What took me so long to make almond butter? I just enjoyed homemade almond butter on toast for breakfast, and I must say—it’s far superior to store-bought almond butter. Homemade almond butter is ultra thick and creamy, and it tastes like warm, freshly roasted almonds.
Now that I know the difference, I can’t go back to buying jars at the store. I blend a tiny bit of cinnamon, vanilla and maple syrup into mine to make it taste extra special. Why not?
Homemade almond butter is more affordable, too. The math is simple. One pound of almonds yields one pound of almond butter (or 16 ounces), which is the size of the standard almond butter jar at the store. Just compare the price of one pound of raw almonds to the price of your favorite almond butter.
The cost savings depend largely on the almond butter. I’ve bought jars of almond butter at Trader Joe’s for seven dollars, so there’s not much savings opportunity there.
However, I’ve seen almond butter on shelves demanding seventeen dollars per jar. Seventeen dollars! For blended-up almonds! This is highway robbery, and I will not be robbed.
Homemade Almond Butter Tips
When it comes to making almond butter, patience is key. It might seem like the whole almonds will never turn into creamy nut butter, but they always do. Don’t give up!
Buy raw almonds and roast them in the oven yourself. Warm almonds blend more easily and offer maximum fresh almond flavor. Roasting the almonds only takes 10 minutes, and it’s absolutely worth it.
Roasted almonds offer the same nutritional benefits as raw almonds (protein, fiber, healthy fat, and vitamins), although their vitamin content is a tiny bit lower. The flavor difference is absolutely worth it, in my opinion. The “raw” almonds you buy at the store have probably been heat-treated to kill bacteria already and will inevitably warm up from the heat of the machine, anyway.
Watch How to Make Almond Butter
Suggested Equipment
Making almond butter is easy, as long as you have a sturdy food processor or blender and some patience. I’ve successfully made almond butter in my Cuisinart food processor and my Vitamix blender (affiliate links).
The blender may have been a few minutes faster (the tamper is handy to press almonds down into the blades), but I couldn’t tell a difference in the texture or flavor of the final product.
My favorite way to enjoy almond butter? I love it on whole-grain toast with berries on top (fresh berries, defrosted frozen, or chia berry jam). You can also spread almond butter on quick breads, like banana bread or muffins. Or, blend it into smoothies or swirl it into yogurt for extra protein.
This freshly roasted almond butter would make a lovely handmade gift. Just tie a ribbon around the jar and it’s ready to go. If this recipe spurs a nut butter kick, try making homemade pecan butter. Please let me know how you like this recipe in the comments!
PrintHomemade Almond Butter
- Author:
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 10 minutes
- Total Time: 25 minutes
- Yield: 16 ounces 1x
- Category: Nut Butter
- Method: Blended
- Cuisine: American
Homemade almond butter is healthy, affordable and even more delicious than store-bought! It’s easy to make, too. You’ll just need a good food processor or blender. Recipe yields about 1 ⅔ cup almond butter (that’s 16 ounces, the equivalent of a jar of almond butter from the store).
Ingredients
- 16 ounces (3 cups) raw almonds
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- Optional: ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
- Optional: ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- Optional: 2 tablespoons maple syrup or honey
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Spread the almonds across a large, rimmed baking sheet and toast the almonds for 10 minutes, stirring halfway.
- Let the almonds cool until they’re just warm (not hot), about 10 minutes.
- Transfer the almonds to a high-speed blender or food processor. Blend until creamy, pausing to scrape down the sides as necessary. You’re going to think it’ll never blend, but be patient! The almonds will go from flour-like clumps, to a ball against the side of the food processor (keep scraping down the sides and breaking up the ball), and finally, it will turn lusciously creamy. If the mixture gets crazy hot along the way, stop and let it cool for a few minutes.
- Once the almond butter is very smooth and creamy (no sooner!), you can blend in any add-ins you would like. I always add salt, for more flavor overall. You can also add cinnamon for a hint of spice, and vanilla and/or maple syrup for almond butter that tastes more special than store-bought.
- Blend until the add-ins are evenly dispersed. When I added maple syrup, I had to let the mixture cool, and then blend a few additional minutes, to make it creamy again.
