredients into the base of the pan as directed? I’ve found that to be key, as well as giving the bars some time to rest and absorb some moisture before using a sharp knife to slice.
Mia
Hey the look delicious!! I’m not living in the US and I’d love to make them, but I never saw almond butter before and the peanut butter tastes awful… Do you have any idea how I could substitute this ingredient?
Mia
** I mean here the peanut butter tastes awful :) In general I love it!
Kate
Yay, so glad to have found this recipe…I’ve become obsessed with the Kaldi granola bars but they’re tough on the wallet! Will try baking up a batch of these for cheaper weekday breakfasts :)
K
These are FANTASTIC. My daugher has a lot of food intolerances, which has ruled out almost all store bought granola bars. These are the best granola bars we have ever had–extremely addictive. We subbed chopped peanuts and toasted/chopped pumpkin seeds for the almonds. My daughter says they taste like a dessert, and I agree. Thank you so much for posting this recipe. We also love your granola recipe!
F
I just made these with PB2 instead of peanut butter and they came out amazing! Much less fattening with the same great taste and texture. Thanks for the recipe!
Baekhyun Byun
Made these several times, taste great!
★★★★★
Kelly
I looked for a long time to find a recipe without butter and sugar and I was really excited when I found these! I used to love granola bars but the storebought ones can be so unhealthy, so I’m excited to eat these! I subbed in 1/3 cup sunflower seeds for 1/3 cup of almonds, 2/3 cup pecan pieces for the chocolate chips, used natural peanut butter, and left the salt out for a slightly healthier option. The batter tastes awesome! Thanks!
Kelly
I made these with Trader Joe’s peanut butter and they’re so good!! They taste like peanut butter cups :) I also used slivered almonds instead of sliced, and I liked that texture.
I don’t know if I did something wrong, but I feel like I added almost double the amount of oats and they still seemed pretty wet and crumbled when eating. Still delicious though! Thanks Kate! You’re my favorite food blogger! :)
★★★★★
Debbi Parduhn
I have made the almond chocolate chip granola bars several times and have turned my co-workers on to them.They are so easy to make and they taste so very good.They are filling and a perfect snack when you need something between meals.
★★★★★
Mindy
I LOVE these granola bars! I don’t like almonds so I substitute chopped peanuts and it tastes great. Much more complex and filling than something you would buy at the store. I learned fast to hide a few for myself in the freezer or they would magically disappear in a day. :)
April Olney
I haven’t tried this yet but I’m planning to. I have been cooking and baking since I was just 9 years old. Following the recipe or tweaking it for my own personal taste. I love to make things from scratch because I believe that they are more healthy for you. Thanks for the recipe will let you know what I think.
Veronica
I am amazed at how cheap and easy these were. They are also delicious! My boyfriend really likes unhealthy junk food snacks so I was a bit worried these would be too healthy for his taste. He gobbled them up!! We both agree that they’re far more delicious than the bars bought in store. I found I needed a lot more oats than listed here before my mixture was no longer “wet”. I also added dried cranberries (yum). Shared your page with all of my friends!
★★★★★
I find them sticky what can I do to make them more solid
I find them sticky what can I do to make them more solid
Kate
They usually become less sticky after you let them chill for a while. If they’re still sticky, you might need to add a few more oats next time.
mary
These are AMAZING! !!!
★★★★★
Kaz
These sound yummy and now my son has finished kindie for summer I’ll make a batch for him. (Maybe without the salt) During term time I sub nut butter for Tahini to make them suitable for the schools no-nut policy. Can’t wait to try your recipe :)
★★★★★
Brianne
Just made this recipe and tried a bar. I am in heaven!
I have recently changed by diet but I have had the worst sweet tooth lately! These bars satisfied my sweet tooth and left me content without binging on a candy bar or junk food.
I also added chia seeds to get in my omega 3s!
Wonderful recipe thank you!
★★★★★
Alli
I glazed over the ingredients and totally missed the instructions! They STILL turned out great! I was lazy and used 2 cups of slow oats, I only had less than half a pound Jar of pb, so I just plopped it in. I didn’t have nuts, but used some trail mix, said “whatever” and dumped the while package in. Lol! I didn’t have enough honey but figured some organic pancake syrup would do the trick so I squirted that in, too. My daughter had a blast squishing it all up! A hand full of Choco chips later, and they became granola balls as they were sickly and I forgot to chill them. They barely made it into the freezer bag!!! :)
So SO much better than my attempt at making energy bars! I passed this “recipe” to a friend who’s gluten and dairy free and only eats things with 3 ingredients.
