Chocolate Peppermint Bars Recipe (2024)

By Melissa Clark

Chocolate Peppermint Bars Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 10 minutes, plus chilling
Rating
5(825)
Notes
Read community notes

A little-known fact: Creamy chocolate-covered peppermint patties are not hard to make at home. Here, the minty filling and chocolate coating are layered onto a cocoa-imbued shortbread base, which adds a cookie crunch to each bite. These keep well, so you can make them a week ahead; store airtight at room temperature. They also freeze well. The coconut oil makes the chocolate coating slightly shinier and a little more brittle in a good way, so use it if you have it. But if you don't have it on hand, you canomit it.

Featured in: Peppermint Patties Worthy of Dessert

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Ingredients

Yield:36 squares

    For the Chocolate Shortbread

    • 1cup/125 grams all-purpose flour
    • ½cup/100 grams granulated sugar
    • 2tablespoons/15 grams unsweetened cocoa powder
    • ¼teaspoon kosher salt
    • 8tablespoons/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick)

    For the Peppermint Fillingand Chocolate Top

    • cups/405 grams confectioners’ sugar
    • 3tablespoons/43 grams unsalted butter, softened
    • ¼cup/60 milliliters heavy cream
    • teaspoons/10 milliliters peppermint extract, or to taste
    • 9ounces/255 grams bittersweet chocolate (at least 60 percent cocoa solids), chopped
    • ½teaspoon coconut oil (optional)

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (36 servings)

139 calories; 6 grams fat; 4 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 2 grams monounsaturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 21 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 18 grams sugars; 1 gram protein; 15 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Chocolate Peppermint Bars Recipe (2)

Preparation

Make the recipe with us

  1. Step

    1

    Heat oven to 325 degrees. Line a 9-inch-square baking pan with parchment paper, allowing 2 inches of paper to hang over the sides.

  2. Step

    2

    Make the shortbread: In a food processor, pulse together flour, sugar, cocoa powder and salt. Add butter and process until a smooth dough forms. Press dough evenly into the bottom of prepared baking pan. Bake until firm to the touch, and sides of the crust are beginning to pull away from the pan, about 25 minutes. Cool completely.

  3. Step

    3

    Make the filling: In a mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine confectioners' sugar, butter, cream and peppermint extract. Beat until mixture forms a thick, smooth paste. Press filling evenly over shortbread. Chill to set the filling for at least 1 hour and up to overnight.

  4. Step

    4

    Use parchment paper overhang to lift the shortbread and peppermint out of the baking pan and onto a cutting board. Cut into 1½-inch squares (there should be 36 squares). Place squares on a rack placed over a parchment-lined sheet tray, and let them come to room temperature for about 15 minutes.

  5. Step

    5

    In the top of a double boiler or in a heatproof bowl set over a pan of simmering water, melt 7 ounces chocolate, stirring occasionally, until smooth. Remove from heat, add remaining 2 ounces chocolate and let sit for 2 minutes.

  6. Step

    6

    Add coconut oil, if using, and stir the chocolate until smooth. Spoon 1 teaspoon chocolate on top of a cut peppermint square, using the back of the spoon to spread chocolate to the edges. Be sure to fully cover the top of the square with chocolate. (Leave the sides exposed, though it's O.K. if some of the chocolate drips down.) Repeat with remaining squares.

  7. Step

    7

    Let squares sit at room temperature until chocolate is set, at least 1 hour.

Ratings

5

out of 5

825

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Melissa Clark

A note about the amount of chocolate/sweetness level of these bars. It's important to use bittersweet chocolate, at least 60% and preferably more like 72%. The higher the percentage, the less sweet the chocolate. The dark chocolate helps temper the sweetness of the peppermint filling. And it's important to use all of the chocolate called for, you want a thick layer to balance the sweetness of the filling. You can use less chocolate but the bars will taste sweeter. Just an FYI!

Lynn

Oh my word these are good. Seriously good. Be careful not to bake the shortbread too long- mine was done in 20 minutes. Spooning the chocolate over the top sucked the joy right out of making them so after two squares of spooning I transferred the chocolate into a pastry bag, snipped a tiny hole in the tip of the bag and drizzled the chocolate over each piece. It went very quickly and looked better too.

