This Larabar Recipe clone tastes more like a Snickers than health food. Just four ingredients -dates, chocolate, almonds and natural nut butter- combine to create a decadent tasting homemade larabar that will deliver a major energy boost.
This larabar recipe is a little magical. Homemade larabars taste like candy bars, Snickers to be exact, but they’re nutritionally dense and oh-so-good for you. Read on for the tasty details.
I was a little late to the energy bar party. It was a matter of semantics.
Energy bars just sound a little suspect. That’s really not a very appetizing name.
In fact, it sounds like some futuristic food substitute (i.e. Soylent Green. F.Y.I. That’s people, people.) Ew.
There’s another little wrinkle. You see, energy bars sound like healthy food for health food’s sake.
If you tell me to eat something just because it’s healthy, I’ll ask you to pass me a stick of butter and a fork. I’m contrary.
I’m sorry. I do try to reform, but I’m the original rebel without a cause.
Here comes issue number three. I’m cheap. We’ve been down this road before once or twice.
I’ve walked many a time past the gigantic displays of energy bars -Larabars, Clif, Luna, Grouchy, Sleepy, Dumpy- and laughed derisively at the prices. A buck or more a bar?
HA HA! In order to get one for everyone in my family I’d have to spend nearly ten dollars. Ten dollars for one snack? Not happening.
So, given all this information, I would’ve been the last person I would expect to perfect a homemade energy bar. Here’s how it happened.
Energy Bar Recipe
Somehow or another, I found myself with a bunch of dates that were nearing the end of their usefulness. I remembered my step-mom making raw cookies a while back and thought I’d give it a whirl.
Literally. Because they’re made in the food processor. Ba-dum-bum. I’ll be here all week folks. Tip jar is on the piano.
One thing led to another, dates in the food processor led to chocolate chips and almonds. Before I knew it, I was pressing an ugly but delicious paste into a parchment lined pan and whacking the whole thing into the refrigerator to get firm.
The next morning, I pulled the parchment wrapped slab-o-dates/almonds/chocolate out of the pan, cut it into squares and called my small regiment of taste testers to the room.
I blinked, as humans are wont to do, and when I opened my eyes, there were mere crumbs left on the cutting board and I was surrounded by big-eyed, finger-licking, hollow-legged, teen and pre-teen boys who were not-so-innocently inquiring as to whether or not I had a second pan of my larabar recipe hidden somewhere in that refrigerator.
As a matter of fact, I did. Because I had foreseen this possibility, I pressed the mixture into three separate pans but I sure wasn’t going to tell THEM that.
No way. I wanted it to last more than one day.
The next day, I cut up the two remaining pans of my larabar recipe into bars and took them to the farmers’ market in Angelica to share with the other vendors. As the adults scarfed the bars much in the same way my kids had, I heard one vendor say, “These taste like Snickers bars. Are you sure they’re good for me?”
I’m sure.
So where does the Larabar of the recipe title come into all of this? A friend asked me what was held the bars together.
When I told her it was a base of ground dates she exclaimed, “OH! It’s a homemade Larabar!” A quick perusal of the Larabar website proved my friend correct.
And here I eat crow on the first two reasons I avoided energy bars. But I maintain my cheapness with pride and this recipe helps me do that. Cheap, yummy and healthy? I’ll eat to that.
Count me among the converted. For those of you who, like me, have balked at the whole energy bar fad, let me tell you why this is handy to have around.
Tuck one or two in lunch boxes or bags, grab a piece of this larabar recipe when you’re ravenous and still hours from a proper meal. Slide a homemade larabar into a sandwich bag and then into your jacket pocket to sustain you on long fall walks or hikes, or just plain nibble when you get peckish.
It’s mainly fruit and nuts with a little dark chocolate thrown in to boot. How can you lose?
Larabar Recipe
When choosing the dates for your homemade larabars, you should try to choose ones that are moist and not over-dry. This makes your finished bars much better texturally, not to mention making it easier on your food processor to blend the whole shebang.
The choice of raw or toasted almonds for your larabar recipe is a matter of personal preference. I like them toasted for that little extra nuttiness it imparts, but my husband prefers it raw. Either way is delicious!
I use whichever natural nut butter we have on hand -most often peanut butter- but sunflower butter, almond butter, and peanut butter work equally well.
Use these to make Homemade Larabars
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Homemade Larabars
Line a 9-inch x 13-inch straight sided pan with a piece of parchment paper so that the paper hangs over the long edges. Set aside.
