
I am a huge fan of chewy, nutty, fruit-filled energy bars of the sort made by Lärabar. These little bars are enough to spur me on to an afternoon work-out and keep The Hangry at bay. It was looking at the ingredient list of my favorite Cherry Pie Lärabar that made me first consider making them myself. The ingredients were just dates, almonds, and cherries. So simple. So incredibly mind-blowing.
I tinkered with ratios a bit, but in the end, I decided to take the most straight-forward path: equal parts dried fruits, nuts, and pitted dates. Whizz them together in a food processor until they combine into a thick paste, press into a square, chill, and chop into squares for snacking. Done.
My favorite is still cherries, almonds, and dates (which are pictured here), but you can swap out the cherries and almonds for any dried fruit or nut. Keep the dates, though. They act as a binder and also sweeten the bars without needing sugar.
You can also play around with adding other ingredients into the mix: a few tablespoons of chia seeds, a handful of coconut, even some chocolate chips. Again, keep the same ratio of the base ingredients (1 part dried fruit : 1 part nut : 1 part dates), and add the extras a bit at a time until you get a taste and texture that you like.
Making energy bars really is that simple. You'll never need to buy them again.

How to Make Easy 3-Ingredient Energy Bars at Home
Makes 8 large bars or 16 small square-shaped bars
What You Need
Ingredients
1 cup nuts
1 cup dried fruit
1 cup (12-15 whole) dates, pitted
Equipment
Food processor
Plastic wrap or wax paper
Sharp knife
Instructions
- Roast the nuts (optional). Nuts can be used raw or roasted; roasting will add a toasty, nutty depth to the bars. If desired, roast the nuts at 350°F for 10-12 minutes, until fragrant and golden. Allow to cool before using. (See: How to Roast Nuts in the Oven)
- Combine the nuts, dried fruit, and dates in a food processor. Combine all the ingredients in a food processor. Pulse a few times just to break them up. Separate the dates if they start to clump together.
- Process continuously for 30 seconds. By this point, the ingredients should all have broken down into crumb-sized pieces. Scrape the edges of the bowl and beneath the blade to make sure nothing is sticking.
- Process continuously until a ball is formed, 1-2 minutes. Continue processing for another 1-2 minutes, until the ingredients clump together and gather into a ball.
- Press into a thick square and chill. Lay a piece of plastic wrap or wax paper on your work surface and dump the power bar dough on top. Press the dough with your hands until it forms a thick square, roughly 8" x 8" in size. Wrap and chill for at least an hour or overnight.
- Divide into bars. Unwrap the chilled power bar dough and transfer to a cutting board. Cut into 8 large bars or 16 small squares, as desired. Wrap each bar in plastic wrap or wax paper.
- Store the bars. Store the bars in the fridge for several weeks or in the freezer for up to three months. The bars can be eaten straight from the fridge or freezer and will be firm, but chewy. Room-temperature bars are perfectly fine to eat and can be kept in a lunch bag or backpack all day, but will be more soft and paste-like.
Additional Notes:
- Energy Balls: The power bar dough can also be shaped into small balls. Refrigerate until firm, then wrap in plastic for longer storage.
- Try These Combinations! Cherry-almond, apricot-almond, cranberry-pecan, apple-cinnamon-walnut
- Try These Add-Ins! Shredded coconut, chia seeds, chocolate chips, cacao nibs, cocoa powder, crystalized ginger, ground cinnamon, ground nutmeg, ground cardamom, lemon zest, lime zest

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(Images: Emma Christensen)










Floral Drink Dispen...

They look really unappetising.
Yum. I like my homemade Larabars with date, vegan chocolate chips + nuts!
Looks good to me! Not hard to dress up if one wanted to. My children need this... I need this. And I need a food processor!!!
My teeth hurt just thinking about how much sugar is in these.
I love Lara Bars! Love this recipe.
I made something similar from Sprouted Kitchen last week ... it was almonds, peanut butter and dates--delicious and have a bit less sugar and more protein than these with the peanut butter in place of the cherries. Though I'd try to add some dried fruit or coconut next time for some more flavor. http://www.sproutedkitchen.com/home/2013/1/16/peanut-butter-bites.html#
I went through this phase last year of making my own LARABAR type food-bars and I learned that based on the materials cost and time it's more economical to buy them for $1.29 at TJ's.
The Tate's Bake Shop Cookbook has a great recipe for homemade energy bars using oats, nut butter, and apple butter. Delicious, and the bars have more protein and fiber.
I agree, lem326. I'm sure they taste great, but it might be good to add a filler like oats and take out some of the dried fruit. (Or the serving size would have to be pretty small.)
@lem326 I had the same thought, so I plugged the ingredients into a recipe calculator. If you used dried cherries and stuck with the small serving suggestion (1/16 of the recipe) you'd be getting 104 calories, 2 g protein, 5 g fat, 2 g fiber, 15 g carbs and 10 g sugar. Not great, but pretty close to most commercial energy bars. I'd personally play around with the ratio to up the nut content and lower the carbs slightly if I made these.
