This article originally appeared on Food52.com: Homemade Peanut Butter CupsCarey Nershi from Reclaiming Provincial shows us how to make peanut butter cups that are reminiscent of childhood, with a grown-up edge.

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Carey Nershi

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Editor’s note: Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups are so last year. And while kids and parents these days might be squeamish about homemade treats being tricky, there’s an upside: You won’t have to feel guilty about keeping all of these homemade peanut butter cups to yourself.

I am what you might call a recovering junk food addict. One that had an especially strong penchant for candy. And while I’ve managed to get my sweet tooth under control in recent years, I still have quite a weakness for homemade versions of classic treats. Being able to create them without preservatives or strange ingredients makes this a justifiable weakness, I’d dare say.

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Carey Nershi

Peanut butter cups are one of the simplest sweets to make. There’s no need to fuss with tempering chocolate or tentatively hovering over a pan of scary-hot sugar. All you need is a handful of ingredients (most of which you probably already have in your pantry), some mini cupcake wrappers, a stove (or microwave), and a fridge. Dangerously easy, folks.

You can customize your peanut butter cups in a number of ways: Use dark chocolate instead of milk chocolate; sprinkle the tops with a little sea salt or cayenne; or make them vegan by using dairy-free chocolate, vegan sugar, and coconut oil instead of butter.

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Carey Nershi

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I opted for a combination of dark and milk chocolate here, and chose an unsalted peanut butter so I could flavor them with Sichuan sea salt. The result: one heck of a peanut butter cup. The dark chocolate and the floral Sichuan spice give them a hint of sophistication, and make for an all-around delicious treat.

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Carey Nershi

Homemade Peanut Butter Cups
Makes around four dozen

1 cup of creamy unsalted peanut butter
4 tablespoons of unsalted butter, softened
1/3 cup light brown sugar
3/4 cup of powdered sugar
1 teaspoon of coarse sea salt (or more, to taste; I used Sichuan salt)
32 ounces of high-quality chocolate (use milk chocolate if you really want to mimic the classic flavor)

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Carey Nershi

Mix together peanut butter, butter, sugars, and salt in a bowl. Taste, then add more salt if needed.

Roughly chop chocolate, then melt it in a heavy-bottomed saucepan over low heat on the stove top (or in 30-second increments in the microwave, stirring in between) until smooth. Transfer half to a heatproof measuring cup.

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Carey Nershi

Arrange mini cupcake wrappers on a baking sheet. Pour just enough chocolate in to fill the bottom of the wrapper about one-eighth inch. Gently lift and drop the tray once or twice to flatten out the chocolate, then place in the fridge for 10 minutes.

While the chocolate is chilling, begin shaping heaping teaspoons of peanut butter filling into discs about the diameter of a quarter, and setting them aside on parchment paper. Remove the chilled chocolate from the fridge, then place each peanut butter disc into a cupcake wrapper.

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Carey Nershi

Transfer the remaining chocolate to your heatproof measuring cup. (If it isn’t as warm or pourable as you’d like, reheat it for a moment or two on the stove top, or for 10 to 15 seconds in the microwave.) Pour into cupcake wrappers until peanut butter discs are just covered. Once you’ve covered all of them, gently lift and drop the tray again to even out the chocolate, then add more to the wrappers as needed.

Sprinkle the tops with a little extra coarse sea salt if you like, then place the tray in the fridge for 30 minutes. Eat them straight from the fridge (if you’re a chilled chocolate guy or gal, like me), or let them soften for about five minutes at room temperature.

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here.