Laura

These were a hit at the office today!
I suggest a couple changes:
1. Limit peppermint extract to 1.5 tsp and add 1 tsp of vanilla to the filling -- it will taste less harsh and dental.
2. Definitely chill the filling overnight before trying to cut it -- an hour is not long enough for it to set.
3. No need to pull out the food processor to make the shortbread layer -- just rub the butter in with your fingertips.
4. Mix in an extra tablespoon or two of cocoa powder to the shortbread dough.

ToddA

Assuming it is food-grade peppermint oil, you would need to use dramatically less. Peppermint extract is the oil mixed into solution, so it is substantially diluted. A couple of drops would be enough. Ingested directly, peppermint oil can be toxic and should be kept away from children.

Kathryn

I enjoyed these bars a lot, but I found them far too sweet for my taste the first time I made them. I amended the recipe to be more like the bars my grandmother made when I was a child: ake the shortbread for less time (add more cocoa and 4 squares of melted chocolate to make them more chocolatey). Cut the filling in a third but add the same amount of mint, and really make sure to use dark dark chocolate. Makes for a slightly more adult treat.

Ellen Tabor

Don't you hate this? When recipes call for ONE THING you don't have? I saw a recipe that called for a 6" springform. Who has one of those? Anyway, if you don't have a 9" square pan, since the base is shortbread and pretty stiff, you can use a 9x13 pan, which you surely do have, and use tinfoil to sequester a 9x9" square. Or make a thicker base using the 8" pan you do have.

Rebeka

Plz do not use peppermint oil, it can be dangerous to ingest! Plz use peppermint extract for this recipe.

Lydia

Easy to make, tasty, albeit perhaps a bit too much...

Judy

Can you use peppermint oil instead of extract?

Lynn

Can I spread the melted chocolate over the filling-shortbread and cut into squares after it is cooled?

MBR

When I saw the photo I had to make this recipe. So pretty! I should have realized that I wouldn't like it. The filling is just a lot of frosting...Way too sweet. I may try again only substituting a cream cheese filling for the same effect. (If you like frosting, 1/2 as much would be better from my perspective). One last thing, I did all the mixing by hand, no food processor, no paddles. It worked fine.

Ryan

1. Limit peppermint extract to 1.5 tsp and add 1 tsp of vanilla to the filling -- it will taste less harsh and dental.2. Definitely chill the filling overnight before trying to cut it -- an hour is not long enough for it to set.3. No need to pull out the food processor to make the shortbread layer -- just rub the butter in with your fingertips.4. Mix in an extra tablespoon or two of cocoa powder to the shortbread dough.

ToddA

The base here is essentially a pastry. If you have a manual pastry blender, that would be fine. You could also cut the butter into small cubes and work them into the flour by hand, squishing them between your fingers to make a coarse meal. This is what Julia Child described in Mastering the Art of French Cooking and it still works great - no tools needed!

Catherine DiNardo

The shortbread was perfect: baked 20 minutes. Reduced confectioner's sugar to 300 grams, substituted peppermint with coconut extract (not a peppermint fan) and added cream gradually until the mixture was as described, a smooth paste. No problems spreading the filling over the shortbread. Used 85% cocoa chocolate and the coconut oil. Very nice results -- not too sweet -- and fun to make. Yes, there is extra chocolate ... darn will have to make another batch!

Lynn

Could I alter this in order to make it without having a food processor or a mixing 'paddle'? (I have a mixer but only with the two traditional metal mixers...no 'paddle'.)

Thanks.

Georgia

I've done something terribly wrong. My shortbread is boiling like candy! Suggestions are welcome :)

Baking4Christmas

Use hot cocoa instead of cocoa powder 4 the shortbread

Victor

Do not make this with the recommended amount of peppermintUse much less! Taste as you add

Fran E

I made these for a bake sale and they were so amazing I bought back a container of them! But I had one problem putting them together and wondered if anyone had a workaround. The peppermint filling was luscious and the perfect consistency once the cookies were complete. But I could not get it to spread to save my life! It did NOT want to adhere to the shortbread at all. The filling picked up the top layer of the shortbread, it took forever to beat it into submission. Any ideas?

Cook

Instead of putting the chocolate in every square individually, I poured it all on, stuck it in the freezer for 2 minutes and then cut it. It was a time saver AND chocolate saver too.Pretty good tho, and thanks Ryan for the peppermint extract tip!