I would like to hear more about the economics of buying vs making these! Did you calculate cost based on buying ingredients in bulk somewhere/online or just at your regular grocery store?
These would be great for kids' lunches!
Do you know the nutrition breakdown for the bars?
Being nut-free, it's hard to find bars that are too; I sub. pumpkin or sunflower seeds for the nuts. Sometimes, it's hard to find nut-free seeds (processed on a facility that MAY contain traces of nuts). It is cheaper for me to make my own, and much safer. (2-cents, that's mine)
Why do you have to reply? If you don't like dried fruit, don't eat it.
Per Serving: 158 cal 25 g carbs 6 g fat 3 g protein 3 g fiber
Based on the nutritional infor for these :
Kirkland Signaturte (Costco) - Dried Cherries, 120g/1 cup;
Bulk Barn (Canada - Almonds Dry Roasted, Unsalted, 165 g (1 cup)
Bard Valley Natural Delights - Fresh Medjool Dates, 15 dates (345 g)
So no go for me. Too many carb, not enough protein/fiber.
I don't want to be rude here, but my personal preference would be to just keep dried fruit and nuts handy for snacking. These look great for portion control though!
Love that you distilled it down to a simple formula that can be universally applied. So helpful. I like to make these Chocolate Coconut Copycat Bars when I want a treat but am trying to take it easy on cookies and sweets: http://www.momskitchenhandbook.com/snacks/chocolate-coconut-copycat-bars-homemade-larabars/
THANKS! I love The Kitchn but I wish that they would give the nutrition info for all the recipes. I think taking the cherries out and adding flax seed and/or pepitas or pumpkin seeds could reduce the overall sugar/carb content.
I think this is simply a homemade replacement for those that like LaraBars. If you aren't eating larabars currently, then you're not going to like the nutrition profile of these either. The nut allergy thing is interesting though: never thought about that.
Sadly, based on trying to replicate the banana bread version, I agree with the poster: economically, not really much of a savings. We tried because I absolutely HATE all the individual packaging (we take them on trips so have a bulk "bag" of them for the whole day/ski trip). However, based on cost from my local food co-op for the organic almonds, dates, and dried bananas, it was about a wash economically and cleanup was an absolute bear. I debated if I was using more water (unlikely, I know, but I did factor it in) cleaning the kitchen/food processor, etc. than just consuming something that came in those wrappers. For me, the time is not worth it.
I'm not sure what other comments said but not the best item for a lunchbox. Unless of course, you're packing a toothbrush. That said it looks delicious.
If you (or your kids, friends, family) have a bit of a sweet tooth, you can make really decadent tasting (but actually healthy) 'truffles' in this way too! Sort of like the energy balls but totally passable as dessert. http://chocolateandchard.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/deceptively-decadent-truly-wholesome.html
I love these with cocoa and coconut mixed in and rolled into truffles like choc + chard. I eat one or two for dessert :)
I should have specified this is for 1/16th of a recipe, not for a 'large' bar. Just a mini square.
Yikes -- not unless you're sending a toothbrush with them as well.
I just made balls like these but with medjool dates, roasted almonds and rolled in unsweetened coconut. I love them and I told the kids they were date candy and they ate them up. I'm going to make some up for an ice fishing camp we're going to this weekend. They'll be a super handy snack. And while I would eat nuts and fruit separaetely, I have one kid that will only eat nuts if they're ground up so sometimes mixing flavors and textures just makes them appealing to the whole family.
I think they look really tasty--maybe a little bit big. I think I'd make them into bite sized balls or chunks and roll them in processed oatmeal to keep down the stickiness. But if someone offered me one of these, I would definitely not turn it down--and you cannot beat the recipe for simplicity. And no chemicals!! Yea!! (But not "unappetising" by any means!)
I love larabars!!! I've been attempting various recipes on my own..they really are so simple to make, aren't they?! And they cost significantly less ;-)
Ground flax seed would be a great addition and sub for some of those carbs.
Good to know Salt Water... thanks
Certainly would be nice to aproximate the calories per bar... I agree with twotoned. And truly...does anyone really think these are ENERGY bars...and not just sweet eats? Curious.
These look great, and I love Larabars. They will be great on the road snacks, thank you!
Don't make them if you only eat "good looking food"
Keep up with your habits, and you aren't rude.
While I'm not going to say that I've spent hours and hours calculating and researching the source for the lowest cost/highest quality ingredients I did practice thrift in procuring good medjools and peanuts. I live in a large metro area and have access to several retailers so I can shop and compare prices easily. For example I avoid the high cost of Whole Foods but I'm satisfied with the quality at Henry's and Trader Joe's for the ingredients. Now realize that you're making small batches- only one pan at a time which yield as many as 10 or so servings which will last over a week even if you eat them every day.
Bottom line- after shopping, prepping, making the bars and finally cutting them up and wrapping them individually I've found that my time and pursuit of happiness is better spent buying my Larabars at Trader Joe's ($1.29 ea.), Target and even supermarkets when they go on sale.
