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Home » Recipes » Bars

Old fashioned Oh Henry Bars Recipe

Updated: May 13, 2026 by Marye

This easy Oh Henry bars recipe is an old fashioned dessert bar with oats, chocolate, and peanut butter. Perfect for potlucks and bake sales and so easy the kids can make them!
Total time for the recipe to be finished.Total Time 1 hour hour 30 minutes minutes
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Stack of oatmeal bar cookies with chocolate frosting.
Oh Henry Bars collage with text overlay for Pinterest

Oh Henry bars were what somebody's mom brought to the bake sale, your aunt showed up with at Christmas, or your grandma quietly hid in the kitchen so nobody would eat them all at once. Sweet, chewy, chocolatey, peanut buttery comfort with pantry ingredients and zero drama.

Closeup of Oh Henry Bar cookies showing texture of bar and glaze.

🥰 Is this Oh Henry bars recipe for you?

  • You believe peanut butter and chocolate can solve many of life's little problems
  • You love old fashioned desserts that taste like somebody's grandma absolutely refused to buy store-bought snacks
  • You need an easy dessert for potlucks, bake sales, family reunions, or "I promised I'd bring something and immediately forgot" situations
  • You want a nostalgic recipe made with pantry ingredients and zero complicated steps
  • You like desserts sturdy enough to travel, freeze well, and survive being wrapped in foil and tossed onto a church fellowship table
  • Reader review
    These are amazing!! They were a huge hit, and so easy to make... I added chopped peanuts to the chocolate topping and I think it really added to the flavour. It added a nice salty taste and they looked more like an O'Henry bar. I will definitely be making these again. Bonus that they are gluten-free.
    Leslie

🧾 Ingredients you'll need for this vintage Oh Henry Bars recipe

A handful of pantry staples, a little butter, and the kind of optimism that says, "I'll just have one." (Narrator voice: nobody has just one.)

Labeled ingredients for Oh Henry Bars.
  • Oatmeal - Old fashioned or quick oats both work just fine. Instant oats, though? Bless their hearts, they are not invited to this dessert party. They'll just make it weird.
  • Brown sugar - Gives these bars that deep, cozy, caramel-y sweetness that tastes suspiciously like childhood and second helpings.
  • Butter - Melted butter holds the oat layer together and makes it rich enough to make store-bought granola bars feel deeply inadequate.
  • Peanut butter - The emotional support ingredient. Creamy or chunky both work, depending on whether you like your chocolate topping smooth or with a little attitude.
  • Sugar - A little regular sugar keeps the oat base sweet and perfectly chewy without getting fussy.
  • Chocolate chips - Melted with peanut butter into the glossy top layer that makes people hover near the pan cutting "tiny pieces" every twenty minutes.

Be sure to download the free printable Oh Henry Bars kitchen cheat sheet with extra storage, tips, faqs, and more.

📖 Recipe

Stack of oatmeal bar cookies with chocolate frosting.

Oh Henry Bars

4.55 from 185 votes
Print Pin Recipe Rate Recipe
This easy Oh Henry bars recipe is an old fashioned dessert bar with oats, chocolate, and peanut butter. Perfect for potlucks and bake sales and so easy the kids can make them!
Course Bar cookies
Cuisine Amercian Heritage,American - Vintage
Prep Time: 5 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes minutes
Chill: 1 hour hour
Total Time: 1 hour hour 30 minutes minutes
Servings:24
Calories:268
Author:Marye Audet-White

Ingredients

  • 4 cups oats, Old fashioned or quick
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1 cup butter, melted
  • 6 ounces chocolate chips
  • 1 cup peanut butter

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350.
  • Grease 13" x 9 " pan or spray with no-stick cooking spray.
  • Cover with parchment paper and spray with more no-stick spray if desired.
  • Mix oats, sugar and brown sugar in large bowl.
  • Pour melted butter over and mix well.
  • Press into pan firmly and bake for 15 - 20 minutes.
  • Cool.
  • Melt chocolate and peanut butter together stirring to blend.
  • Spread over cooled cookie base.
  • Chill 1 hour…IF you can wait that long.
  • Cut into 2 dozen bars.

