edible gift vegan

Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls

vegan chocolate peanut butter balls

There are treats you make once out of curiosity. And then there are treats like these Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls — the kind that disappear from the refrigerator faster than you made them, that people reach for one of and then immediately reach for a second and then a third before the first has even been fully appreciated, that combine two of the most universally beloved flavors on the planet in a single, perfect, bite-sized package so deeply satisfying and so completely irresistible that calling them a treat feels like a vast understatement. These are those balls. The ones that get requested at every gathering. The ones that convert people who claim they do not like health food into people who eat six of them before realizing what has happened. The ones that taste so indulgently, so unapologetically rich and chocolatey and peanut-buttery that no one believes for a single second that they are made from four ingredients and require zero baking.

These are no-bake truffles of extraordinary simplicity and extraordinary deliciousness — a center of creamy natural peanut butter blended with oats, maple syrup, and vanilla into a dough so fudgy and rich and deeply peanut-buttery that it is difficult not to eat it directly from the bowl before it ever becomes a ball — rolled into perfect spheres, chilled until firm, and then dipped in a shell of dark vegan chocolate that sets to a satisfying snap around the creamy peanut butter center and makes each bite a perfect two-texture experience of crisp chocolate and yielding, creamy, intensely flavored filling.

What makes these treats so genuinely outstanding is their deceptive simplicity. Four main ingredients. No oven required. Twenty minutes of active preparation. And the result is something that tastes like it came from a professional chocolatier — with a richness and depth of flavor that commercial peanut butter cups and chocolate candies simply cannot match because the ingredients here are real, whole, and of infinitely higher quality than anything in a commercial candy bar.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally sweetened with maple syrup, made without refined sugar in the filling, ready in just 20 minutes plus chilling time, gluten-free when made with certified gluten-free oats, and absolutely, completely, magnificently impossible to stop eating.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins30 mins50 mins6~320 kcal

Ingredients

For the Peanut Butter Centers

  • 1½ cups (390g) natural smooth peanut butter (room temperature — runny peanut butter works best)
  • 1 cup (90g) rolled oats, blended to a fine flour in a food processor
  • 4 tbsp maple syrup
  • 1½ tsp pure vanilla extract
  • ½ tsp salt (essential — do not reduce)
  • 2–4 tbsp oat flour or coconut flour (as needed to achieve the right consistency)

For the Chocolate Shell

  • 250g vegan dark chocolate (70% cocoa or higher — quality matters enormously here)
  • 1 tbsp coconut oil (added to melted chocolate for a thinner, glossier, snappier shell)

Optional Add-ins for the Filling

  • 2 tbsp natural cocoa powder (for a chocolate peanut butter center)
  • ¼ cup (35g) finely chopped roasted peanuts (adds beautiful crunch)
  • 2 tbsp desiccated coconut
  • 1 tbsp chia seeds (boosts fiber and nutrition invisibly)
  • ½ tsp cinnamon (adds beautiful warmth)
  • 2 tbsp vegan protein powder (for extra protein)

For Topping and Decoration

  • Flaky sea salt — scattered over the chocolate before it sets
  • Crushed roasted peanuts pressed into the wet chocolate
  • White vegan chocolate drizzle for visual drama
  • Freeze-dried raspberry powder for color contrast
  • Cacao nibs pressed into the surface
  • Gold or silver edible luster dust for extraordinary occasions