Fit a food processor with a metal blade. Add the almonds to the processor and pulse until they are uniformly finely chopped (think fresh bread crumb texture.) Add the chocolate chips and pulse again until the chocolate chips are also finely chopped.
Pour the chocolately nuts into a large mixing bowl and set aside.
Add half of the dates to the food processor and process until a paste forms and clumps together in the workbowl. Open the food processor and add in 1 tablespoon of the nut butter and half of the chocolatey ground nuts. Replace the lid and process until evenly combined. Scrape into the prepared pan.
Repeat with the remaining dates, chocolatey nuts and nut butter.
When all of the ingredients have been thus processed, wet your hands and use them to press the mixture as evenly over the bottom of the pan as possible. Fold the excess parchment over the bars to cover them and use something flat and heavy to press down firmly on the mixture until it is smooth.
Refrigerate for at least 2 hours before moving onto the slicing.
To slice:
Use the excess parchment paper like a sling to transfer the now-firm bars from the pan to a large cutting board.
Cut into desired size (I prefer 30 squares) and store in the refrigerator in a tightly covered container. An unrefrigerated bar will be good for 48 hours, covered, at room temperature.
Homemade Larabars
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 4 cups whole pitted dates (moist ones work best)
- 2 cups raw or toasted whole shelled almonds
- 1 cup chocolate chips or chopped dark chocolate
- 2 tablespoons natural peanut butter or sunflower or cashew butter, divided (or more, if necessary)
Instructions
- Line a 9-inch x 13-inch straight sided pan with a piece of parchment paper so that the paper hangs over the long edges. Set aside.
- Fit a food processor with a metal blade. Add the almonds to the processor and pulse until they are uniformly finely chopped (think fresh bread crumb texture.) Add the chocolate chips and pulse again until the chocolate chips are also finely chopped.
- Pour the chocolately nuts into a large mixing bowl and set aside.
- Add half of the dates to the food processor and process until a paste forms and clumps together in the workbowl. Open the food processor and add in 1 tablespoon of the nut butter and half of the chocolatey ground nuts. Replace the lid and process until evenly combined. Scrape into the prepared pan.
- Repeat with the remaining dates, chocolatey nuts and nut butter.
- When all of the ingredients have been thus processed, wet your hands and use them to press the mixture as evenly over the bottom of the pan as possible. Fold the excess parchment over the bars to cover them and use something flat and heavy to press down firmly on the mixture until it is smooth.
- Refrigerate for at least 2 hours before moving onto the slicing.
To slice:
- Use the excess parchment paper like a sling to transfer the now-firm bars from the pan to a large cutting board.
- Cut into desired size (I prefer 30 squares) and store in the refrigerator in a tightly covered container. An unrefrigerated bar will be good for 48 hours, covered, at room temperature.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
Love Homemade Larabars? You might love these other homemade treats!
- How to Make Croissants
- Homemade Candied Jalapenos
- Easy Salted Caramel Fudge
- Homemade Cool Ranch Doritos
- Homemade Spicy Taco Seasoning
- One-Hour Sandwich Bread
This post was originally published August 30, 2011. Updated August 30, 2017 and again in February 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Pam says
After just buying several luna and larabars at the grocery store this morning and spending a fortune, I am interested in saving money and trying to make these but I need some advice on two possible changes. I have one teenager who does not like or eat chocolate so wondering how I could alter this recipe; and the other teenager tried a larabar and did not like the date taste (does this recipe “mask” the taste?). Any suggestions?
Jeff says
Pam,
I was just going to comment on my experience with using the dates and almonds as a base. My cousin’s kids don’t eat chocolate so I thought I would see if variations worked. Just the date/almond together is tasty but a bit like toffee. I tried adding unsweetened coconut to the base and it tastes a lot like coconut-pecan icing I use on German chocolate cake. I probably won’t even go to the trouble of pressing chopped pecans in although that might be a good addition.
I think I could make up the date/almond mixture, freeze it, then thaw and mix in whatever additions I was in the mood for then press the bars. I haven’t tested this but it seems like it should work.
Suzanne says
These are really, really good! And it’s nice knowing exactly what’s in them. However, making them made me appreciate paying $1.30 for a bar in the store, since (at least for me where I live) these ingredients aren’t cheap. $8 for the dates, $10 for the almonds, $1.35 for the chocolate…that’s about $20 for 16 bars (if you approximate the size of store-bought energy bars), or $1.25/bar. I will be on the lookout for cheaper sources of these ingredients, since I love this recipe so much.