BTW- I'm very careful with what I do with these food bars. I really only eat them prior to the work-outs 3 to 5 times a week which are swimming, surfing and paddling. They deliver plenty of energy without the bulk of a big meal and I can go hard for two hours or so on one bar chased with a half liter of water.
PS- Have you tried Kit's Organic Fruit and Nut Bars? They are the equivalent of Larabars made by Clif. They're just as good and the only difference I've found is the prices differ but only by a few cents.
PSS- Nutrition info for Larabars and Kit's Organic is available online from their web sites.
Definatley, energy bars.
A true 'energy bar' needs to be high in sugars and carbs. Proteins do not provide energy. My kids compete in long distance cycling races and this is exactly the protein/carb ratio we look for in energy foods. Recovery foods are a different story--more protein, fewer carbs.
Darn I only have some prunes on hand...could that work to replace the dates?
I have just made some and they're in the fridge now, can't wait! Thanks.
These look good. I love cooking by method & ratios, rather than recipe, so that's right up my alley, too. Another way to up the protein content, for those who want it, would be to make them into small balls & roll them in chopped nuts. Dates, dried pineapple & macadamia, rolled in more macadamia sounds like af relish, candy-like treat & would be a great way to sneak some extra nutritional value and calories into the diets of picky, underweight kids, too. Or onto the dessert table at potlucks, where people are expecting to find empty calorie sweet stuff - what a great way to alleviate some of the desert guilt that accompanies those empty calorie treats!
*sounds like a delicious (auto 'correct', my sweet patoot!)
It's fair to get a discussion going, isn't it? And others have agreed. I actually love dried fruit! But all in moderation.
I made mine with dried apples, dates, dried pear, almonds, walnuts, pecans and pistachio sprouted first as I do with all my raw nuts. I also added some dark chocolate covered acai berries and a little sea salt. They came out great. I love Kits organic as they are organic and no sugar added.
Sugar does not have to be bad. The key is moderation. Having been both vegan and vegetarian for about eight years, i find it more telling how little people know about what they eat. I would recommend kids (and their parents) to plan and eat vegan meals for 2 weeks and 2 weeks of vegetarian food. Basically, anything with an e-number is not allowed, which cuts away most school lunches (processed foods), candy, toast, etc. Where does our food come from and what is it? If you're going to eat it, you have to be able to identify it. I do eat meat nowadays and not a militant vegan, but I'd be more worried about e-numbers and aspartame.
Anyway, there are a number of fillers for those of us who are oversensitive to nuts. I've found Psyllium fiber husk (in the US) and something called Fibrex (beet root flakes - EU only methinks) that makes doughs quite moist. They are both gluten and dairy free as well.
Can't wait to try these!
Bars like this are designed for endurance athletes who need compact, high-calorie, easily-digestible fuel. They're not health food. They're workout food.
They are very simple to make and are simply delicious! I did the cherries/almonds/dates combo. Next attempt will be the pecans/apricots/dates. I cut them into 32 pieces. They are sweet, salty, chewy and satisfying. A little goes a long way. Based on my calculations, the bars are 53 calories each for the cherry/almond/date combo, and 45 calories each for the pecan/apricot/date combo. (Per the nutritional info provided on the items purchased.) BTW, I used roasted, salted nuts, therefore the salty comment. Dates, apricots and cherries are unsweetened.
They are very simple to make and are simply delicious! I did the cherries/almonds/dates combo. Next attempt will be the pecans/apricots/dates. I cut them into 32 pieces. They are sweet, salty, chewy and satisfying. A little goes a long way. Based on my calculations, the bars are 53 calories each for the cherry/almond/date combo, and 45 calories each for the pecan/apricot/date combo. (Per the nutritional info provided on the items purchased.) BTW, I used roasted, salted nuts, therefore the salty comment. Dates, apricots and cherries are unsweetened.
The idea is great as I prefer energy bars without any conservatives, but individually wrapped and sealed bars are more convenient on the go...
These look so easy and so good.
Jacqueline, I disagree. I think it depends on your application. Yes, I imagine a long distance cyclist would need lots of sugars and carbs. A power lifter won't. If you're fat adapted (you burn fats instead of sugars), you won't also need sugars and carbs. That said, I think this is a great idea. It's totally inspired me to make my own.
A disk is round by definition, so there is no such thing as a "square disk." Just sayin. The bars look good; I'm going to try them.
I'm really surprised by the complaints about sugar. These are delicious, easy to carry, and easy to customize. They are the perfect thing for between classes. Seriously, saves me money, waste and helps me avoid so many chemicals and bad decisions.
Exercise, eat real food, and stop obsessing people. Cherries, nuts and dates are a lot better than prepackaged alternatives and these have no weird preservatives. If you want protein look up protein bars, not energy bars.
Keep up the great work! I'm on my 5th batch of these babies.
Yeah, I see more sugar complaints here than I do in the dessert posts and this is from FRUIT. Sheesh!