Instructions

  1. Make the peanut butter filling. In a large mixing bowl combine the natural peanut butter, blended oat flour, maple syrup, vanilla extract, and salt. Mix with a spatula until everything is completely combined into a smooth, cohesive dough. The mixture should be firm enough to roll into balls that hold their shape — similar in consistency to cookie dough. If the mixture is too soft and sticky add oat flour one tablespoon at a time until it firms to a rollable consistency. If the mixture is too dry and crumbly add maple syrup or a teaspoon of coconut oil to loosen. The consistency varies depending on the natural peanut butter brand — some are thicker and some are runnier so adjust as needed.
  2. Taste and adjust. This step is important — taste the peanut butter dough and adjust the seasoning. More salt for depth and to amplify the peanut flavor. More maple syrup for sweetness. More vanilla for aromatic complexity. The filling should taste deeply peanut-buttery, pleasantly sweet, warmly vanilla-scented, and noticeably salty — all in perfect balance. This is the flavor foundation of the entire treat and it deserves careful attention.
  3. Portion and roll the balls. Line a large baking sheet or flat plate with parchment paper. Using a tablespoon or small cookie scoop portion the peanut butter dough into equal amounts — approximately 1.5 tablespoons each. Roll each portion between your palms into a smooth, even sphere. If the dough sticks to your hands refrigerate for 10 minutes to firm before rolling. Place the rolled balls on the prepared parchment-lined tray as you work.
  4. First chill. Place the tray of rolled peanut butter balls in the freezer for 15–20 minutes until completely firm and cold. This chilling step is essential — firm, cold centers dip in chocolate far more easily and cleanly than room-temperature ones, producing a thinner, more even chocolate shell and preventing the centers from softening and losing their shape during the dipping process.
  5. Melt the chocolate. Place the chopped vegan dark chocolate and coconut oil in a heatproof bowl set over a pot of gently simmering water — ensuring the bottom of the bowl does not touch the water. Stir gently and continuously until the chocolate is completely melted, smooth, and glossy. Alternatively melt in the microwave in 30-second intervals, stirring between each, until completely smooth. Add the coconut oil and stir to incorporate — the oil thins the chocolate slightly and produces a glossier, snappier shell that sets more cleanly around the peanut butter centers.
  6. Dip the chilled balls in chocolate. Remove the chilled peanut butter balls from the freezer. Working quickly one at a time drop a ball into the melted chocolate and use two forks or a dipping tool to roll it until completely coated. Lift the ball from the chocolate allowing excess to drip back into the bowl and return to the parchment-lined tray. Work efficiently — the cold centers will cause the chocolate to set quickly, which is desirable for a clean finish.
  7. Add toppings immediately. Before the chocolate sets on each ball add any desired toppings — a pinch of flaky sea salt, crushed peanuts pressed gently into the surface, a drizzle of white vegan chocolate. Work quickly as the chocolate sets within 30–60 seconds of the cold center touching the warm chocolate.
  8. Final chill. Place the chocolate-dipped balls in the refrigerator for a minimum of 20 minutes until the chocolate shell is completely set and firm. The finished balls should have a distinct snap when bitten — if the chocolate shell is soft the balls need additional chilling time.

Pro Tips for Perfect Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls

  • Use natural peanut butter with only one or two ingredients. Natural peanut butter — made from only peanuts and salt — has a runnier, more pourable consistency than commercial peanut butter brands that contain added palm oil and sugar. This natural consistency is what produces the richest, most intensely peanut-flavored centers. Commercial peanut butters with added hydrogenated oils produce a stiffer dough that can taste flat and artificial compared to the extraordinary depth of natural peanut butter.
  • Salt the filling aggressively. Salt is the single most important seasoning in peanut butter confectionery — it amplifies the natural peanut flavor dramatically and creates the sweet-salty contrast that makes peanut butter and chocolate combinations so uniquely addictive. The half teaspoon of salt in this recipe may seem like a lot for a sweet treat but it is precisely the right amount for this quantity of peanut butter. Taste and trust the process.
  • Freeze the centers before dipping — always. This step is non-negotiable. Room-temperature peanut butter centers are too soft to dip cleanly — they lose their spherical shape in the warm chocolate, absorb excess chocolate, and the finished balls have an uneven, lumpy appearance. Frozen centers dip perfectly and produce beautifully smooth, even chocolate shells with a professional finish.
  • Use good quality dark chocolate with a high cocoa content. The chocolate shell is half of this entire recipe and its quality is directly reflected in the finished treat. A 70% or higher cocoa content dark chocolate produces a shell with genuine bitterness and complexity that perfectly balances the sweetness of the peanut butter center. Low-quality chocolate produces a shell that is too sweet and lacks the depth that makes this combination so extraordinary.
  • Add coconut oil to the melted chocolate. One tablespoon of coconut oil added to the melted chocolate produces a thinner, more fluid dipping chocolate that coats the centers more evenly and thinly, and sets to a glossier, snappier shell than pure melted chocolate alone. This single addition elevates the finished balls from homemade to genuinely professional in appearance and texture.
  • Work in a cool kitchen. Warm kitchens slow the setting of the chocolate shell and can cause the peanut butter centers to soften during dipping. If your kitchen is warm work in smaller batches of 6–8 balls at a time, returning the remaining balls to the freezer between batches, and refrigerating the dipped balls immediately after finishing each batch.