- Let the almond butter cool to room temperature, then transfer the mixture to a mason jar and screw on the lid. Store in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks, or until you see or smell any signs of spoilage.
Notes
Change it up: You can create a mixed nut butter by substituting raw cashews, walnuts or pecans for some of the almonds. Just roast them all on the pan together.
Jessie
When does it end?!? I’ve been blending this and stirring and blending and stirring for over an HOUR AND A FREAKING HALF, and it’s still like flour. What am I missing? I added maple syrup thinking that would help, but the help was marginal at best. The only thing I’ve done differently is I didn’t roast the almonds first. But I like the taste of raw, and I looked at other recipes before this one that used raw, and I don’t see that being the issue. Raw should have more liquid in them, and should have blended easier than roasted. I have a black and decker food processor, which isn’t the best, but I’ve made other butters with it before just fine. WHAT GIVES?!?!
Yaminah
I think adding the maple may have ruined it- as mines has the same issue, otherwise, this recipe was great!
Andi
I had to add some oil to mine to bring it together. I halved the recipe, so I used a cup and a half of almonds (I did roast mine). I added 3 Tbsp of canola oil before adding the other ingredients. I also added honey.
★★★★
Cynthia
You needed to add oil a little at a time. This recipe is flawed.
Dylan
I roasted my nuts, got the almond flour you described, and then let it sit for about an hour to cool and see if the flour wouldn’t express some more oil. Then when I came back it formed into butter! Hope that helps, curious if you were ever able to get it to form butter.
Peg
This worked for me! Thanks for the tip.
Mylie
You can add a bit of oil while processing them but no other liquids until they are completely creamy. Adding maple syrup will freeze them up and keep them from ever becoming creamy.
Jessie
So my almond butter never did turn out. That’s the bad news. The good news is, I saved it because I couldn’t bear to throw it all away, and turns out that soft crumbly almond “butter” makes a fantastic topping for ice cream cake. It was a winning fail! Five stars!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you were still able to enjoy it! Thank you for reporting back, Jessie.
Zachary Zwerin
The roasting step helps bring the fats out more when you process it afterward while also imparting more flavor by slightly cooking them. Washing, pre-soaking, dehydrating, then roasting may yield an even more superior and longer lasting product as well.
Kyle
Baking the almonds at the recommended temp and time burnt all my almonds completely
★
Kate
Hi Kyle, I’m sorry to hear that. What rack did you place them on in your oven? Do you have a conventional or convection oven?
Rebecca
Hey Kyle. Did you use sliced almonds? They roast much faster then whole ones! I made this recipe with sliced. They came out quite toasty, but I made the butter anyway. Turned out great. I will make sure to toast for maybe 2 minutes less next time!!
Jill Shanley
Same here! Horrible. I wanted to make it sugar free so I ended up adding a very small amount of coconut oil, thinking that would help. Like you, after an hour and a half, still ended up more as a paste. I don’t have hours to be fussing with this!
Marion
I’m having a chuckle, thankful I’m not the only one who had such a struggle making almond butter. I soaked, peeled, dried, roasted the almonds yesterday and today tried to make this ‘easy’ recipe. Honestly, I felt like chucking the whole thing out after trying for over an hour to get the almond to ‘cream’! I tried 3 blenders that I have, and the Ninja worked best but! same problem, the almond just caked around the sides while the machine continued on so I had to stop it many times to scrape the thick paste down…still couldn’t get it to a creamy consistency; even after adding some avocado oil, maple syrup and even evaporated milk. I believe it’s the blender’s fault…not enough power. Unless someone gives me a VitaMix, I ‘ain’t making it again ha! P.S. it still tasted good, esp. w/the maple syrup.5 stars for the experience. 4 for the taste as it wasn’t creamy like I would have liked.
★★★★★
Anita
It’s definitely in the blender. My old food processor didn’t work as well, but I just whipped it up in five minutes in my Breville, and I used all raw nuts, which I’ve found difficult to make nut butter with in the past.
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Anita!
Paul
Thanks so much for this recipe! It’s good you said to be patient because at first I thought it would never go from clumpy to smooth and creamy but it was so satisfying to see it transform. I just tried it on some home-made sourdough and it’s delicious. I’m so glad I found your site!!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you tried it and worked, Paul! Thank you for your review.
