With rich chocolate chips and plenty of nutty flavor in every bite, this easy peanut butter pound cake recipe is absolute perfection!
This peanut butter pound cake only has a half cup of peanut butter in the batter, but somehow that translates into a lovely peanut butter flavor throughout. Of course, the peanut butter chips help, too—and chocolate chips add another layer of deliciousness. Despite the non-traditional ingredients, this recipe has the classic pound cake texture, with a crispy crust that forms around soft cake. It really turns out beautifully!
Why You’ll Love This Peanut Butter Pound Cake Recipe
- The best combination. Peanut butter and chocolate are meant to be together! If you love recipes like this peanut butter chocolate chip cake and chocolate chip peanut butter bread, you’ll enjoy this peanut butter pound cake, too.
- Quick and easy. While it takes a bit of time to bake such a large cake, the process of mixing the batter is quite simple. And because there’s no frosting, once the cake is baked, there are no additional steps.
- Perfect for any occasion. This pound cake is a great “just because” dessert, but it’s delicious enough to serve for a party, especially if you dress it up with a drizzle of chocolate or a scoop of no-churn vanilla ice cream.
What You’ll Need
Scroll down to the recipe card to find the ingredient quantities and recipe instructions.
- All-purpose flour – Here’s how to measure flour for this recipe.
- Baking powder
- Salt
- Unsalted butter – Learn more: Unsalted or Salted Butter: Which is Better for Baking?
- Granulated sugar
- Brown sugar – I usually use light brown sugar in this recipe.
- Creamy peanut butter
- Vanilla extract – This homemade vanilla extract is my favorite.
- Eggs – Let these come to room temperature.
- Milk – You can use whatever you have on hand, but I do like whole milk best, as the extra fat yields the most tender crumb.
- Semisweet chocolate chips – Or chopped dark chocolate, if you prefer.
- Peanut butter chips
- Confectioners’ sugar – To dust the top. This is also labeled as powdered sugar, icing sugar, or 10X sugar.
How to Make Peanut Butter Pound Cake
- Mix the dry ingredients. Whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt in a bowl.
- Mix the wet ingredients. Use an electric mixer on medium speed to cream the butter, sugars, and peanut butter. Beat in the vanilla, then the eggs one at a time.
- Finish the batter. Reduce the mixer to low speed and mix in the dry ingredients, alternating with the milk. Fold in the chips.
- Bake. Transfer the batter to a Bundt pan coated with nonstick spray, then bake at 325ºF for 75 to 85 minutes.
- Cool. Let the cake cool in the pan for 15 minutes, then turn it out onto a wire rack to finish cooling. Dust with confectioners’ sugar before serving, if desired.
Tips for Success
- Soften the butter. Make sure your butter has softened at room temperature before you start the recipe. This will make it easier to cream into the sugar and peanut butter. Learn more: How to Soften Butter
- Dust the chips if desired. This batter is thick enough to keep the chocolate chips and peanut butter chips from sinking, but you can toss them in a bit of the flour if you want to make doubly sure.
- Use “regular” peanut butter. Natural peanut butter (the kind that needs to be stirred before you use it) can produce inconsistent results in baking. Stick with traditional, shelf-stable creamy peanut butter for best results.
- Keep an eye on the cake as it bakes. If necessary, cover the top of cake with aluminum foil to keep the top from getting too dark.
- Don’t let the cake fully cool in the pan. There is a sweet spot when it comes to turning out Bundt cakes—do it too soon and it will fall apart, but let the cake cool completely and it will get stuck. After 10-15 minutes, it should come out in one piece without sticking.
Variations and Serving Suggestions
- Glaze it. A chocolate or peanut butter glaze would be delicious on top of this pound cake, as would a cream cheese glaze (or even a cream cheese frosting, a la Nothing Bundt Cakes).
- Add different chips. Milk chocolate chips, dark chocolate chunks—it all goes well with peanut butter!
- Garnish with abandon. Take this pound cake to the next level by serving it warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream on top, or adding a dollop of whipped cream. Roasted peanuts add some crunch, or scatter additional chocolate and peanut butter chips on top.