The Perfect Chemistry of Chocolate and Peanut Butter

The combination of chocolate and peanut butter is one of the most beloved flavor pairings in the entire world of confectionery — and understanding the food science behind why this combination is so universally irresistible helps explain why these balls are so genuinely addictive.

At the most fundamental level the chocolate and peanut butter combination works because it satisfies multiple pleasure systems simultaneously. The sweetness of the chocolate and maple syrup activates the brain’s reward pathways through dopamine release — producing the immediate pleasure response associated with sweet foods. The bitterness of the dark chocolate provides a contrasting, sophisticated note that prevents the sweetness from becoming cloying and keeps the palate engaged. The fat content — from both the chocolate and the peanut butter — coats the mouth and carries flavor compounds to taste receptors with extraordinary efficiency, amplifying every flavor note simultaneously.

The salt in the peanut butter filling plays a specific neurological role that is often underestimated. Salt suppresses bitterness while simultaneously amplifying sweetness and the perception of other flavors — a mechanism so powerful that adding salt to the peanut butter center makes the chocolate taste sweeter, the peanut flavor taste richer, and the entire combination taste more intense and satisfying than any individual element could achieve alone.

Peanut butter contributes an aromatic complexity that is derived from the Maillard reaction compounds produced during roasting — the same chemical process that creates the complex aromas of coffee, bread, and roasted meat. These compounds interact with the flavonoids in dark chocolate — particularly epicatechin and catechin — to create a combined aromatic profile of extraordinary complexity that registers on the palate as deeply satisfying in a way that neither ingredient achieves independently.

This is food that satisfies through chemistry as much as through pleasure — and it does so entirely through plants.


Flavor Variations

  • Almond Butter Chocolate Balls: Replace the peanut butter with natural almond butter for a subtler, more elegant version with a beautiful almond fragrance and a slightly lighter, more delicate flavor that is particularly spectacular finished with a single toasted almond pressed into the chocolate shell.
  • Dark Chocolate Truffle Centers: Add 2 tablespoons of raw cacao powder to the peanut butter filling for a double chocolate version with a deeply chocolatey center inside a dark chocolate shell that is one of the most intensely chocolate experiences possible in plant-based confectionery.
  • Coconut Peanut Butter Balls: Add 3 tablespoons of desiccated coconut to the filling and roll the finished chocolate-dipped balls in toasted coconut immediately after dipping for a tropical version with extraordinary texture and a beautiful coconut aroma.
  • Salted Caramel Peanut Butter Balls: Press a small cube of date caramel into the center of each peanut butter ball before rolling and dipping for a version with a molten, salted caramel surprise at the center of every ball that is one of the most extraordinary confectionery experiences imaginable.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving — 3 balls)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~320 kcal10g28g4g20g

At 320 calories per serving of three balls these treats deliver a genuinely satisfying confectionery experience alongside meaningful nutrition. The natural peanut butter provides 10 grams of plant-based protein per serving alongside heart-healthy monounsaturated fats, magnesium, phosphorus, zinc, niacin, and resveratrol. The oat flour contributes beta-glucan fiber with documented cholesterol-lowering properties alongside B vitamins and iron. The dark chocolate provides an extraordinary concentration of flavonoid antioxidants — particularly epicatechin — that have been studied for cardiovascular protective properties, blood pressure reduction, and mood enhancement through the stimulation of serotonin production. These are treats that indulge and nourish simultaneously — the finest possible combination.


Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks. Place parchment paper between layers to prevent the balls from sticking together. Remove from the refrigerator 5 minutes before serving — the chocolate shell is at its most satisfying snap and the peanut butter center is at its creamiest slightly below room temperature rather than at full refrigerator coldness.
  • Freezer: These balls freeze beautifully for up to 3 months — making them the ideal make-ahead treat for celebrations, gifts, or simply having something extraordinary available whenever the craving strikes. Freeze in a single layer on a baking sheet until solid then transfer to a freezer-safe container or bag. Thaw in the refrigerator for 30 minutes before serving or eat directly from frozen for a particularly satisfying, ice-cream-like texture.
  • Gifting: These balls make extraordinary edible gifts. Arrange in a small box or tin lined with parchment paper, finish with a ribbon, and store refrigerated until gifting. They travel well when kept cold and remain beautiful and delicious for up to 2 weeks — making them a perfect holiday, birthday, or host gift.
  • Room temperature: The balls can be kept at cool room temperature for up to 3 days — the chocolate shell remains firm and the peanut butter center stays at an ideal creamy consistency. Avoid warm environments above 75°F (24°C) where the chocolate may soften and lose its snap.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my peanut butter filling too sticky to roll?