Brandy
I read in a different recipe that roasting is what makes almonds release their oil. Try adding a little avocado oil next time.
Andi
Just made this. Love the addition of vanilla extract and cinnamon! I agree with others comments in regards to having difficulty getting it really creamy even using a nutri bullet. I added some canola oil and it worked really well to get that good, smooth consistency.
★★★★
Ania
Great recipe, thank you I see it’s a matter of a good blender. I have Bosh 800 W and it took me 5-10 min to make it :)
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you enjoyed it, Ania!
Laura
Great recipe!! I roasted the almonds for 10 minutes and cooled them for another 10 minutes. Popped them into my mother’s old Hamilton Beach food processor, scraping the sides when needed. Mixture transformed from almond flour to sticky almond flour to balls sticking on the sides to finally creamy almond butter!! The process took about 15-20 minutes in total. Once creamy, I added salt, cinnamon, and vanilla. Perfect!!!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy it turned out! Thank you for sharing how you made it and your experience.
Anna
Thanks so much, thinking about add a spread of some kind to my 9 month old’s diet for crackers and bread. This came out perfectly, only used the almond and salt (the salt does make a world of difference). I must say seeing how crumbly it was initially I was kind of worried but I kept scraping, and boi was I surprised. Thank you.
★★★★★
Debbie
Followed your recipe and it’s amazing almond butter, the salt really makes a difference! Thank you!!
Colleen
I use this recipe to make pecan butter, and it comes together in just a few minutes in my Cuisinart food processor.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Colleen!
Roman R
Great recipe, worked excellently for my on my first try with a food processor. Thanks for the reminder to be patient, it seemed like it’s final state was flour, even my mom said she thought it was done, I trusted in the recipe and it worked out excellently. Really happy with the consistency and taste, 5 stars.
★★★★★
Suz Magruder
I made this recipe and I had a hard time getting past the “dry” stage. I thought I had purchased raw almonds from Costco, however, at second glance, they were steam pasteurized. Perhaps that process removed some moisture. Anyway, after I had processed all ingredients for quite a while in my Cuisinart Pro Classic Food Processor, I decided I wasn’t getting anywhere. I decided to add probably 3 or 4 Tbs of Sunflower oil, and that did the trick. I let it trickle through the tube. I really liked the salt, vanilla, and maple syrup. I used a coarse Mediterranean Sea salt. Nice and Yummy. Oh, and it’s still soft after overnight in the fridge. I used the nut butter to make a salad dressing, protein balls and smeared on toast. The recipe is a keeper.
Susan
I just looked at the bag I purchased from Costco…yep, steam pasturized. Shuck-a-roo! Did you heat them in the oven as recipe directed? Thanks!
Joy
Love this recipe. Stress DO NOT add anything until it is creamy!
Anne Rogers
Wow that really worked. I am super excited to have my own almond butter. Yes the key is patience, of which I am usually short but for me in a Nutribullet, it really did not take long.
Jessica
Can I make extra and freeze it?
★★★★★
Kate
I haven’t tried it, but it may work. Let me know if you do!
Sara
First time maker, lifetime eater. This almond butter came out perfectly delicious, exactly as the recipe promised. Big time saver, I used a Hamilton Beach food processor that comes with a bowl scraper attachment. I added local honey, salt and cinnamon. The only issue I have is, how do I not eat it all in one sitting?! Thanks for the easy, spot-on recipe. With Love, Sara
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for your review, Sara! I’m happy you enjoyed it.
Christine Abbott
Wow! This was great! Thanks for sharing. I started with about a cup of Blue Diamond lightly salted almonds because they were already pre-roasted and I didn’t want to waste anything just in case I failed making the recipe. I have a mini Cuisinart food processer that only has a high and low lever but I found out if you press both levers together it goes super fast. It only took a few minutes to get that creamy consistency. I probably added more honey than most (maybe 3 tablespoons, hard to judge because I just kept adding and blending to taste). This is a perfect way to make a quick batch of almond butter for your own amount and taste. Thanks!
Kate
You’re welcome, Christine!