Notes

Storage:
Cover with plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 3 days. You can also refrigerate for 5 days or so or freeze for 2 months.
Expert Tip: If there are allergies to peanuts use almond butter. soy nut butter, or sunflower seed butter in place of the peanut butter.
  • Old fashioned or quick oats are fine - just don't use instant oatmeal. It won't work!!
  • Brown sugar- either golden or dark is fine. It's up to your tastes.
  • Double check your products for gluten but these are, as far as I know, gluten free.

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 268kcal | Carbohydrates: 29g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 15g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 21mg | Sodium: 125mg | Potassium: 133mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 18g | Vitamin A: 250IU | Vitamin C: 0.1mg | Calcium: 30mg | Iron: 0.9mg

Nutrition information is estimated as a courtesy. If using for medical purposes, please verify information using your own nutritional calculator. Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

This recipe has been tested several times. If you choose to use other ingredients, or change the technique in some way, the results may not be the same.

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🔪 How to make Oh Henry bars

These old fashioned Oh Henry bars are easy enough for beginner bakers and forgiving enough for tired Tuesdays. We love a low-effort dessert with a strong personality.

step by step images showing how to make oh henry bars.
  1. Toss the oats and sugars into a bowl. This is where the chewy magic starts.
  2. Stir it all together. Break up any brown sugar clumps before they start acting difficult.
  3. Pour in the melted butter. Things are about to get deliciously serious.
  4. Mix until everything looks buttery and cozy. Dry oats are not the vibe here.
  5. Press into your prepared pan. Firm enough to hold together, not "angry at the pan" hard.
  6. Bake until lightly golden. Your kitchen should start smelling like somebody's grandma loved you.
  7. Melt the chocolate chips and peanut butter together. The emotional support layer has entered the chat.
  8. Stir until smooth and glossy. Like melted candy-bar dreams.
  9. Spoon over the cooled oatmeal base. Try not to eat it with a spoon standing at the counter. Or do. I'm not the boss of you. 😌

😱 What can go wrong (and how to fix it)

🍫 Your bars are dry and crumbly
This usually means they baked too long. Start checking around 15 minutes because ovens love to freelance. The bars will firm up as they cool, so don't wait for them to look super done.

🥜 The chocolate topping won't spread smoothly
Usually the chocolate needs another few seconds of melting or the peanut butter ratio is a little off. Stir until glossy and smooth before spreading. If it still feels stubborn, microwave in 10-second bursts.

🍫 The bars stick to the pan like they pay rent there
Line the pan with parchment paper and leave some hanging over the sides like little handles. Future You will thank Present You.

🥜 The oat layer falls apart when cutting
You probably didn't press it firmly enough into the pan before baking. Give it a good press next time. Not aggressive. Just "I mean business."

🍫 The topping cracks when cutting
The bars were probably too cold. Let them sit on the counter for 10 to 15 minutes before slicing, and use a sharp knife.

🥜 You accidentally ate three before they chilled
No fix available. This appears to be a feature of the recipe. 😌

One of the Oh Henry bars with a bite taken out of it showing layers of cookie and chocolate.

📚 More old fashioned bar cookie recipes

If old fashioned dessert bars are your love language, I've got more where these came from. These cookie dough brownies are what happens when brownies and edible cookie dough decide to stop fighting and just become one glorious dessert. Rich, fudgy, and absolutely the kind of thing that disappears suspiciously fast at family gatherings.

The M&M peanut butter swirl brownies bring serious lunchbox nostalgia energy with fudgy chocolate, creamy peanut butter swirls, and candy crunch in every bite. If you love the chocolate-peanut butter situation happening in these Oh Henry bars, these are going to be right up your alley.