A sticky filling is almost always the result of using a very runny natural peanut butter or insufficient oat flour. Add oat flour or coconut flour one tablespoon at a time, mixing thoroughly between additions, until the dough firms to a consistency that holds its shape when rolled. Alternatively refrigerate the dough for 20 minutes to firm before rolling — cold dough is significantly easier to work with than room-temperature dough.

Can I use crunchy peanut butter instead of smooth?

Yes — crunchy natural peanut butter produces a filling with a beautiful, slightly textured quality from the peanut pieces throughout. The filling will be slightly less smooth when rolled but equally delicious and the peanut pieces add a satisfying crunch that contrasts beautifully with the smooth chocolate shell.

How do I get a perfectly smooth chocolate shell?

A perfectly smooth chocolate shell requires thin, fluid melted chocolate, cold centers that allow the chocolate to set quickly without running, and a gentle tapping motion to remove excess chocolate after dipping. If the chocolate becomes too thick during dipping reheat gently over the double boiler for 30 seconds and stir to restore fluidity. Tempering the chocolate — a specific heating and cooling process — produces the glossiest, most professional finish but requires a thermometer and practice.

Can I make these balls without oats?

Yes — replace the blended oat flour with almond flour, coconut flour, or rice flour in the same quantity. Each alternative produces a slightly different texture in the finished center — almond flour produces a more tender, slightly crumbly center, coconut flour produces a denser, more coconut-flavored center, and rice flour produces a center closest in texture to the oat version. All are delicious.

Can I use milk chocolate instead of dark chocolate?

Yes — use vegan milk chocolate if you prefer a sweeter, creamier shell. Vegan milk chocolate is widely available in specialty stores and online. The finished balls will be significantly sweeter than the dark chocolate version — reduce the maple syrup in the filling by one tablespoon to maintain the balance between the sweet shell and the filling. The contrast between sweet milk chocolate and salty peanut butter is a different but equally wonderful flavor experience.

How do I make these balls without a microwave or double boiler?

Place the chopped chocolate and coconut oil in a heatproof bowl and set it over a pot of barely simmering water — ensuring the bottom of the bowl does not touch the water — for a gentle double boiler effect. Stir continuously until completely melted. Alternatively place the chocolate in a warm oven at 200°F (93°C) for 5–8 minutes until softened enough to stir smooth. A hair dryer held 15cm from the bowl and directed at the chocolate for 3–4 minutes also works surprisingly well as an emergency melting method.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more indulgent, no-bake vegan dessert and treat recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Chocolate Fudge

vegan chocolate fudge

There are treats you make because something sweet is needed. And then there are treats like this Vegan Chocolate Fudge — the kind that sets into perfectly dense, glossy squares that melt slowly on the tongue with a rich, intensely chocolatey flavor that rivals anything from a candy shop. This is that fudge. The one that requires no candy thermometer, no stovetop drama, and no risk of grainy, broken sugar crystals. The one that disappears from the tin within a day of being made.

This fudge uses a simple, foolproof method built on melted vegan chocolate, full-fat coconut cream, and a touch of vegan butter, set in the refrigerator until firm and sliceable. It avoids the traditional candy-making process entirely, relying instead on the natural setting properties of chocolate and coconut fat to produce a result that is every bit as rich and dense as classical fudge.