Rose
I was making red lentils dahl and the recipe had almond butter as one of the ingredients. I looked in my pantry and there was none, so I looked online and found your recipe. I’m so glad I did because I will never buy almond butter from a store anymore. It came out perfect and my red lentils dahl was so creamy and delicious. My nine year old son was amazed that I made almond butter myself. He was even more amazed with the flavor and ate some right away with apple slices. Thanks so much for sharing!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Rose! I’m delighted you enjoyed it.
Sarisa
What an amazing recipe!!! It turned out sooo creamy. Thanks a lot for sharing!!
Kate
You’re welcome, Sarisa!
Linda Kellbach
Glad you made the comment about being patient as it did take a while for the almonds to transform into a delicious butter. We chose your recipe because it referenced a Vitamix blender, which we have, and didn’t call for any oil which it turns out wasn’t necessary.
★★★★★
Nina
How do you preserve it for a long period of time?
Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Nina, this recipe isn’t meant for canning. Sorry!
Nina
How long will it hold? and best way to hold? Thanks for your response :)
Kate
Hi Nina, See the final step. I hope you love it!
jason
September 2022
I omitted the salt, but when it was finally butter(patience IS the key), I added 1 t. vanilla , blended it a little more, then scooped it into a jar. I licked the spoon and spatula and cleaned some out of the blender with my finger – DELICIOUS! Later I scooped 1 T. of almond butter into a bowl and added 1 t. cinnamon and ½ t. sugar substitute (Splenda): FANTASTICALLY DELICIOUS!
THANK YOU!
★★★★★
Gene
I like challenges in cooking. I have tried this recipe twice. I have a heavy duty Cuisinart food processor. After more than 30 minutes of processing, scraping sides down, & repeating this, I gave up. It never went into a creamy ball. I love almond butter. I was sad to have it not work out. The only reason I added honey & vanilla at all was because I had been processing so long with no ball forming.
I read the below comment… I did roast mine but the outcome was the same as the writer below.
★
Kate
Hi Gene, I’m sorry to hear that. Do you know if your almond were fresher? It sounds like they may have been really dry.
Lisa
Turned out great! I did it in the processor; next time I’ll use my blender (which isn’t fancy but is powerful), as I think it would go faster in the blender. I’ve made peanut butter in the blender and it worked well, but I thought I’d see how the processor would do. Anyway, it did take a while in the processor—maybe a few minutes? I didn’t time it—but the end product was very creamy and wonderful. I wouldn’t have thought you could leave the skins on the almonds and still get it so smooth. Thanks for the info & tips!
Oh, and I got a half-pound of almonds in bulk at the grocery store for around $4.75. Which made a good-sized jar of almond butter. Would’ve paid a lot more buying the butter, and it wouldn’t have been as good.
★★★★★
Carol
LOVE THIS RECIPE! This is my third batch. I roasted the almonds and let them cool according to the recipe and it turned out perfectly. Definitely have to be patient with the blending process. I personally prefer no add-ins when making the recipe but actually add cinnamon and honey to my almond butter toast. SO MUCH BETTER THAN STORE-BOUGHT.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m delighted to hear you loved it, Carol. Thank you for sharing!
Paul
Can you freeze it?
If so how long will it last?
Kate
I haven’t tried freezing it so I can’t say for sure. Sorry!
jocelyn
hi kate. why roast them, rather than just buying already roasted almonds?
thank you!
Kate
Hi! I find the flavor is better and sometimes pre-roasted can be too dry.
Carol Cox
I made this almond butter this morning, following the recipe exactly, with the only add-in being 1/4 tsp salt at the very end. I appreciate Kate’s notes to be patient. I invested in a very nice Breville food processor, and it took nearly 20 minutes total blending time before it achieved the desired creamy consistency. It tuned out perfect, and I used it right out of the food processor to top my vegan banana oat muffins. Delicioso! Thanks, Kate!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Carol! Thank you for your review.
Gerry Arnould
I made your almond butter recipe!! I roasted my raw almonds for 10 minutes, per your recipe.I put it in my food processor, and it was pretty full, and wasn’t working well, so I put it in my vitamix! I was so happy at how fast it came together in a short amount of time!! I didn’t add any other ingredients, and it turned into delicious creamy almond butter!! Thanks so much
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you tried it, Gerry! I appreciate your review.
