Retro Recipe: Homemade Nutty Bars (2024)

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Nealey Dozier

Nealey Dozier

Nealey Dozier is a former wedding planner turned chef, culinary instructor, recipe developer, and food writer. She is based in Atlanta. You can find more of her Southern adventures in eating and entertaining at www.dixiecaviar.com.

updated Jun 5, 2019

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Retro Recipe: Homemade Nutty Bars (1)

Serves8Makes8 bars

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With my wedding plans well under way, in addition to an upcoming engagement party and the fiance’s big 3-0, let’s just say I’ve been in full on entertaining mode. The internet has been a fabulous (if not overwhelming) source of creativity. With all the extra inspiration coming my way however, I feel the need to harness the overload of ideas into a few solid hostess home runs.

I’ve always loved the idea of a themed dessert bar for a party. For my own, I thought it would be fun to create the “ultimate snack bar,” featuring homemade versions of all my store-bought junk food favorites—think ding dongs, cereal bars, twinkies and whatever other whacky gas station goods I can think of.

I was hashing the idea out with a coworker and she demanded I make her Nutty Bars, a Lil’ Debbie snack I had all but forgotten about. Feeling nostalgic, I stopped by the grocery store on the way home just to snag a box. It had probably been 15 years since I’d last tasted a Nutty Bar and one bite took me right back to childhood. I flipped over the carton to check out the nutritional info; let’s just say I didn’t make it to bite number two. I practically needed a chemistry textbook to decipher the ingredient list!

Despite the onslaught of preservatives, the flavors are simple: chocolate, peanut butter, and sweet wafer. I figured I could handle the task. I had planned on making homemade wafers from scratch, but a little research made me realize it would overcomplicate my whole concept. I remembered seeing recipes floating around the web for a spin on toffee using matzo crackers; I wondered if they could work for my Nutty Bars? (Full disclosure—this was the first time I’d ever seen or tasted a matzo cracker in person. It’s just not something that shows up very often in a Southern kitchen.) The crackers sure didn’t taste like much, but then again neither do plain wafers, so my plan was still on.

Three ingredients and a *heap* of cracker crumbs later, I had homemade Nutty Bars that would make the “real thing” run for the hills. These crispy treats taste of good quality chocolate, creamy peanut butter and nothing else. Make these today and remember your childhood—without the plastic wrappers or the guilt.

(Readers, if anybody has a good method for breaking/cutting matzo sheets into even pieces, please let me know in the comments section. I have a feeling mine is not the most efficient method!)

Comments

Makes 8 bars

Serves 8

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 6

    plain, thin matzo sheets

  • 1 cup

    creamy peanut butter

  • 4 ounces

    good quality semisweet or bittersweet chocolate chips

Instructions

  1. Gently break the matzo sheets into 4 long pieces, then split each of those pieces in half cross-wise. (In a perfect world you'd get 8 even sections from 1 matzo sheet. I am not so lucky and shattered many pieces of matzo to get all my rectangles. Good thing I have a new recipe for Matzo Brei, which I'll be having for breakfast tomorrow.) Arrange similar sizes of rectangles into stacks of three. (I made 8 stacks.)

  2. Heat the peanut butter for a few seconds so that it is spreadable but not runny (if you overheat it, allow to cool a bit before moving forward). Have a 3-stack of matzo rectangles ready. Using a knife or off-set spatula, smooth a layer of peanut butter on one cracker, add another cracker, another layer of peanut butter, and top with the third cracker. Place the stack on a parchment-lined sheet pan and continue with the remaining crackers.

  3. In the bowl of a double boiler (or in the microwave on medium power), melt the chocolate until smooth and glossy. Use a pastry brush or off-set spatula to smooth a thin layer of chocolate over the top and around the sides of the stacks. If desired, draw a waffle pattern across the top of the bars using a toothpick. Chill the bars until the chocolate has hardened, at least 30 minutes. Keep refrigerated until ready to serve.