How to Store
To store your peanut butter pound cake, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap or foil to keep it fresh, or place it in an airtight container. Keep it at room temperature for up to 3 days.
Can I Freeze This Recipe?
For longer storage, you can freeze individual slices or the whole peanut butter pound cake. Wrap it well and freeze for up to 2 months; thaw in the refrigerator before enjoying.
More Pound Cake Recipes
- Strawberry Pound Cake
- Orange Pound Cake
- Sour Cream Pound Cake
- Mini Lemon Pound Cakes
- Coconut Buttermilk Pound Cake
Peanut Butter Pound Cake
With rich chocolate chips and plenty of nutty flavor in every bite, this easy peanut butter pound cake recipe is absolute perfection!
Ingredients
- 3 cups (360g) all-purpose flour
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup (226g) unsalted butter, softened
- 1 & 1/2 cups (300g) granulated sugar
- 1 cup (200g) firmly packed brown sugar
- 1/2 cup (127g) creamy peanut butter
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 5 large eggs
- 1 cup (236ml) milk
- 1 cup (170g) semisweet chocolate chips
- 1 cup (170g) peanut butter chips
- confectioners' sugar for dusting
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 325°F. Spray a 12-cup Bundt pan and set aside.
- Whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
- Using an electric mixer on medium speed, beat the butter, both sugars, and peanut butter at medium speed until fluffy. Add the vanilla, and then add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
- With the mixer on low speed, gradually add the flour mixture, alternating with the milk, beginning and ending with flour mixture. Stir in the chocolate chips and peanut butter chips. Transfer the batter to the prepared pan and spread evenly.
- Bake for 1 hour and 15 minutes to 1 hour and 25 minutes, or until a pick inserted into the center comes out clean. If necessary, cover the top of cake with aluminum foil to prevent excess browning.
- Cool the cake in the pan for 15 minutes. Then, remove from the pan to a wire rack to cool completely. Garnish, if desired, with confectioners' sugar.
Notes
Recipe slightly adapted from Taste of the South.
To store your peanut butter pound cake, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap or foil to keep it fresh, or place it in an airtight container. Keep it at room temperature for up to 3 days.
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35 Comments on “Peanut Butter Pound Cake”
All chocolate all the time is not a bad thing! I’m also taking a little, and I emphasize little, break from baking with chocolate. The PB pound cake looks great! I like your chocolate sauce on top idea… damn it, I’m on a break!
i reckon that there cookbook is chock full of some dang good recipes. 🙂
tastes like home (but no, i don’t actually talk like that…)!
Mmm, peanut butter pound cake. What a great idea! I was also thinking a chocolate glaze on the top would make me happy.
I’m addicted to peanut butter, so your pound cake really makes me tummy rumble! Gorgeous looking!
Cheers,
Rosa
Peanut Butter? Yumm!
You know, I have this strange love for pound cakes and bundts – there is something so very old-fashioned, comforting and satisfying about them, that I can rarely resist! This looks like a lovely one, the chocolate glaze idea sounds fantastic.
I’ve actually never seen a peanut butter pound cake, but it sounds like the perfect comfort food.
There is definitely a lack of peanut butter cakes around, as I spent all night looking for one to make for a birthday party this weekend. And I’m not sure why, peanut butter is the best thing since sliced bread. Maybe next time, instead of the chocolate chips, I’ll toss in some nutellla. If you are gonna go, might as well go big, right?
This sounds delicious!
Chuck, I agree. I personally don’t need a break from chocolate. It’s just nice to offer something else every once in a while.
LOL, a grace! They actually have lots of wonderful recipes.
Leslie, it’s really good without the glaze, but the glaze just pushes it over the top.
Thanks, Rosa! This is certainly for you if you’re a peanut butter fan.
Tarah, that’s exactly how I feel about peanut butter.
Tara, I love Bundt cakes, too. I usually attribute that to my terrible frosting skills.
Alicia, I pretty sure this is the first peanut butter pound cake I’ve seen.
