Thick, chewy monster cookies hit that sweet spot between a peanut butter cookie and a loaded oatmeal cookie, with crisp edges, soft centers, and enough M&Ms and chocolate in every bite to keep them from ever feeling plain. The oats give them a little structure, but the peanut butter keeps the crumb tender and rich, so they stay satisfying long after they come out of the oven.
What makes this version work is the balance in the dough. There’s no flour here, so the peanut butter and eggs have to do the heavy lifting, and quick oats help the cookies hold together without turning dry or cakey. The dough is thick, scoopable, and forgiving, which means you can get them onto the tray fast and still end up with cookies that bake up soft in the middle instead of spread thin and brittle.
Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: how to keep the centers chewy, why a light flattening helps these bake evenly, and the swaps that still keep the texture on track if you need to adjust the mix-ins.
The centers stayed soft for days and the M&Ms didn’t bleed all over the dough. I loved that the cookies puffed up a little, then settled into that thick chewy texture once they cooled.
Like these thick peanut butter monster cookies? Save them to Pinterest for the days you want a chewy, colorful cookie packed with oats, M&Ms, and chocolate.
The Reason These Cookies Stay Thick Instead of Spreading Too Much
The biggest trick with monster cookies is that the dough needs to be heavy enough to hold all those mix-ins without melting into a puddle. Peanut butter gives you that structure, and quick oats soak up just enough moisture to keep the cookies thick without making them dry. If you use old-fashioned oats, the cookies still work, but they bake up a little rougher and more rustic because the larger flakes don’t bind as tightly.
The other thing that matters here is the bake. These should come out when the edges are set and the centers still look a little soft. If you wait until the middle looks fully done in the oven, they’ll cool into a firmer, drier cookie than you want. The carryover heat finishes the job on the pan.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Dough

- Creamy peanut butter — This is the backbone of the cookie, replacing the fat and much of the structure you’d normally get from butter and flour. Use a standard creamy peanut butter, not a natural style that separates heavily, because the oiliness can make the dough looser and the cookies more fragile.
- Quick-cooking oats — These give the cookies their chew and help everything hold together. Quick oats blend into the dough better than old-fashioned oats, which means a softer bite and a more even texture. If you only have old-fashioned oats, pulse them a few times in a food processor first.
- Brown sugar — Brown sugar keeps the centers moist and adds that subtle caramel note that works so well with peanut butter. Packed brown sugar matters here; loose measuring will make the dough drier and the cookies less tender.
- M&Ms and chocolate chips — The M&Ms bring color and a little crunch, while the chocolate chips melt into pockets of sweetness. I like a mix of standard and mini chips because the minis distribute better, so every cookie gets chocolate instead of a few oversized pockets.
- Eggs — With no flour in the recipe, the eggs are doing a lot of the binding. Don’t cut them back. The dough will look loose at first, then tighten once the oats are mixed in.
Getting the Dough Mixed and the Centers Baked Just Right
Build the Peanut Butter Base
Beat the peanut butter with both sugars until the mixture looks smooth and slightly fluffy. It won’t get as pale as a butter cookie dough, and that’s fine. You’re looking for the sugars to disappear into the peanut butter so the finished cookies don’t taste grainy. If the mixture looks oily at this point, the peanut butter was too loose or the bowl needed a little longer of a mix.
Add the Eggs and Let the Dough Come Together
Mix in the eggs, vanilla, and baking soda until the batter looks glossy and thick. It may look almost too wet before the oats go in, but that’s the right stage. The baking soda helps the cookies lift a little and keeps the texture from turning dense and heavy. Scrape the bowl well here so you don’t leave pockets of unmixed sugar at the bottom.
Fold in the Oats and Mix-Ins
Stir in the oats until the dough firms up, then fold in the M&Ms and chocolate chips at the end. If you add the candy too early, the colors can streak through the dough and the chips can break apart more than you want. The dough should be thick enough to scoop cleanly and hold its shape on the tray. If it feels sticky, let it sit for five minutes so the oats can absorb more of the moisture.
Bake for Soft Centers
Scoop the dough into balls, flatten them lightly with your palm, and bake just until the edges look set and the centers still appear a little underdone. That slightly underbaked middle is what gives these cookies their chewy bite after cooling. Pulling them too late is the fastest way to lose that texture. Let them rest on the pan for five minutes before moving them, because they finish setting during that time.
How to Adjust These Cookies Without Losing the Chewy Texture
Gluten-Free as Written
These cookies are naturally gluten-free as long as your oats are certified gluten-free. That matters more than the rest of the ingredient list, because oats are the place where cross-contamination usually sneaks in.
Use Different Mix-Ins Without Changing the Dough
You can swap the M&Ms for chopped peanut butter cups, raisins, or a different candy-coated chocolate. Keep the total mix-in amount about the same so the dough doesn’t overload and fall apart.
Make Them Extra Peanut Butter Forward
If you want a stronger peanut butter flavor, add a handful of chopped roasted peanuts or swap some of the regular chocolate chips for peanut butter chips. That gives more peanut flavor without changing the bake time.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days. They stay soft, but the chocolate chips will firm up a little.
- Freezer: Freeze baked cookies for up to 2 months, or freeze scooped dough balls and bake from frozen with 1 to 2 extra minutes.
- Reheating: Warm a cookie in the microwave for 8 to 10 seconds if you want the chocolate soft again. Don’t overheat them or the oats will turn dry and the peanut butter flavor can taste flat.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Monster Cookies
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper, using a wire-rack-friendly setup for easy transferring later.
- Beat the creamy peanut butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar together in a large bowl until combined and glossy.
- Add the large eggs, vanilla extract, and baking soda, then mix until smooth with no streaks.
- Stir in the quick-cooking oats until fully incorporated, then fold in the M&Ms, chocolate chips, and mini chocolate chips so they’re evenly distributed.
- Scoop dough into 2-tablespoon balls and place them 2 inches apart on the prepared baking sheets, flattening each slightly with your palm for even baking.
- Bake at 350°F for 10–12 minutes until the edges are set but the centers still look slightly underdone, looking thicker and puffed with golden rims.
- Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack where they firm up as they cool.


