Looking for an easy Grab the Gold Bar Recipe? This one is easy to make and much cheaper!
Watch how quick and easy these post-workout bars are to make in this recipe video and then I’ll walk you through everything, step by step.
My gym sells Grab the Gold bars for about $3. I made the mistake of trying them once and loving them. I say “mistake” because they were perfectly oaty and delicious.
A friend of mine said she made a similar pan-sized recipe but that they didn’t hold as well as the original. After a few tweaks, I am happy to say that my homemade Grab the Gold Bars are just as delicious as the expensive ones!

Round bars you ask? Well yes, that’s how the original bars are shaped. I used a round biscuit cutter to shape these. Although, you can also use the rim of a glass to shape them round. For consistency’s sake, I’m a purist at heart. What can I say?
How to Make Grab the Gold Bars
Unlike other no-bake recipes, these bars are made with simple ingredients like quick oats, almond flour, peanut butter (or any no nut butter), honey, cocoa powder, and vanilla extract, and almond milk- to keep it dairy-free.

So grab your supplies, and let’s get this recipe rolling.
- Combine the oat flour with almond meal.
If you don’t have almond flour on hand, I use this one. It’s a great flour substitute and helps keep these bars, gluten-free. - Create the sauce.
In a medium saucepan over medium heat, add the peanut butter, honey, cocoa powder, almond milk, and vanilla extract. Whisk slowly until smooth and cohesive. - Combine
Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and use a large spoon or your hands to combine into a thick dough. - Press it down
Transfer the dough into a lined 9 x 9-inch pan, cover with plastic wrap, and press down into an even layer. - Refrigerate
Refrigerate for 1 hour or until firm. - Slice and serve
Remove the bars from the refrigerator and use a biscuit cutter into even rounds. Optional- use your favorite cookie cutter to make these into different shapes.
Whatever you have leftover, you can store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days or one month in the freezer.

Other Gluten-Free Snack Bars and Bites
If you love homemade no-bake snacks, you’re in the right place! While gluten-free storebought snacks are convenient, nothing beats homemade. They’re less expensive, and you have full control of what goes into the recipe. Here are more gluten-free snack bars and bites that are no-bake and better tasting than storebought!
- Chocolate Chip Blondies
- Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Bars
- Healthy Brownie Energy Bites
- No-Bake Pumpkin Bites
- High Fiber Chocolate Bites
- 2 Ingredient Magic Cookies
But let’s get started today, with these Grab the Gold Bars!
Homemade Grab the Gold Bars

Watch how it’s made:
Ingredients
- 2 cups quick oats
- 2 cups almond flour
- ½ cup peanut butter or nut-free butter
- ⅓ cup honey
- ¼ cup cocoa powder, optional
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ½ cup unsweetened almond milk
Instructions
- Line a 9×9-inch pan with parchment paper and set aside.
- In a large bowl, combine quick oats and almond flour and set aside.
- In a small saucepan, combine the peanut butter, honey, cocoa powder, vanilla extract, and almond milk. Whisk constantly until everything is melted into a cohesive mixture.
- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients. Using a large spoon, combine into a thick dough.
- Transfer dough into the lined pan, cover with plastic wrap and press down to spread into an even layer. Refrigerate for 1 hour.
- With a biscuit cutter or upside-down glass, cut into round bars or simply slice into 9 squares.
- Refrigerate leftover bars for up to 5 days or wrap individually and freeze up to 1 month.
Notes
- Make this recipe nut-free by substituting the almond flour with oat flour and the peanut butter with a nut-free butter.
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Mary says
The Grab the Gold original is dairy free. Any suggestions instead of milk?
Laura Fuentes says
You can easily use any dairy free milk alternative or water. Enjoy!
Lyn Brown says
Just made these. Used peanut butter, no cocoa powder and 1/2 of shredded coconut. Yum..
Shannon says
I just discovered the “grab the gold” bars recently, and like you – I was hooked! But they are PRICEY. So, I was so excited to find this recipe!! I made it exactly as stated above. I made the same size batch; however, I used a shot glass instead of a drinking glass… I wanted them to be more “snack” size. It made about 20-22 bars instead! They are wonderful! I have a bag in my freezer, though my fridge bag is almost empty after 2 days… 🙁 Guess I need to make more soon!
Do you have any variation ideas for this recipe?
Cheers!
Laura Fuentes says
I’m working on some variations… but you can add chopped nuts, raisins, dried pineapple chopped fine.. so so good. Glad you enjoyed it!
Shannon says
PB, Oats, and Raisins – BRILLIANT!! 🙂 Thanks!
Bas says
Hey there, I was wondering if you can use xylitol instead of honey?
Laura Fuentes says
I have not tried it with xytol. others have and it’s not that sweet.
Margaret says
They’re pretty tasty. But when I added up the calories, sugar, protein and fats my nutritional information came up much higher (assuming 10 bars with even using less honey). Calories as high as 282 and fat 18.9. Do I calculate something incorrectly? I’m thinking of substituting 1/2 the almond flour with oat flour to cut down calories and fat.
Laura Fuentes says
You can definitely substitute the almond flour for oat. I never advertised these as low-cal and low-fat since I’m not worried about either. These are perfect for my husband who works out and needs the recovery fuel.
ck says
Same here – I really enjoy the taste and don’t want to spend a fortune on grab the gold bars, but I use them as a nutritional meal substitute when watching my intake. When I add up the recipe is nutritional value adds up to Per Serving: calories 318 carbs 30 fat 19 protien 11 sodium 27 sugar 11 (I sub chocolate almond milk for the normal milk). I cut the almond flour in half today when I realized how off the calories listed are. I have made this a couple times and a little shocked and disappointed when I checked it over. An extra 91 calories and 10 grams of fat can really through off someone’s diet if they are watching their intake! It’s my fault for not double checking it sooner. I understand you aren’t advertising them as low-cal or low-fat, but you may want to update your calorie counter at the bottom of the recipe since it seems to be quite off for those that are looking at that for reference. 🙂
Laura Fuentes says
The recipe has been updated with the nutritional calculator based on the ingredients in the recipes without substitutions.