Bev
Hello Kate!
I basically tried this before reading your article because the process is mostly self-evident. But I learned about valuable add-in options like cinnamon and maple syrup. Umm!
Also, you enlightened me to keep blending after the mash gets sticky. I think I gave up at that point (Not the first time I have bailed on something when things got sticky, says two ex-husbands who are not fans of roasted nuts).
The answer to my sticky issues, outside the legal process of course, was to add salted butter, which seems to introduce a velvety creaminess to the product. Coconut oil works to. Just add to desired effect. Keep in mind this will make the butter firm at frigid temps, which is counter to what I found as a married woman.
As for the financials, I never thought about equating the price per pound of raw almonds to the price of prepared almond butter. But yesterday I turned my nose up when faced with a $12, 16oz. Jar at Kroger. Problem with that, besides the price, is the use of palm oil, which I am told, should be avoided for it’s inflammatory effects (t’s inflationary effects I addressed last Tuesday, in the voting booth).
One thing I do not understand is the limited shelf life referenced in the article. How does processing the nuts reduce shelf life? Not that it matters, Mama eats it all before anyone else can get to it. But that is a story for another day when you write about pillows, restricted air flow, and the shelf life of Seniors!
Great job Kate!
★★★★★
Nola
thank you for this recipe. I just got an inexpensive Hamilton Beach good processor with the scraping blade. I roasted my Costco almonds that are kept in the freezer. Let them cool and put 1/2 (1/2 lb) in the processor. Didn’t add anything and in just a very few minutes, less than 3 I think, I had awesome creamy almond butter. Repeated with the other 1/2 lb. With the same reulsts. Soo good. Thand you
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Nola! I appreciate you taking the time to review.
Joanne
I just made this and it’s a huge hit. Not sure why I waited so long to try making almond butter. My husband consumes almond butter daily and because we prefer organic, it’s quite expensive. We were gifted some fresh almonds and decided to give it a try.
Was easy to make in the food processor and got creamy without too much fuss. I only added salt and it didn’t require any additional oil. Next time May try with vanilla. My husband loves it!
Thank you
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Joanne!
Jessie
I used a Hamilton beach 450 watt motor food processor. I used the processor to sliced the almonds before mixing them after baking. It turned to butter in less than 5 minutes. I then added salt and vanilla. So happy with the result! Highly recommend this recipe and especially food processor.
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great to hear, Jessie! I appreciate you taking the time to review.
Marianne Bartolome
How long can we store the almond butter?
Kate
Store in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks, or until you see or smell any signs of spoilage.
Perri
Was going along great, almonds got super creamy and beautiful. I added the maple syrup and it completely broke apart into dry clumps. Won’t get creamy again. . How do I save this? Almonds are super expensive.
Kate
Hi Perri, Did you keep blending? Did you let is cool as stated in the instructions?
Michelle
Hi, is it ok to start with sliced almonds? The ones i bought are already sliced.
Kate
Hi Michelle, I’m not sure if you will have the same results. Let me know if you try it.
Tracey
I haven’t tried this recipe yet. I can’t wait to try. Is there a Monday butter or nut butter I could make with less fat & suger.
★★★★
Laurie
I messed the recipe because I didn’t read all of the instructions before starting, I do that all the time unfortunately lol – I just have beef with instructions.
Anyways, I ended up with an almond crumble and oh my god does that thing tastes good. To be honest, I’m using this way more than I would almond butter.
It tastes delicious with cereal, oats, wheat, ice ream….. my husband said to mention I’m pregnant lol, but I’m sure thats not a factor – the crumbles just taste amazing. I may even mess the recipe up again on purpose next time lol.
★★★★★
Kate
Oh No! I’m glad you were still able to enjoy it, Laurie. I appreciate your review.
Pam Tierney
This is the best almond butter ever! I’ve paid ridiculous prices for raw almond butter and this beats them all. It’s so creamy! I only added salt and it was delicious but I will try the vanilla just for a change next time.
Thank you for the recipe, Kate!
Kate
You’re welcome, Pam! Thank you for your review.
Alex
So delicious! Added salt and cinnamon. Amazing. I halved the recipe and it worked in my cheapo Cuisinart food processor just as described in recipe. Thank you Kate!!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Alex!