Rebecca says
Suzanne,
Do you have Amish or Mennonites living near you? They often have bulk foods stores where the items are significantly less expensive than that. Amazon.com is another good bet!
Carlie says
I made these with all almonds as the recipe says…AMAZING! Then I made them again and replaced some of the almonds with walnuts. If anyone is wondering, I definitely do not recommend doing that because the walnut flavor is overpowering and I love walnuts.
Nancy says
I would like to make these to take backpacking and eat as my breakfast. Do you think they would be fine after Day 4 at daytime temps?
I should probably worry more about them being melty than going off, but I am curious. Ideas? Comments anyone?
Virginia says
Nancy, I don’t see how they’d spoil. Worst case they’d get crumbly before you eat them. Everything in them is stable at room temperature. I say go for it, and have fun!
Angela says
I made mine with peanuts and they tasted better than any Lara bar I have ever tried! Kind of like an ‘Eat More’ bar. A small piece is very satisfying.
Leah Johnson says
All I have to say is…WOW!!!! These were SO good! They are almost like eating fudge or a brownie. I don’t even think Lara Bars compare to how delicious these are! Thank you for this recipe – so easy, so tasty!
Dan says
How long will these last unrefrigerated?
mesha says
Swap the chips for an unsweetened bar of bakers chocalate. It is 100% cacao and lots healthier, but cheaper than candy bars of the same nature. Love the
recipe, thanks!
Anna says
I made these. They were kind of awesome. And addictive, which is not necessarily a good thing when it comes to dates. But I will be making another batch, probably today. x
Laura says
A friend introduced me to your recipe–yum! I had as much fun reading your post as I did eating this delicious bar! You’re a great writer. Thank you!
Barhi@date fruit origin says
They really look yummy. With your recipe, I am gonna try and make the lalabars today and see if I can come with something like yours.
Natalie says
YUM! I used half peanut butter and half almond butter turned out great! also added a couple handfuls of rice krispies for an extra hint of crunch. SO GOOD! thank you 🙂
Debbie says
Thanks for sharing. I love them. Tried them and served them to a class of 8-12 year-olds and my school staff. The kids loved them, as did all of the teachers and staff. Not sure I want to introduce them to my husband, thought. He may eat the whole pan, leaving me none. I may just let him think they are another gross, health food and he will avoid them!
Karen says
I could not wait to make these! they turned out perfect. So easy once I found my food processor. (vita mixer does not work for this) I used 1c walnuts and 1c of almonds just like the last laua bar I bought and it tasted just like it! I made one batch with peanut butter and one w/o. The one with peanut butter tasted like a recees cup. My whole family loves them except my youngest which would like me to make a batch w/o nuts. I bet they would still be good. I got 30 bars out of each 9 x 13 and my cost was .23 each. I made two batches. Sams club was the best deal for large quantities. Thank you so much for sharing! This is my new snack instead of cookies!
Brittany says
Hey! Can you tell me why the Vitamix doesn’t work for this recipe? I don’t have a food processor, but I do have a Vitamix and was really looking forward to making this recipe with the Vitamix.
Rebecca says
The truth is that I’ve never tried it in the vitamix! If you try it let me know!!
Fanny Gray says
Love ,Love ,Love your blog! Hi Jeannie, I cut strips of parchment paper and used those to wrap the bars. I know some bloggers are sensitive about people asking about alterations to recipes, so feel free to ignore me. These are great – I did cut down on the dates to 2 cups because that’s what I had on hand, but wow – these taste like a candy bar for sure and oh so yummy.
Ashley S says
I am so THRILLED so have this passed on to me! My son has Celiac Disease and therefore a very limited diet, and he loves lara bars! This is going to save me a fortune!! Thank you so so so much!!!
Sarah says
Just to clarify – are you using fresh, raw dates or the dried, pitted kind? I have never seen fresh dates in my grocery store but we definitely have the dried kind.
Rebecca says
Definitely the dried, pitted variety! Just look for the most moist ones you can find.
Jeannie says
Hi, what type of paper did you use to individually wrap these? Thank you for sharing such a great recipe!
Rebecca says
Hi Jeannie, I cut strips of parchment paper and used those to wrap the bars. I imagine waxed paper would work well, too.
Lisa says
These are great – I did cut down on the dates to 2 cups because that’s what I had on hand, but wow – these taste like a candy bar for sure and oh so yummy. My kids loved them – and they are really easy to make.
Margarete says
Thank you for this recipe!