5 Ingredients or Fewer

Chocolate and Nut Butter Caramel Bark

November  8, 2015
4
1 Ratings
Photo by Kyle Orosz
  • Makes one sheet of chocolate bark
Author Notes

A reinterpretation and mash-up of two of my favorite childhood sweets: chocolate bark and peanut butter. I used Justin's Almond Butter in this recipe, but you could use any nut butter you'd like. —Samantha Weiss Hills

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Ingredients
  • 1 pound bittersweet chocolate
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1/4 cup nut butter
Directions
  1. Chop the chocolate into smaller shards and set aside.
  2. Temper the chocolate. I like to use the metal bowl over a sauce pan method. In a small saucepan over high heat, bring some water to a boil. (I generally fill the saucepan up halfway, but it depends how deep your metal bowl is.) Once the water is boiling, turn the heat down so that the water is at a simmer and place a wide, shallow metal bowl over the top—it should nest right into the saucepan without touching the water for this to work well. Add the chocolate and stir at regular intervals until it is fully melted.
  3. On a parchment-lined baking sheet, pour the melted chocolate in one 1/4-inch tall layer. Set aside as you prepare the peanut butter caramel.
  4. In a shallow saute pan over medium heat, melt the sugar by simply lifting the pan and swirling it around as the sugar melts. You don't want to mess with it using a utensil too much.
  5. Once the sugar has mostly dissolved, add the cream. Do this carefully, as it will almost be guaranteed to bubble and splatter as you do so. Whisk the cream and sugar together constantly to make a caramel. While you whisk, you'll probably notice a bump of hardened sugar develop on the whisk—that's ok. You'll want to work on melting this as you incorporate the sugar and cream. It's important to to fully mix the sugar in with the cream so when you add your nut butter it doesn't split.
  6. Once the sugar has dissolved into the cream, add the nut butter. Whisk constantly so that you fully incorporate the nut butter with the caramel. Once it's all one mixture, remove from heat.
  7. Take a spoon to the caramel and drizzle all over the chocolate. Place the baking sheet with chocolate and nut butter caramel drizzle into the refrigerator to set. I like to leave mine in there overnight so there's no doubt it will be hard as a rock. When you're ready to eat, remove and give it a bunch of cracks so it breaks up into chunks for easy snacking.

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3 Reviews

erinbdm December 12, 2015
Just made this for the first time. I took great care to continue mixing the cream and sugar until the hard lump of sugar on the whisk was completely incorporated. I added natural smooth almond butter from trader joe's and stirred until it was incorporated. When I went to drizzle the mixture onto my chocolate an oily/watery mixture separated from the rest of the mixture. Any ideas about why this happened?
Samantha W. December 25, 2015
This can be a somewhat common occurrence! Since it seems like you stirred it regularly until it was incorporated, it's possible this could be attributed to an abrupt temperature shift, a too-thin saucepan, or the humidity in your kitchen.
laurenlocally December 1, 2015
Making this with my 4 yo this holiday!