Lauren

Melissa Clark does it again--these were absolutely delish! The only changes I made were adding an extra tb of cocoa to the shortbread & cutting down the peppermint extract to 1.5 tsp. I had a mishmash of chocolate in my pantry--for this mostly used 72%, had about 3 squares of 60% so I added a 1/4 cup semi sweet chips. Insanely good!

dhwsmith

An easier assembly method? Chill shortbread spread with peppermint stuff. Then remove from pan onto a flat surface. Spread chocolate with an off-set spatula. Cut into bars while chocolate is still soft.My shortbread mix stayed powery, but I pressed it into the pan and it baked up as it should.

Alexa

These were great, but I thought there was significantly too much sugar in the peppermint filling. If I made them again I would use about half the amount.

Cary

This is a go-to of mine. Yum, yum, yum! Recently I accidentally doubled the cream. Absolutely delicious, however it didn't fully set. Since then I add a tad extra. The layer hardens well but is more creamy. I also halve the chocolate and dribble it over the squares once cut. I use 100% cacao, thus the sugar layer lifts the chocolate but neither one is overpowered by the other. It literally melts in your mouth! Depending on the season I sometimes put some food coloring in the peppermint filling.

DMV in TN

These are wonderful! The shortbread layer baked up weird looking to me, bubbly and soft, but firmed up when cooled and tested great in the final product. The filling reminded me of butter mints, and was perfectly sweet when paired with good quality bittersweet chocolate. To those who accuse these of having a “dental” flavor: perhaps make a mint-free dessert!

GDavis

Sub 1 tablespoon peppermint schnapps for 1 tsp peppermint extract

Cary

Wowza! I'll have to try that!

Meghan

Is the shortbread supposed to be soft? First time I baked it—as directed—the butter bubbled out and it wasn’t usable. Second time I left it in the freezer briefly before baking, but it still started to bubble at around 25 minutes even though it didn’t seemed cooked. Was usable but very soft. Any tips? Should I turn down my oven temp?

Cary

I've never had your problem as such, but it did take a few attempts before I got it right. I find the key things are using barely softened butter (firm but you can squeeze) cut up into small pieces (about 4/5 bits per tablespoon) and making sure it really reaches a dough complexity. I.e., don't be afraid of letting it mix more. The shortbread isn't soft, but it's far from hard. I definitely need a knife to cut the squares, but it doesn't crack. Have fun perfecting. It's always delicious!

Halina

I found the frosting layer a bit too sweet- admittedly I’m not a sweet tooth. Next time will probably reduce to half or less for a thinner layer. And/or double the thickness of the shortbread. My child said it was like a peppermint patty w a slightly salty crust. My topping looked boring so I did little ribbons of chocolate drizzle over the nearly dried layer to give it a truffle-y look.

Cary

I dribble as you do (halving that portion of the recipe) but use 100% cacao, thus the frosting layer isn't too sweet. Also make sure you use fine Kosher salt, not coarse ground. Diamond is the brand. It comes in a big reddish box. I also refrigerate overnight before adding the chocolate. I get so many compliments every time I make this!

Meagan

Is it just me or at 25 min was the shortbread more “boiling like a cauldron” than it was “firm to the touch and separating from the side of the baking dish”? Looked a total mess so cooked much longer-closer to 40 minutes! Gave up for the night and left them all to sit. Surprisingly, all tasted “correct” the next day and served them at a party and they were a hit!Also, did not even attempt spreading the topping individually-covered the entire thing and then cut squares at room temp, no cracking.

Jamie

These were a hit at our annual Christmas party. They taste just like a peppermint patty, but with a pleasant crunch! Definitely putting these on the list of "must make" Christmas cookies!

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Chocolate Peppermint Bars Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How much peppermint extract to use in melted chocolate? ›

Add 1/2 teaspoon of oil. Melt in 20-second increments, stirring vigorously with a silicone spatula spatula or spoon after each increment, until completely melted and smooth. White chocolate and chocolate overheat easily, so it's important to do this in increments. Once melted, stir in 1/4 teaspoon peppermint extract.