Feeling citrusy instead of chocolatey? Lemon chess bars are sweet, buttery, bright little squares of sunshine with that old fashioned church cookbook energy we all secretly trust. And for holiday tables, bake sales, or random Tuesday emotional support, these pecan pie bars pack all the gooey, buttery magic of pecan pie without anybody having to wrestle pie crust. Because sometimes dessert should meet you where you are. 😌

These easy bar cookies are bound to bring back some amazing memories. You may even make some new ones for your own kids.

My favorite part of my mom's old 1941 Better Homes & Gardens cookbook wasn't even the cookbook. It was the stack of recipe clippings stuffed between the pages. Handwritten notes, faded ink, butter smudges, recipes from relatives I barely remember and some I never knew. I still have them all.

This Oh Henry bars recipe was tucked in there, looking a little frazzled and very well loved. Which tells me everything I need to know. Good recipes get messy. Every. Single. Time.

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About Marye

Marye Audet-White is a professional food writer, New York Times bestselling cookbook author, and founder of Restless Chipotle, where she shares Southern comfort food, yeast breads, and from-scratch recipes tested in real kitchens. She’s known for explaining the little technique details that keep recipes from going off the rails, so home cooks can count on what comes out of the oven actually tasting good.

Comments

    4.55 from 185 votes (173 ratings without comment)

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  1. Shanleigh says

    October 25, 2020 at 6:06 pm

    These are awful. The bottom completely stuck to the pan and is as hard as a brick. The top is okay. I wouldn’t waste my time on these. I am an excellent cook and am very disappointed. I was expecting the bottom to be chewy goodness. Sorry.

    Reply
    • Marye says

      October 26, 2020 at 8:47 am

      I'm sorry you had trouble with it. I've not had that experience.

    • Donna says

      June 04, 2022 at 9:05 pm

      Wish I had read the bad reviews before making these. Didn’t have any trouble site them sticking but base was crumbly and dry. They were just not good at all.

    • Marye says

      June 05, 2022 at 10:21 pm

      I'm sorry this didn't work for you Donna. I've tried to replicate the problem several times but they always come out fine for me and for the recipe testers I've used. I don't know why it works for some people and not others.

  2. Evelyn says

    February 20, 2020 at 1:21 pm

    Okay. I made these and followed the recipe to a "T". Yes, sprayed the pan with Pam. The bars are TOTALLY stuck to the bottom of the pan and Simply cannot be removed. What in the world?

    Reply
    • Marye says

      February 20, 2020 at 5:30 pm

      I've never had that happen... You didn't happen to use homemade peanut butter did you? Sometimes that causes things to stick because there's less fat.

  3. Candy says

    June 02, 2016 at 3:55 pm

    Are these soft?

    Reply
    • Marye Audet says

      June 04, 2016 at 12:23 pm

      Candy, not really. They aren't terribly crispy either.

  4. Manila Spoon (Abby) says

    July 20, 2015 at 2:21 pm

    5 stars
    Oh what a treasure trove of recipes and good memories you have in that cookbook! You must be so delighted to have that! And these bars are delicious and certainly timeless!

    Reply
  5. Kristen Chidsey says

    July 20, 2015 at 7:47 am

    Your parties sound like mine did as a child--I wish everyone would return to simpler things in life. Kids need so much to stay happy these days (my kids ALWAYS have a homemade party--I refuse to pay over 200 to just rent a place for a few hours)

    Reply
    • Sarah says

      October 25, 2017 at 1:38 pm

      Those parties arent just a thing of the past. All through my childhood my mom would make the boxed cakes, and do pin the tail on the donkey! That is the only way to do kids parties. I can't believe that Toys R US does gift registry!!

    • Marye Audet says

      November 02, 2017 at 11:07 am

      I know! It seems kinda of creepy to me that they do but some people love it.

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Marye Audet-White, founder of Restless Chipotle Media

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NY Times bestselling author. 10 cookbooks. Mom of 8 kids. Homeschooling mom for 22 years. Addicted to Hallmark Christmas Movies. Collector of old cookbooks.

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