What makes this fudge so outstanding is its simplicity — four main ingredients, no thermometer, no boiling sugar syrup, just melted chocolate and coconut cream combined and chilled, producing a result that is consistently smooth and perfectly set every single time.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, ready in just 15 minutes of active preparation plus chilling time, and absolutely wonderful cut into small squares for gifting, parties, or simply keeping in the refrigerator for whenever a chocolate craving strikes.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
15 mins3 hours3 hrs 15 mins16~150 kcal

Ingredients

For the Fudge

  • 400g vegan dark chocolate (60-70% cocoa), finely chopped
  • 1 cup (240ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 3 tbsp vegan butter
  • 2 tbsp maple syrup
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

Optional Add-ins

  • ½ cup (75g) chopped toasted walnuts or pecans, folded in before setting
  • ¼ cup (45g) vegan chocolate chips folded in for extra texture
  • ½ tsp espresso powder for a deeper chocolate flavor
  • Flaky sea salt scattered over the top before chilling

For Topping

  • Flaky sea salt
  • Crushed nuts
  • A light dusting of cocoa powder

Instructions

  1. Prepare the pan. Line an 20cm (8-inch) square baking dish with parchment paper, leaving some overhang on the sides for easy removal later.
  2. Heat the coconut cream. In a small saucepan, heat the coconut cream and vegan butter over medium heat until just beginning to simmer at the edges, with small bubbles forming. Do not let it boil vigorously.
  3. Melt the chocolate. Remove the pan from heat and add the finely chopped chocolate. Let sit undisturbed for 2 minutes to allow the heat to begin melting the chocolate evenly.
  4. Stir until smooth. Stir gently from the center outward until the mixture is completely smooth, glossy, and fully combined. Stir in the maple syrup, vanilla extract, and salt.
  5. Add optional ingredients. Fold in any nuts or chocolate chips if using, reserving a small amount for topping if desired.
  6. Pour and chill. Pour the mixture into the prepared dish and smooth the top with a spatula. Scatter with flaky sea salt or reserved toppings if using. Refrigerate for a minimum of 3 hours, ideally overnight, until completely firm.
  7. Slice and serve. Once fully set, lift the fudge out using the parchment overhang and slice into small squares with a sharp knife.

Pro Tips

  • Use good quality dark chocolate, since it makes up the majority of the flavor in this simple recipe.
  • Heat the coconut cream just to a gentle simmer, not a vigorous boil, to avoid the fat separating.
  • Let the hot cream sit on the chopped chocolate for a couple of minutes before stirring, to ensure even, gentle melting.
  • Chill the fudge fully before slicing — cutting too early will result in a softer, less clean slice.
  • Use a sharp knife and wipe it clean between cuts for the neatest squares.

Why This Method Works

Traditional fudge relies on carefully cooking sugar to a precise temperature to control crystallization, which can easily go wrong without a thermometer. This recipe sidesteps that process entirely by relying on the natural fat content of dark chocolate and coconut cream, which set firmly when chilled, producing a dense, smooth texture without any risk of grainy or seized sugar.


Flavor Variations

  • Peppermint Chocolate Fudge: Add ½ teaspoon of peppermint extract in place of vanilla for a festive, minty version.
  • Peanut Butter Fudge Swirl: Swirl warmed peanut butter through the top of the fudge before chilling for a marbled effect.
  • Orange Chocolate Fudge: Add the zest of an orange to the mixture for a bright, citrus-chocolate combination.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving — 1 square)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~150 kcal2g12g2g11g

Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks. Keep chilled, as the fudge softens at room temperature.
  • Freezer: Freeze in a sealed container for up to 3 months. Thaw in the refrigerator before serving.
  • Gifting: Fudge squares travel well when kept cool, making them an excellent homemade gift for holidays or special occasions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use coconut milk instead of coconut cream?

Full-fat coconut cream is recommended for the best set, as coconut milk contains more water and may result in a softer fudge. If using coconut milk, reduce slightly over low heat before proceeding.

Why didn’t my fudge set firm?

This is usually caused by using a lower percentage chocolate with less cocoa solids, or coconut milk instead of full-fat cream. Stick to dark chocolate with at least 60% cocoa and full-fat coconut cream for the most reliable result.

Can I make this fudge nut-free?

Yes — simply omit any nuts and use a nut-free topping like crushed pretzels or extra chocolate chips instead.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more indulgent vegan dessert and treat recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Tiger Butter

vegan tiger butter

There are homemade candies that impress. And then there are candies like this Vegan Tiger Butter — the kind that sets into a glossy, marbled slab of white and dark chocolate swirled through with rivers of peanut butter that creates a visual pattern so dramatic and so beautiful that it looks like a professional confectioner’s creation, while requiring nothing more than melted chocolate, peanut butter, and five minutes of hands-on time. This is that candy. The one that makes the most stunning edible gift imaginable. The one that makes people ask how you did it when the answer is genuinely as simple as “I swirled it.”