Kathie
Delicious! Better than store bought which makes me feel sick!
★★★★★
Kellie
Made my first batch today. It will take longer to come together than you think. But it can also depend on the type and quality of the nuts. I think I could have gotten mine a little smoother but it is delicious! Made it according to the recipe. Honestly I could have left it alone with just the nuts. It tasted so good! Next time I will let it go a little longer.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you still liked the end result, Kellie! I appreciate your feedback.
Emily Estes
This is delicious!! The person I made it for won’t stop raving!! Thank you for this recipe! I’m so glad I could change his mind from buying store bought!
★★★★★
Kate
Hooray! I’m glad you loved it, Emily.
Cheryl
Absolutely love it!! Followed the recipe as written. Used a cuisinart food processor. Had to do in two batches as my processor only recommends 2 C nuts at a time.So on the second batch (1 C) I added part of the vanilla ( I only use good pure Mexican vanilla- Xel-Ha brand) Put the other 2 cups in, added the remaining vanilla. It made exactly 16 oz. BETTER THAN COOKIE DOUGH!! CAN WAIT TO EAT ON TOAST AND USE IN RECIPES! Thank you!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Cheryl!
Sam
Followed the recipe to a T and it came out amazing! I used my 64 oz Vitamix jar and it took a bit of work to use the tamper and push everything down. Next time I will make 4 cups almonds instead of 3, I think it should make it easier. Thank you Kate <3
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great to hear, Sam! I appreciate your comment and review.
Kit
I now completely understand your emphasis on no sooner! I didn’t allow my almonds to become creamy before adding the honey. Next time, I will read the entire recipe before starting.
★★★★★
Kate
Oh no! I hope it works better next time. Let me know, Kit.
Stephanie Burck
I tried another recipe that recommended letting the almonds cool completely (about 1 hour) before blending to prevent the butter from being too dry. Now that I’ve tried both ways, I agree with that recommendation. To both recipes, I added1/4 c oil (cocounut oil for this one) & later added more oil to this recipe, as it was still too dry. No amount of churning got the desired creaminess until I added tje second pour of oil to it. I will definitely make this again! But took a lot less churning & came out a lot creamier by using cooled almonds.
★★★★
Rose M Prince
I’m about to make it, and I was wondering if it is necessary to toast the almonds?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi! I find the flavor is best. I hope you try it, Rose!
Gary
I saw this recipe last night and picked up the ingredients, including locally made honey today to make it. It turned out great! I’m glad you gave the warning to be patient. It took about 10 out 12 intervals with the Vitamix and dry container. (I didn’t find the tamper for that container until after.) I added the cinnamon, salt, vanilla, and honey! The taste is great! Even my girlfriend who doesn’t care for almond butter liked it! Thanks for the recipe and the hints! Now to make more paleo pumpkin chocolate with the almond butter! They’ll taste even better now!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing your experience, Gary!
Traci
I made this (roasted the almonds for a few minutes as suggested) and OMG! It worked great. I added a little maple syrup and vanilla powder. It’s delicious and has no issues with making it.
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great to hear, Traci! Thank you for your review.
Melinda
The almond butter recipes is great.
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Melinda!
Brenda
This almond butter is amazing! It came together just like described in the recipe. It did clump together when the syrup was added, but letting it cool and scraping the bowl worked – it turned creamy again.
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great, Brenda!
Min
Hi Kate, I love almond butter and thought it’ll be fun to make a bottle. It all started well. I got to the creamy almond butter that spreads beautifully and tastes delicious. But when I add in a spoonful of honey and some salt, the mixture turned hard into hard cookie dough.. any idea why and how I can salvage it? and at the point, my blender seemed to have over heated and stopped working. Am waiting for it to cook before I try again. TIA
★★★★★
Kate
Oh no! Did you wait for it to cool to continue to blend?
Norma Ortega
Made this in my Pure juicer and worked like a charm! So quick and easy no blending required.
