O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (2024)

by RetroRuth | Oct 5, 2017 | , Desserts | 8 comments

This week we aren’t doing anything freaky, just making some nice, calm bar cookies.

These are O’Henry Bars!

O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (2)AuthorRetroRuth
Rating

O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (3)

From Art of Cooking from St. Pauls, 1965

Tested Recipe!

cup melted butter

2 tsp vanilla

cup peanut butter

½ cup white sugar

4 cups quick-cooking oatmeal

1 cup brown sugar

1 cup chocolate chips

1

Mix melted butter and sugars, then add vanilla and oatmeal. Pat firmly into a well-greased 9x13 pan. Bake for 20 minutes at 350 degrees.

2

Melt chocolate chips and stir in peanut butter. Spread over the baked mixture as soon as it is removed from the oven. Let set in the refrigerator.

O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (5)

CategoryBars, DessertsCooking MethodBake, Bar CookiesTags#brownsugar, #butter, #chocolatechips, #oatmeal, #peanutbutter, #quickcookingoats

Ingredients

cup melted butter

2 tsp vanilla

cup peanut butter

½ cup white sugar

4 cups quick-cooking oatmeal

1 cup brown sugar

1 cup chocolate chips

Directions

1

Mix melted butter and sugars, then add vanilla and oatmeal. Pat firmly into a well-greased 9x13 pan. Bake for 20 minutes at 350 degrees.

2

Melt chocolate chips and stir in peanut butter. Spread over the baked mixture as soon as it is removed from the oven. Let set in the refrigerator.

O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (6)

O’Henry Bars

IngredientsDirections

This recipe is from the Art of Cooking, a community cookbook from St. Paul’s Church from 1965. Sorry, this scan got kind of smeared, probably because a kid was tugging on my arm while I was scanning it.

Anyway, since O’Henry Bars are candy bars, I was interested to see if this would taste like candy, a cookie, or…a granola bar. Because 4 cups of oatmeal is a lot of oatmeal for a candy bar. Anyway, this also is missing the caramel and peanuts from the candy bar version, but there is peanut butter so I guess that counts. Sort of.

Interesting tidbit about candy Oh Henry Bars, Nestle writes on their website that it was named after a young man named Henry who used to flirt with the candy shop girls, which is kinda cute.

These were incredibly easy to throw together, which is always much appreciated for a dessert.

Done!

And, covered with chocolate. We can’t forget that important step.

A little note about these: They were very, very firm. It wasn’t difficult to get them out of the pan, but they were just very crunchy.

“What’s that face for? It’s a cookie!”
”It’s not a cookie. It’s a granola bar.”

The Verdict: Granola Bar

These were very good, but obviously a chocolate-covered granola bar. They were very sweet and crunchy. Not so crunchy you broke your teeth, but they were on the firm side. The brown sugar gave them a slight caramel flavor. Not as fun as eating caramel, but it was good enough for me. You couldn’t really taste the peanut butter at all, so I probably would add more of that in the future. But overall, a yummy crunchy treat. Tom and Alex weren’t huge fans, so I ended up eating most of them. Were they like the candy version of O’Henry Bars? No, not at all. Were they good? Yes. Would I make them again? Yes. But next time I think I am doubling the chocolate topping.

  1. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (13)

    Sueon October 6, 2017 at 11:12 am

    I remember those! A Midwestern church potluck and bake sale staple when I was a kid in the 70s. Didn’t matter which church!

  2. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (14)

    Lassieon October 7, 2017 at 11:15 pm

    They sound delicious, but that’s a heckuva lot of sugar and chocolate. They say most granola bars are more candy than healthy snacks. Sound darn tasty, nonetheless.

  3. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (15)

    bkd69on October 11, 2017 at 3:52 am

    Instead of doubling up on the chocolate, take a cue from millionaire shortbread and drop a layer of caramel on top of the bars before the chocolate. And mix in some salted peanuts with the oatmeal.

  4. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (16)

    Diego Lopeson October 16, 2017 at 7:16 am

    These cookie bars look delicious!! Can’t wait to try making (and eating!) them!

  5. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (17)

    Keikoon October 30, 2017 at 10:56 am

    I made these-and they were exactly the way I remember them from my “mid century mom”. The only screw-up was that I baked them a little too long so I had to dig them out a little bit-I was misled by thinking that because they weren’t “set” when I pulled them out that they weren’t done when in reality they harden as they cool. I thought they tasted like the candy bar and not a granola bar. I was a tad short on the chocolate so I threw in a scoop of Nutella to improvise and that kicked it up a notch 🙂

  6. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (18)

    Brendaon November 8, 2017 at 8:46 pm

    The nutella probably added some oil to help with the consistency. That’s a good idea. My thought was to mix marshmallows into the oatmeal base to soften it.

  7. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (19)

    Speedy-O'Reedyon November 25, 2017 at 11:34 pm

    Try this, and you’ll see that not only does it make a softer base, but the whole thing is much more akin to the O’Henry bar. In any case, a much more enjoyable version…and the actual recipe handed to my mother in the late’70s…even my elementary school would serve them.

    Preheat oven to 350.

    Cream:
    1 C butter
    1 C sugar
    1 C brown sugar

    Add:
    2 eggs
    1 C peanut butter, creamy
    1 t vanilla

    Add:
    1 t baking soda
    1/2 t salt
    2 C flour
    2 C oats

    Blend. Spread onto greased 11×17 pan. Bake at 350 for 20 minutes, checking after 15, until browned but not too browned. Remove from oven, sprinkle 12 oz chips onto top, let them melt, spread.

    Frosting:
    1/2 C peanut butter, creamy
    1 C powdered sugar
    4-8 T canned milk

    Beat well until smooth and creamy. Frost over cooled (and hardened) chocolate layer.

  8. O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (20)

    Manderon December 4, 2017 at 7:56 pm

    Sounds a lot like British flapjacks, which are sort of a cross between granola bars and cake. Usually they are not much more than oats, golden syrup, and butter though there are many variations.

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O’Henry Bars, 1965 – A Vintage Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (2024)

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