Tiger butter is a classic American no-cook candy traditionally made from white chocolate and peanut butter swirled into a marbled slab, with dark chocolate added for the characteristic tiger-stripe contrast. This vegan version uses vegan white chocolate and vegan dark chocolate with natural peanut butter, producing an identical result — a creamy, rich, marbled candy with the clean sweetness of white chocolate, the bitterness of dark chocolate, and the deep, nutty richness of peanut butter in every single bite.

What makes this candy so outstanding is the swirling technique — dropping spoonfuls of each component into the dish in an alternating pattern and then running a knife or skewer through them in long, sweeping strokes creates the distinctive tiger stripe marbling that gives this candy its name and its spectacular appearance.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, ready in just 15 minutes plus setting time, and absolutely magnificent broken into irregular shards and arranged on a plate or packed in a box as a gift.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeSet TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
15 mins1 hour1 hr 15 min16 pieces~160 kcal

Ingredients

For the Tiger Butter

  • 300g vegan white chocolate, finely chopped
  • 150g vegan dark chocolate (60–70% cocoa), finely chopped
  • ½ cup (130g) natural smooth peanut butter, warmed until pourable
  • 1 tsp coconut oil (added to each chocolate for glossiness)
  • Pinch of flaky sea salt for topping (optional)

Optional Variations

  • Replace peanut butter with almond butter for a different nut flavor
  • Add a few drops of peppermint extract to the dark chocolate layer for a mint version
  • Sprinkle crushed pretzels over the surface before setting for a salty crunch
  • Scatter freeze-dried raspberries over the top for color and tartness

Instructions

  1. Prepare the pan. Line a 20 x 30cm (8 x 12 inch) baking tray or similar with parchment paper, leaving overhang on the sides for easy removal.
  2. Melt the chocolates separately. Melt the vegan white chocolate with half a teaspoon of coconut oil in a heatproof bowl over gently simmering water, stirring until completely smooth. Melt the vegan dark chocolate with the remaining coconut oil in a separate bowl using the same method. Do not overheat either chocolate.
  3. Warm the peanut butter. Microwave the peanut butter for 20–30 seconds until pourable and fluid. Stir to combine.
  4. Create the marbled layer. Pour the melted white chocolate over the prepared pan and spread to an even layer with a spatula. Immediately drop spoonfuls of the dark chocolate over the white chocolate base in random spots. Drop spoonfuls of the warmed peanut butter between and over the chocolate drops.
  5. Create the tiger stripe pattern. Using a toothpick, skewer, or thin knife, drag through all three layers in long, sweeping back-and-forth strokes — first in one direction across the full length, then perpendicular to the first strokes. Work with confident, fluid movements rather than hesitant small strokes for the most dramatic marbling effect.
  6. Add toppings. Immediately scatter any optional toppings — flaky sea salt, crushed pretzels, freeze-dried fruit — over the surface while still wet.
  7. Set until firm. Refrigerate for 60 minutes until completely firm and set throughout.
  8. Break into shards. Lift the slab out using the parchment overhang and break into irregular pieces by hand for a rustic, beautiful presentation.

Pro Tips

  • Work quickly once the chocolates are melted — both chocolates and the peanut butter must be fluid and warm when swirled for the marbling to work cleanly.
  • Use confident, sweeping strokes for the most dramatic tiger stripe effect — tentative small movements produce a muddy, indistinct pattern rather than clean stripes.
  • Melt the chocolates separately and at a gentle temperature — vegan white chocolate in particular is sensitive to overheating and can seize if the heat is too high.
  • Use natural peanut butter specifically — commercial peanut butters with added oils or sugar do not flow as cleanly and produce a less attractive pattern.

The History of Tiger Butter Candy

Tiger butter candy is a beloved American homemade confection that appears to have originated in the American South, where peanut butter and chocolate combinations have long been a staple of home candy making. The name derives from the distinctive striped pattern that resembles the coat of a tiger, created by swirling the contrasting dark and white chocolate components through the peanut butter base. It became particularly popular in the 1980s and 1990s as an easy, impressive homemade candy gift, appearing in church cookbooks and bake sale fundraisers across the American South and Midwest. This vegan version maintains the exact same appearance, technique, and flavor profile using entirely plant-based ingredients.


