Peanut Butter Clouds

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A gem from Alice Medrich, these peanut butter meringues are salty-sweet and light as a cloud.

peanut butter meringues

A gem from Alice Medrich’s Chewy Gooey Crispy Crunchy Melt-In-Your-Mouth Cookiesthese meringues are salty-sweet and light as a cloud. Lovers of both meringue cookies and peanut butter cookies will love them plain — a crunchy, two-bite treat to satisfy the sweet tooth. Everyone else will love them served sundae-style as Medrich suggests: piled into bowls with creamy vanilla ice cream and drizzled with luscious warm chocolate or caramel sauce. Yum!

“Oh my god, so so good! This combination of salty and sweet, that consistency of… clouds. So good.”

Anna

What You’ll Need To Make Peanut Butter Clouds

Countertop of ingredients including cream of tartar, eggs, and peanut butter.
  • Egg Whites: Provide the structure and light, airy texture of the cookies. Make sure your mixing bowl and your whisk are completely clean and free of any oily residue. If not, the eggs won’t beat up as they should.
  • Cream Of Tartar: Stabilizes the egg whites, helping them to whip to stiff peaks, creating a fluffy meringue.
  • Sugar: Sweetens the cookies and helps achieve a glossy, stiff meringue.
  • Smooth Peanut Butter: Adds rich, creamy peanut butter flavor.
  • Salted Peanuts: Add a crunchy texture, a nice contrast to the sweetness of the cookies, and enhance the peanut butter flavor.
  • Jump to the printable recipe for precise measurements

Step-By-Step Instructions

Begin by placing the egg whites and cream of tartar in the bowl of an electric mixer.

Stand mixer whisking eggs.

Whisk until the egg whites are creamy white instead of translucent and hold a soft shape when the beaters are lifted.

Stand mixer whisking eggs that are creamy white.

Continue to beat on medium-high speed, adding sugar a little at a time, taking 1-½ to 2 minutes in all, until the whites are very stiff.

Egg and sugar mixture in a stand mixer.

When you lift the whisk out the bowl, the whites should hold a stiff peak.

Stiff white peak of egg and sugar on the whisk of a stand mixer.

Scatter small spoonfuls of peanut butter over the meringue.

Dollops of peanut butter in an egg mixture.

With large rubber spatula, fold the peanut butter into meringue until streaky.

Spatula folding peanut butter into a egg and sugar mixture.

You don’t want it to be perfectly blended.

peanut butter cloud batter

Drop rounded tablespoons of meringue 1-½ inches apart onto the lined cookie sheets. Sprinkle each meringue with a pinch of chopped peanuts.

peanut butter clouds ready to bake

Bake for 1-½ hours, until the meringues are perfectly crisp.

baked peanut butter clouds

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Peanut Butter Clouds

A gem from Alice Medrich, these peanut butter meringues are salty-sweet and light as a cloud.

Servings: 30

Ingredients

  • 3 large egg whites, at room temperature (see note)
  • ⅛ teaspoon cream of tartar
  • ⅔ cup sugar
  • ⅓ cup smooth peanut butter, well stirred
  • 3 tablespoons finely chopped salted peanuts

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°F. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper. Position racks in upper and lower thirds of the oven.
  2. In the bowl of a heavy duty mixer fitted with the whisk attachment (or a bowl if using a hand mixer with beaters), combine the egg whites and cream of tartar. Beat at medium-high speed (or high speed if using a hand mixer) until the egg whites are creamy white and hold soft peaks when the beaters are lifted out of the bowl. Continue to beat on medium-high speed, adding sugar a little at a time, taking about 2 minutes in all, until the whites are glossy and stiff. When you lift the whisk out the bowl, the whites should hold stiff peaks.
  3. Scatter small spoonfuls of the peanut butter over the meringue. With a large rubber spatula, fold the peanut butter into meringue until streaky; you don't want it to be perfectly blended.
  4. Using two soup spoons, drop heaping tablespoons of meringue about 1-½ inches apart onto the lined cookie sheets. Sprinkle each meringue with a bit of chopped peanuts. Bake for 1-½ hours, rotating the pans from top to bottom and front to back halfway through baking. Turn off the heat and let the meringues cool completely in oven.
  5. Store the cookies in an airtight container as soon as they are cool. They will keep for a about 2 weeks.
  6. Note: You will get the most volume from room temperature egg whites. To quickly bring cold eggs to room temperature, place them in a bowl of hot tap water for 5-10 minutes.

Nutrition Information

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  • Per serving (30 servings)
  • Serving size: 1 cookie
  • Calories: 41
  • Fat: 2g
  • Carbohydrates: 5g
  • Sugar: 5g
  • Protein: 1g
  • Sodium: 12mg
  • Cholesterol: 2mg

This website is written and produced for informational purposes only. I am not a certified nutritionist and the nutritional data on this site has not been evaluated or approved by a nutritionist or the Food and Drug Administration. Nutritional information is offered as a courtesy and should not be construed as a guarantee. The data is calculated through an online nutritional calculator, Edamam.com. Although I do my best to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures should be considered estimates only. Varying factors such as product types or brands purchased, natural fluctuations in fresh produce, and the way ingredients are processed change the effective nutritional information in any given recipe. Furthermore, different online calculators provide different results depending on their own nutrition fact sources and algorithms. To obtain the most accurate nutritional information in a given recipe, you should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe, using your preferred nutrition calculator.

Gluten-Free Adaptable Note

To the best of my knowledge, all of the ingredients used in this recipe are gluten-free or widely available in gluten-free versions. There is hidden gluten in many foods; if you're following a gluten-free diet or cooking for someone with gluten allergies, always read the labels of your ingredients to verify that they are gluten-free.

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Comments

  • Hi! Is this good for a baby starting solids? Like does it dissolve easily?

    • Hi Lina, I do think they dissolve easily. 🙂

  • My daughter and I are slowly making our way through all of your cookie recipes while in lockdown. We made these yesterday and they were a huge hit! Super east to make and the peanut butter brings it to another level!

  • Should the oven door be propped open a bit for the cooling or should it be closed? Thanks.

    • Hi Susan, It should be closed. Hope you enjoy the cookies! 🙂

  • Oh my god, so so good!
    This combination of salty and sweet, that consistency of .. clouds. So good.

  • Want to make these cookies. just wondering should I use a regular oven setting or convection?

    • Hi Denise, I’d use regular. Enjoy!

  • I made these last night and left it in the oven to cool down till this morning. It was soooo good just wish meringue (in general) could be less sweeter 🙂 Brought them to work and my co-workers loved it. Perfect way to use my egg whites after making flans. Will be making more for sure.

  • Easy and delicious! Sweet and salty. I used superchunky peanut butter and they turned out great.

  • Absolute hit in our house. Be prepared to fight over the last one.

  • Hi Jen,
    Can I use some other nut butter instead of the peanut butter?
    Thanks in advance,
    Natalie

    • Hi Natalie, I’ve only made these with peanut butter but I think another nut butter would work as long as it’s smooth. Please let me know how they turn out!

  • Neither my husband nor I are fans of meringue, but we watch the British Baking Show, and they are always making meringue treats. So, I wondered if I could find a recipe for meringue that we actually liked. What to do? Look at Jenn’s blog, of course! We are now meringue fans. Well, these anyway!

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