Peanut Butter Fudge Iced Brownies

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I’ve lost count of how many of you have tried this icing since I first brought it to Southern Plate back in 2008 on Red’s birthday cake. Our family tradition has us putting it over a yellow cake but the combination of chocolate brownies paired with this old fashioned boiled icing is a whole new level of old fashioned decadence – so much so that I’m devoting a whole new post to it!

We’re gonna start with boxed mix made brownies. I used two boxes of mix to make mine extra thick. If you do that you need to cut your oven temperature down to 325 and add about fifteen minutes to the baking process.

As far as which mix to choose goes, I usually get Kroger brand or some other generic but when I went to Krogers this brand was on sale for $1.00 a box. I’d go for whatever is cheapest where you shop because I’ve never met a brownie mix I didn’t like :).

You don’t have to use two boxes of mix, one is fine and you get to taste more of the icing!

You can also make them from scratch by using your own recipe or Susan Spencer’s Grandmothers recipe for Blue Ribbon Brownies.  The peanut butter icing will take on the star of the show so go with whatever you prefer and what you have time for but as for me and my house, we will make them from a mix today.

Folks that turn their noses up at anything that was baked for them, be it from a mix or completely from scratch, don’t deserve to have people making them brownies anyhow. Snootiness doesn’t bother me though, because that just means there is extra room in my life for good hearted folks with more sense 🙂

For our icing we’ll need: Peanut butter, sugar, a bit of salt, bit of shortening and margarine, little vanilla (I really do need to get a smaller bottle coz eventually someone is going to think they have to go buy a gallon), and some milk.

Place your milk, sugar, shortening, margarine, and salt in a good sauce pot and put this over medium heat.

Stir constantly while you wait on all of it to melt and come to a boil.

This is what it looks like as it starts to melt.

My photo turned out with more yellow than it actually had so ignore that. Clearly, I’m not seeking accolades for my food photography.

I’m more like ~tilts head and looks before snapping the pic~ Eh. Good enough.

This is the icing mixture as it has come to a boil.

What you are going to do is stir it constantly until it comes to a full rolling boil and then stop and let it boil on it’s own (no stirring) for two minutes.

Remove from heat and pour in vanilla.

(I forget this half the time and it still turns out fine)

Add in your peanut butter and stir quickly until it is all melted and well blended.

Folks, I’m NOT kidding about stir quickly here. This sets up fast.

Now this is ready to pour.

Pour over your cooled brownies and spread to cover it all.

Mine would have been all smooth but I was trying to take photos at the same time and that ate up some of the time I should have been spreading.

Allow to cool completely .

You can occupy yourself during this time by licking the sauce pot clean once it cools enough to let you!

Go impress people because you rock. Seriously, you do. Look what you just made!

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*This recipe works fine for a 9×13 or 8×8. If making an 8×8 pan of brownies, I’d still use this same amount of icing and just let it be thicker.

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I hope you’ll take time to read the story of why this icing is so special to me by clicking here.

You can also find the story and this icing recipe on page 258 of the Southern Plate cookbook.

I want to thank you again for all of your kind reviews on Amazon.com – My mother actually read them all the other day!

“Smile and give your face a holiday”

Doris says, “This was my Mom’s favorite saying.” Thank you, Doris!

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143 Comments

  1. These are awesome! I am taking them to work tomorrow if any are left. This is a wonderful site. I love the stories and recipes.

  2. Don’t keep mixes on hand, except yellow cake mix to use with Cake Doctor recipes – so I made Susan Spencer’s brownie recipe to go under this peanut butter icing. The first day I thought ‘these brownies leave something to be desired’ but — oh, my goodness, the second day and — after freezing some of the leftovers and getting them out to enjoy — they are the BEST! They age into a wonderful chocolate treat. I will make them again and I have only used one old favorite brownie recipe of my own for about forty years but —- will use this one when I need/want a chocolate fix again.

  3. Wow, thanks for this recipe. I made this using brownies made with special dark cocoa powder and ate them while the peanut butter fudge was still warm. So easy and so yummy!

  4. I have made the Laundry Detergent and I really like it. It was easy to make, and I am enjoying using it. My grocery store didn’t have Fels Naphtha, but they did have the Zote brand and I got that. Next time I’ll look elsewhere to find the Fels Naphtha to see which I like best. I’ve also used a number of your other recipes and have loved every one of them. Thanks so much for sharing with us!!!!

  5. These brownies were a huge hit. One daughter said they were the BEST brownies she had ever had and she’s had a lot. My 6 yr old grandson said they were “wicked”! Other grandkids loved them too! Thank you!

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