Flavor Variations

  • Almond Tiger Butter: Replace peanut butter with almond butter for a subtler, more delicate nut flavor.
  • Mint Chocolate Tiger Butter: Add peppermint extract to the dark chocolate layer for a festive, holiday-inspired version.
  • Pretzel Tiger Butter: Scatter crushed pretzels and flaky sea salt over the surface for a salty-sweet crunch.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Piece)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~160 kcal3g14g1g11g

Storage

  • Room temperature: Store in an airtight container at cool room temperature for up to 1 week.
  • Refrigerator: Keeps for up to 3 weeks refrigerated. Let come to cool room temperature before serving for the best texture and flavor.
  • Freezer: Freeze in a sealed container for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature before serving.
  • Gifting: Tiger butter makes an exceptional homemade gift — arrange broken shards in a box lined with parchment paper and tie with ribbon for a beautiful, impressive edible gift.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use white chocolate chips instead of a bar?

Yes — white chocolate chips melt more variably than a bar and some brands contain additives that affect texture, but they work adequately. A bar of good quality vegan white chocolate produces the most consistently smooth result.

Why did my chocolate seize?

Chocolate seizes when it comes into contact with even a small amount of water, or when overheated. Ensure all bowls and utensils are completely dry and melt over gentle, not vigorous, heat.

Can I make this without white chocolate?

Yes — use only dark chocolate as the base layer and swirl the peanut butter through it for a simpler, equally delicious dark chocolate peanut butter bark.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more stunning vegan candy and dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Lemon Curd

vegan lemon curd

There are spreads you buy from a jar and feel vaguely disappointed by. And then there are spreads like this Vegan Lemon Curd — the kind that you make once from scratch and realize immediately, irreversibly, that homemade lemon curd is in a completely different category from anything that has ever come in a jar. This is that curd. Brilliant yellow, impossibly silky, intensely lemony in the way that only fresh lemon juice and zest can achieve, with a richness and body from coconut cream and cornstarch that make it spread like liquid silk and set into glossy, glossy, glossy perfection. The one that goes on everything. The one you make in double batches and find seventeen uses for before the week is out.

This recipe cooks fresh lemon juice, lemon zest, sugar, coconut cream, cornstarch, and turmeric into a thick, glossy, intensely flavored curd that is every bit as silky and rich as a traditional egg-and-butter lemon curd, without any of either. The turmeric provides the characteristic deep yellow color that lemon curd should have, contributing a negligible flavor note while making the finished curd look exactly as beautiful as it should.

What makes this curd so outstanding is the ratio of lemon to sweetness — using more lemon than most recipes dare to, producing a curd that is genuinely tart and intensely citrusy rather than merely sweet with a hint of lemon, balanced by just enough sugar to make every spoonful genuinely delicious.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, ready in just 15 minutes, and absolutely magnificent spread on toast, used as a cake filling, swirled into yogurt, folded into whipped coconut cream, or eaten directly from the spoon standing at the kitchen counter.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
5 mins10 mins30 mins45 mins8~120 kcal

Ingredients

For the Lemon Curd

  • ½ cup (120ml) fresh lemon juice (from approximately 3–4 large lemons)
  • Zest of 2 lemons
  • ½ cup (100g) cane sugar
  • ½ cup (120ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 2 tbsp cornstarch
  • ¼ tsp turmeric
  • 2 tbsp vegan butter, cold, cut into small cubes (stirred in at the end)
  • Pinch of salt

Optional Uses

  • Spread on toast or bagels
  • Fill cakes or cupcakes
  • Swirl into vegan yogurt or chia pudding
  • Layer in trifles and parfaits
  • Fill tart shells for lemon tarts
  • Fold into whipped coconut cream for lemon mousse
  • Drizzle over pancakes or waffles