★★★★★
Scarlett
Great recipe! I ground the almonds and whole grain oats in the food processor then mixed all the ingredients together. I formed the dough into balls and froze them! Our HyVee store makes something similar, but they are very expensive! I am thrilled to be able to make my own at home! Thank you!
★★★★★
D
I LOVE this recipe. So simple and quick to make. I can’t eat honey or almonds or chocolate so I make a peanut butter, maple syrup version with dried figs and macadamia nuts.
Kate
Thank you so much for this no-bake recipe! It was so easy to follow the recipe, and the bars are very yummy. I replaced the almonds with walnuts as a personal preference, and added some flax seed as well. My bars came out a little wet, so I could have added more oats, but I’m hoping they sitting overnight in the fridge will help them become firmer. Thank you again for the recipe!
★★★★★
Margi Fisher
These were awesome! I finally made the commitment to eat healthy back in January, and this recipe was a great addition to my breakfast/snack repertoire. I used almond butter, raisins and sunflower seeds since that’s what I had on hand, but the variation ideas are already popping up in my head. So much better (and better for you!) than store-bought! <3
★★★★★
Melissa
I made these this weekend for back-to-school lunches and they are AMAZING! So delicious and satisfying – an instant classic in our house. My very picker eaters agree!
Thank you so much for your recipes – we have tried many and every one has been excellent. Your book can’t come soon enough!
★★★★★
Stephanie Keogan
I made these granola bars for my fussy eater of a son (4 1/2 years old). More importantly I got him to help me make them. I have to say we both love them and I like to think it is a much healthier snack than what he was used to and he would often ask for these now instead of sweets. I normally freeze half of them which is really handy to have in the freezer. They really are easy to make and so worth the effort. Thanks for a great recipe. Stephanie
★★★★★
Kate
Stephanie, that’s so nice to hear. Thank you for taking the time to let me know! Glad you’re both enjoying them.
Alex
I love this recipe! I’ve made it three times already – first two as written, and most recently I used different nuts. They’re a great snack to bring to work!
★★★★★
Shawna
Do you happen to know if they freeze well?
Kate
They do! They’ll just need a few minutes to come to room temp.
Cat
Oh yum! Just made these with homemade honey roasted peanut butter (nutrabullet blender is great for making homemade PB!) and toasted old fashioned rolled oats (I didn’t have any quick cooking oats except steel cut). I did have to use about 2 cups (maybe a bit more than 2) of oats to get them stiff enough. Other than that, I followed the recipe as written. Soooo good! Much, MUCH better than any store bought granola bar. Loved the flavors and love that this recipe can be adapted to what you have on hand. I have a gazillion packets of the dried fruit a certain coffee house gives you with your oatmeal. I’m thinking a few of those tossed in will be tasty too. My granddaughters are going to love these. Thanks Kate!
Kate
Thank you for your comment, Cat! I’m so glad you love these bars. They’re my favorite!
Ginafordinfo
It’s funny that you are posting this recipe today. I have a copy (the original I guess) that I just put in the oven. I keep thinking the oats should be soaked and dried first, but I just don’t feel like going to all that trouble. It looks like you don’t bother with that either. I wish I could get sprouted oats so I didn’t have to worry about it.
★★★★★
Kate
That would be a lot of effort. I haven’t seen sprouted oats for sale yet, but I’ll keep an eye out for them.
Joanne
Hi Kate, I just wanted to let you know that I made these Granola bars yesterday. I love them! They’re delicious and tasty! Thank you for the recipe!
★★★★★
Fred
What is the nutritional information on this? Sounds great but looking to use it for my calorie tracker.
Kate
Unfortunately, I don’t have nutritional info available for my recipes just yet. I’m looking for a solution, and will update about it once I find one. Thanks!
Rachel
so delicious – Thanks for another great recipe! I used tahini and cashew butter since that’s what I had -and only 2 tablespoons honey and it turned out great.
★★★★★
Kate
Your version sounds delicious, Rachel. Thanks!