Amanda, recipes that prominently feature peanut butter can be hard to find. I have searched for many over the years because I have a father and a brother-in-law who love peanut butter. Whenever I find them, I am always sure to hang on to them. I actually had the same exact thought about the Nutella. I was thinking of substituting it for the peanut butter, then maybe adding chocolate chips and hazelnuts. Yum!
Deborah, it is very, very good!
I am never disappointment when I stop by your blog—just the most amazing photos & perfect recipes for a person who is all about dessert (that’s me!)! Of, course I take a gander at your additional related recipes–oh my–a peanut butter & chocolate cheesecake–is that legal?
Well, well, well. Looks like pound cake just got a whole lot better. Damn!
Thanks, JEP! I’m glad you enjoy the site. As for that cheesecake, I think it’s legal, but just barely.
LOL, Cakespy. This is some pound cake.
This cake makes me absolutely salivate.
This sounds like the first pound cake I’m going to make!!:) Swirls of peanut butter are what make it for me I guess…
Thanks!
This looks awesome, I need to get my bundt pan back so I can give it a try!
Thanks, giz, Evelin, and Brilynn!
My husband loves chocolate chip pound cake….but he’s also a peanut butter nut!! So I’m thinking he really gonna love it. Thanks for the recipe and your pictures are gorgeous!!! Do you use a tripod on your food pics?
http://www.burningkitchen.blogspot.com
Thanks, Terri! I hope you and your husband enjoy the cake. To answer your question, we use a tripod always with natural light and sometimes with a flash.
Good luck with the magazine recipe thing. I just made a new recipe – from 1996! The pound cake looks deelish.
Oooh, the texture of the inside looks to-die-for. Gorgeous!
By the way – I’ve tagged you for a meme on my blog. You don’t have to do it if you don’t want to, but the link’s here:
http://happylovestrawberry.blogspot.com/2008/02/expression-of-affection-and-meme.html
Thanks!
I’m always looking for new ways to use my bundt pan. Who can resist chocolate and peanut butter together?
Tracy, I’ve got “to-make” recipes from years back. I think it’s unavoidable. I am trying, though!
Thanks, Indigo!
Carla, I certainly can’t resist that combination!
Ooo peanut butter pound cake! Sounds delicious. I’m always intrigued by baked goods with peanut butter.
Thankyou this cake was so yummy! I’m rom England and we don’t have chocolate and peanut butter morsels so as a substitute I used a concoction of a chopped up milk chocolate bar and a couple of big spoonfuls each of nutella and crunchy peant butter.
I also added chocolate icing which literally topped it off!
Before I made it I wasn’t totally sure that peanut butter would go in a cake but had to make it for my friend’s birthday cake as she loves pb, and it definitely worked, I’ll be making this again!
Hatti, I’m glad you liked it! The addition of Nutella sounds delicious.
Hi Jennifer, just wanted to let you know that I made this cake this morning and the smells in my kitchen are making me salvitate! This is the first pound cake I’ve ever made and something tells me I’m not going to be disappointed. Thank you for a great recipe 🙂
nickki, that’s good to hear. Enjoy!
I have made this cake several times and my family loves it!!!!! I wonder if you can substitute sour cream for the milk . I may try and see how it comes out .
Hi, Aida. I think you should be able to use sour cream. You might try adding a bit of baking soda because of the acidity of the sour cream.
Hi Jennifer I made this morning using the sour cream and taking your advise on using baking soda and it came out great! It is just as moist as using milk. Thanks for the tip. Now I know I can make this with milk or sour cream 🙂
Hello, Jennifer! I made this yesterday afternoon, instead of going out to take a walk! Hey, it was windy and raining, so making a cake just seemed like the logical alternative. We don’t have swirled chocolate-peanut butter chips so I used half peanut butter chips and half chopped milk chocolate. So dense and rich! My husband doesn’t like PB, so I’ve cut up the cake and frozen it, to take out and enjoy anytime I like!
Cake baking generally wins over taking a walk for me, too. 😉 Glad you liked the cake!
Don’t eat chocolate how is this w/o chocolateÂ
You can omit them, or try using peanut butter chips for more peanut butter flavor.