Related: Do You Have a Secret Food?

(Images: Nealey Dozier)

Filed in:

Dessert

easy

snacks

sweets

Retro Recipe: Homemade Nutty Bars (2024)

FAQs

What was the old name for Nutty Bars? ›

Nutty Buddy, formerly known as Nutty Bars, are a snack manufactured by McKee Foods under the Little Debbie brand since 1964.

Why did they change Nutty Bars to nutty buddies? ›

This is where the chocolate coating thickens: the kind lady on the phone told me they still manufacture boxes under both names. “We found out that people down South called them 'Nutty Buddies,' so that's why we made the switch,” she said.

What was the original Nutty Buddy? ›

Nutty Buddy was originally created and produced by Seymour Ice Cream Company, which was located in the Port Norfolk section of Dorchester, Massachusetts and named after its owner, Buddy Seymourian. Seymour Ice Cream ceased operations in the 1980s.

What are the ingredients in Little Debbie Nutty Bars? ›

dextrose, peanut butter, enriched flour wheat flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamin mononitrate [vitamin b1], riboflavin vitamin b2], folic acid), sugar, palm and soybean oils with tbhq and citric acid to protect flavor, palm and palm kernel oil, water, contains 2% or less of each of the following: cocoa, soybean oil, ...

Are nutty buddies and drumsticks the same thing? ›

Nutty Buddies and Drumsticks are similar but not the same thing. Nutty Buddies are cone-shaped wafers filled with vanilla ice cream and topped with peanut butter and chocolate, while Drumsticks are cone-shaped wafers filled with vanilla ice cream and topped with a chocolate coating and nuts.

What are buddy bars? ›

Crunchy wafer bars layered with peanut butter and a chocolatey coating. single serve, family pack, and big pack.

How unhealthy is a Nutty Buddy? ›

For one, they're extremely processed, contain multiple additives and plenty of fats and sugars. In fact, Nutty Buddy bars contain high amounts of sugar, saturated fats, trans fats, and the additives tertiary butylhydroquinone (TBHQ), soy lecithin, glycerides, and artificial flavors (per Is It Bad For You?).

Do nutty buddies go bad? ›

Shelf Life 60 days, FOA: Freeze for up to 6 mos.

What is the ice cream called Nutty Buddy? ›

Vanilla ice cream with caramel core, chocolate flavored coating covered in peanuts.

What if my dog ate a Nutty Buddy? ›

There's no need to worry! There is so little chocolate in a Nutty Bar that it won't hurt your pug at all. He could possibly have some vomiting or diarrhea from eating something unusual, but he probably won't have any symptoms at all.

What flavor is the Nutty Bar? ›

Rich peanut butter ice cream with crunchy pieces, dipped in a crispy milk chocolate shell.

Do Nutty Buddies have high fructose corn syrup? ›

Nutrition Facts

Ingredients: ICE CREAM: Milkfat and nonfat milk, sugar, corn syrup, high fructose corn syrup, cocoa (processed with alkali), sweetcream buttermilk, whey, contains less than 2% of guar gum, mono and diglycerides, xanthan gum, polysorbate 80, cellulose gum, carrageenan, salt.

When did Nutty Buddy's name change? ›

Originally Nutty Bars, the treat went through a mysterious name change to Nutty Buddy somewhere around 2016. A comic released in November of that year by the company made it all the more confusing for fans, who weren't quite sure what it meant, at least when it came to the great nomenclature debate of Nutty Bars.

Who was Little Debbie named after? ›

McKee was trying to come up with a catchy name for their new family-pack cartons of snack cakes. Packaging supplier Bob Mosher suggested using a family member's name. Thinking of what could be a good fit for the brand, O.D. arrived at the name of his 4-year-old granddaughter Debbie.

When were Nutter butters invented? ›

Nutter Butter is an American sandwich cookie brand, first introduced in 1969 and currently owned by Nabisco, which is a subsidiary of Mondelez International.

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