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Why It Works
- Browning the butter and blooming the cayenne deepens their flavor, adding warm nuttiness and a subtle kick that amplifies the chocolate–peanut butter base.
- Briefly chilling the chocolate-coated cereal and using ample powdered sugar for tossing ensures a crisp texture and an evenly coated, clump-free finish.
If your first encounter with “puppy chow” involved you quietly wondering why someone was casually announcing they were handing out bags of dog food during the holidays…same. It takes a moment to realize this Midwestern party staple—also known as muddy buddies, monkey munch, and about four other equally chaotic names—is not, in fact, canine cuisine. Instead, it’s one of the easiest, most joyful sweet-and-salty snacks ever invented: crisp cereal tumbled in warm chocolate and peanut butter, then snowed under a blizzard of powdered sugar. It shows up in giant bowls at office parties and disappears before you can say “Wait, what’s in this?”
This version, developed by my colleague Isabelle Easter in our Birmingham, Alabama, test kitchen, keeps everything you already love about puppy chow—the crunch, the fudgy coating, the finger-dusting layer of powdered sugar—but gives it a grown-up glow-up. Browning the butter adds nuttiness, while blooming cayenne in that butter builds a slow, warming heat that sneaks in just as the sweetness fades. A scoop of white miso might sound surprising, but it slips seamlessly into the chocolate–peanut butter mixture, adding a savory depth that makes every bite taste more chocolatey, more peanut-buttery, more everything.
Serious Eats / Stacy Allen
A few tiny technique tweaks guarantee the best texture. Briefly chilling the chocolate-coated cereal before tossing it with ample powdered sugar—more than you might think you need—helps the coating firm up so the cereal stays crisp and each piece gets an even, velvety layer. Layering the cereal and sugar in a large zip-top bag is the cleanest, easiest way to achieve that uniform coating, but a gentle toss in a big bowl will also get the job done. Isabelle used Rice Chex when developing this recipe; it’s sturdy enough not to crumble during tossing and strong enough to hold all that flavor, but any crispy rice square cereal will work.
Once you’ve nailed the base, you can take it in a dozen directions: Amp up the heat with more cayenne, add espresso powder for a deeper, more complex chocolate flavor, brighten things with orange zest, or fold in pretzels, peanuts, sesame seeds, mini marshmallows, even popcorn. However you riff, this sweet and salty puppy chow is sure to vanish quickly and will never, ever outgrow its charm.