Instructions

  1. Combine all ingredients except the butter. In a medium saucepan whisk together the lemon juice, lemon zest, sugar, coconut cream, cornstarch, turmeric, and salt until the cornstarch is completely dissolved with no lumps remaining. This pre-whisking before heat prevents lumps from forming during cooking.
  2. Cook over medium heat. Place the saucepan over medium heat and cook, whisking continuously and without stopping, until the mixture thickens significantly — approximately 7–9 minutes. The curd is ready when it coats the back of a spoon thickly and a line drawn through it holds its shape cleanly.
  3. Remove from heat and add the butter. Remove the pan from the heat immediately and add the cold vegan butter cubes one at a time, whisking each one in until completely melted and incorporated before adding the next. This technique — called mounting — adds gloss and richness to the finished curd.
  4. Strain for ultimate smoothness. Pour the curd through a fine mesh sieve into a clean jar or bowl to remove the lemon zest pieces and any lumps, producing a perfectly smooth, glossy curd.
  5. Cool and store. Press a sheet of plastic wrap directly onto the surface of the curd — preventing a skin from forming — and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes until thickened to the desired spreading consistency. The curd thickens considerably as it chills.

Pro Tips

  • Whisk continuously throughout cooking without stopping — the moment you stop whisking a cornstarch-thickened curd over direct heat is the moment lumps begin to form.
  • Use fresh lemon juice only — bottled lemon juice lacks the volatile aromatic compounds that make fresh lemon curd so intensely flavored and alive.
  • Use both juice and zest — the zest contains aromatic oils that are entirely absent from the juice, and these oils contribute much of the complex, floral lemon character of great lemon curd.
  • Add the vegan butter off the heat one cube at a time for the glossiest, most emulsified result.
  • Strain the finished curd — removing the cooked zest pieces produces a perfectly smooth, professional result.

The Brilliant History of Lemon Curd

Lemon curd is one of the most beloved British preserves, with a history stretching back to the nineteenth century when it first appeared as a simple preparation of lemon juice and zest cooked with eggs, butter, and sugar into a thick, spreadable preserve. It became particularly associated with afternoon tea, where it was served alongside scones and clotted cream as an alternative to jam, and remains one of the defining flavors of British baking and preserving tradition.

The name “curd” derives from the cheese-making process that it superficially resembles — both involve the controlled thickening of a liquid into a more solid, concentrated form through heat and chemical interaction. In lemon curd’s case, the proteins in the eggs traditionally provided this thickening; in this vegan version, cornstarch performs the same role, producing an identically thick, glossy, sliceable result without the eggs.

Lemon curd’s enduring appeal lies in its extraordinary versatility — it works as a spread, a filling, a sauce, a topping, and an ingredient in countless other preparations, making it one of the most useful and most rewarding things available to make in a home kitchen.


Flavor Variations

  • Lime Curd: Replace the lemon juice and zest with fresh lime juice and lime zest for a more tropical, slightly more tart version with a beautiful pale green color.
  • Orange Curd: Replace the lemon with fresh orange juice and zest for a sweeter, more mellow citrus curd.
  • Grapefruit Curd: Use pink grapefruit juice and zest for a more bitter, complex curd with a beautiful blush color.
  • Lemon Lavender Curd: Add 1 teaspoon of culinary dried lavender to the curd while cooking and strain out with the zest for a floral, aromatic version.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving — 2 tbsp)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~120 kcal0g18g0g6g

Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store in a sealed jar for up to 2 weeks. The curd continues to thicken slightly during refrigeration.
  • Freezer: Freeze in a sealed container for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and stir well before using — the texture may be slightly different after thawing but still delicious.
  • Gifting: Homemade lemon curd in a beautiful jar makes one of the most wonderful and appreciated homemade food gifts available. Label with the date and storage instructions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my lemon curd too thin?

Thin curd is caused by insufficient cooking time or insufficient cornstarch. Ensure the curd has thickened significantly on the stovetop — it should coat the back of a spoon visibly — before removing from the heat. It will thicken further during chilling.

Can I make this curd less sweet?

Yes — reduce the sugar to 6 tablespoons for a more tart, assertively lemony curd. Do not reduce below this as the sugar also contributes to the texture of the finished curd.

Why did my curd turn lumpy?

Lumps are caused by stopping whisking during cooking, or by the cornstarch not being fully dissolved before heating. Whisk continuously without stopping and ensure the cornstarch is completely dissolved in the cold liquid before applying heat. Straining the finished curd removes any lumps that do form.


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