Kelly
Patience pays off! Read a lot of folks mention the difficulty of blending it until creamy. Followed as written and only added a little salt…. heeded the “Patience” advice….Used a Ninja food processor and even ear protection :O Seriously!…..took 15 min. with some scraping of sides, but not even as much as I thought it would. Simple, easy peasy for me, thank goodness and DELICIOUS! Thanks for sharing Kate!
Denise
Thank you for this great recipe! I only made a small amount to try, as didn’t want to waste almonds. It was done in 12 minutes and tastes lovely I have an old Braun blender 500w turbo and wasn’t sure if it would work but it did an amazing job. Next time I’ll do a larger amount, although it will probably take longer. Thanks again.
★★★★★
TD
My local Trader Joe’s is out of all of their almond butter for A MONTH so I finally tried making homemade almond butter and this recipe was fantastic.
I roasted raw almond slivers, cooled slightly, and blended in my Vitamix for 5 minutes for perfectly creamy and smooth almond butter.
I also added some whole roasted almonds to another batch and pulsed slightly to make crunchy almond butter.
Great recipe!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, TD!
Mila
Hello. Thanks for your recipe. Which food processor model do you use for making nut butter? Thanks
★★★★★
Kate
Hi! The one I used here was a Cuisinart. They don’t make this version anymore.
Mila
Oh thanks. If possible can you please write me the model number as I might find a second hand one if it’s an older version:)
Cornelia
Such a wonderful recipe. Super simple
I made mine with 3 cups of sliced almonds, roasted them, turned them a couple of times and took them out when I thought they were done. Not sure how long that was, somewhat around 10min. I love the scent of roasted almonds.
Let them cool down afterwards until I could easily touch them, still nicely warm. Put them in my Vitamix, started low, to watch, never went higher than 6 and used a lot them stomper.
They turned into creamy almond butter within 5-10 min.
I love it! Thank you so much for this recipe. Next batch I am going to start to play around with flavors.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Cornelia!
Khalica
I just wanted to see if I could be helpful to some of the questions below. This recipe requires a food processor, not a blender. Some blenders can do it but others can not. Roasting the nuts correctly will assist with the time used to make the butter greatly. A little oil made be needed but don’t put too much. If you are putting oil in multiple times it may be a problem that oil won’t fix. Do not add liquid-like stuff like maple syrup until it is the texture you want. If you add it in too early it could hinder the paste from ever getting smothered. I personally don’t like to add to my almond butter a drop of lemon extract(really a drop), sea salt, a little brown sugar, and a little honey.
Madi
Hello! I’ve tried this recipe twice now and can say that the key to easy blending is to properly toast the almonds! The first time I had to add over a cup of almond milk to my blender to make something that remotely resembled almond butter. The second time I toasted the almonds for an extra 5 min and had gorgeous almond butte within 5 min blending on low speed. Amazing!
stacey
Can I use canned Blue Diamond almonds?
Kate
This recipe is best as written. I haven’t used those before so I can’t say for sure.
Pamela Borden
How do you store it once it’s made? in the fridge? or shelf?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Pamela! See the final step.
elle
I just broke the motor of my vitamix that I use daily for 5 years using this recipe
★
Kate
Hi Elle, I’m sorry to hear that. I didn’t experience that. I have made this recipe several times. They are usually good about warranties. You may want to reach out to the customer service.
Christina
Worked great! Roasting definitely helps. It actually got creamy! (When I tried to make almond butter before this without roasting first, it wouldn’t get creamy but was hard and crumbly). I also ran the food processor without stopping it for several minutes until I noticed clumps going around, and I just stopped to break it up occasionally and scrape the bottom. Eventually, it turned into a softer and softer clump going around, until it actually smoothed out into creamy almond butter! :)
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad it worked for you, Christian! I appreciate your review.
Karen
Hi Kate, I made the Almond butter and it looked nice and creamy until I added the honey and salt. It went back to the dough stage. I kept on processing but it never got creamy again. Not sure what went wrong but it tastes good.
Maariya
Can I make this with blanched almonds? I’m on a low lectin diet atm.
Kate
I recommend this as written. I haven’t tried with blanched.
Robin
The almond turned out fantastic. Everything happened exactly as you said. As I was blending, I kept rereading your notes. All of a sudden, I looked up and the crumbs turned into butter. Magic! Patience was the key. Thanks for your accurate post!
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Robin!