Can I add peppermint extract to tempered chocolate? ›

Also, melted chocolate doesn't mix readily with tiny amounts of liquids. So, don't add peppermint extract or any other liquid to the melted chocolate, as this may cause the chocolate to suddenly harden. (A few drops of peppermint oil, on the other hand, can be added.)

How do you get peppermint bark to stick together? ›

The trick for chocolate peppermint bark layers that stick together is to add the white chocolate layer before the semisweet layer is completely set.

How long is peppermint bark good for? ›

A: Peppermint bark has a shelf life of 1 year.

How do you add extract to melted chocolate without seizing it? ›

Melt or temper chocolate to desired temperature. Add the extract of choice and mix it gently. The extract will mix with the chocolate without any changes to the consistency or texture of the chocolate. Set the chocolate in molds, use in ganache, as dipping sauce etc.

Can you use too much peppermint extract? ›

Its side effects are claimed to be usually mild and minimally toxic (gastro esophageal reflux, heartburns, nausea, vomiting, allergic reactions and diarrhea). High doses could be hepatotoxic[2] and nephrotoxic (rarely interstitial nephritis and acute renal failure).

Will peppermint extract make chocolate seize? ›

After your white chocolate is melted, add 1/2 teaspoon of peppermint extract. This will make your white chocolate seize slightly for a few seconds, but just keep whisking and it will smooth out.

How much peppermint oil per pound of chocolate? ›

Using essential oils in chocolate and chocolate crafting

Use approximately 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon per pound of chocolate or chocolate coating. Also ideal for flavoring candy centers & fondants. To use, add oil to melted chocolate and stir to mix thoroughly.

What will ruin chocolate while tempering it? ›

Two important things to avoid: Scorching (microwave); and getting any water in the chocolate (simmering water). Both of these things will ruin your chocolate and you'll have to start over. Water in melted chocolate "seizes" it, causing instant recrystallization – not in a good way. The chocolate will be unworkable.

What's the difference between peppermint and peppermint bark? ›

Peppermint bark is a chocolate confection. Generally it consists of peppermint candy pieces, such as candy canes, in white chocolate on top of dark chocolate, but peppermint bark can refer to any chocolate with peppermint candy pieces in it. It is especially popular around the Christmas season.

Is mint extract the same as peppermint extract? ›

Mint extract is a mixture of spearmint and peppermint, whereas peppermint extract is just that. Whether you prefer the subtle flavor of spearmint or the in-your-face flavor of peppermint, we have a recipe to suit your taste.

What's the difference between a peppermint stick and a candy cane? ›

The first difference between the two is that peppermint sticks will likely remain on the lower edge, while candy canes will likely go a little over 300 F. The lower the temperature, the softer your final product will be.

Where should you store peppermint bark? ›

Peppermint bark will keep for weeks if stored in an airtight container at room temperature. This makes it a great gift idea around the holidays—make a big batch at the beginning of December and grab what you need for easy gifts for teachers, neighbors, and friends.

Can peppermints go bad? ›

Like food, mints also have an expiration date. If mints are not stored properly, they will eventually go bad. Mints past their expiration date show signs of discoloration and stop giving off their fresh peppermint aroma. If there are changes to the way mints look and smell, they may be unsafe (and unpleasant) to eat.

Can extract be added to melting chocolate? ›

It is important to remember that when adding alcohol extracts and liqueurs to chocolate, these liquids need to be added to chocolate mixtures, not pure melted chocolate, otherwise the alcohol will cause the chocolate to seize and form a lumpy mass.

Can you use peppermint extract in candy melts? ›

Peppermint Extract – You could use vanilla, but we're going to pack as much peppermint flavour as possible into these treats! M&Ms – Any candy coated peppermint flavoured chocolate will do, just use one that is festive like red and green M&Ms!

Can you add extracts to candy melts? ›

Traditional Candy Melts candy is vanilla flavored; however, you can also find them in dark cocoa and light cocoa, as well as a variety of limited edition flavors. If you want to add your own flavoring, make sure your extract is oil-based. Anything that's not oil-based may ruin your melted candy.

How do you use peppermint extract in baking? ›

You can use peppermint extract as you might with vanilla extract by adding a small amount to baked goods or chilled desserts, such as ice cream. In my opinion, peppermint extract has a sharper flavor than vanilla, so I usually start with a smaller quantity and adjust as needed.

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