Samoa Cookie Bars Recipe
I started making these Samoa cookie bars because I wanted all the Girl Scout-cookie chaos—chewy caramel, toasted coconut, melty chocolate—without lining up for summer kids outside the grocery store. These bars are basically a crowd-pleasing shortcut: a crunchy cookie-ish base, a sticky caramel-coconut middle, and a sloppy-good chocolate drizzle. They’re indulgent, messy, and exactly the kind of thing I’ll unapologetically bring to a potluck.
My husband calls them “danger squares” because one always leads to another. The kids (and our dog, if we’re not looking) hover like it’s a magic trick. Once I made a pan for movie night and hid the leftovers in the back of the fridge — he found them three hours later like a dessert detective. Now it’s a staple when friends drop by or when I need to bribe someone to mow the lawn.
Why You’ll Love This Samoa Cookie Bars Recipe
– Caramel + toasted coconut + chocolate = nostalgic, sticky, and comforting all at once.
– Easier and less fussy than making tiny individual cookies, but all the same delicious chaos.
– Great for sharing: they travel well and slice into bars you can toss on a plate.
– The texture contrast keeps you coming back — crisp edges, chewy center, and that smooth chocolate top.

Kitchen Talk
I burned the first batch of toasted coconut the first time I made these because I walked away to answer an urgent text about socks. Lesson learned: coconut goes from golden to “weird smoke” in seconds. I also once tried swapping the caramel for dulce de leche from a can, and honestly? It made the bars silkier and hella convenient. Other times I’ve messed with the base — crushed shortbread, crushed graham, even crushed chocolate cookies — and each gives a slightly different vibe. These bars are forgiving, which is my favorite kind of recipe.
These Samoa Cookie Bars are a total crowd-pleaser—rich, chewy, and packed with that classic coconut-caramel-chocolate combo. I loved how easy they were to make, and everyone kept coming back for more!
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): If you’re making a scratch base, go for all-purpose flour and stick to granulated sugar for predictable texture; don’t accidentally grab superfine or baker’s sugar unless you know what you’re doing.
– Fats & Oils: Use unsalted butter so you control the salt level—salted butter can make the caramel overly salty fast.
– Chocolate: Buy good melting chocolate or chocolate chips labeled “for baking” — they melt smoother and set up nicer on bars.
– Nuts & Seeds: If you add nuts (macadamia or pecans are lovely), toast them briefly for more flavor and less moisture in the bars.
– Sweeteners: For the caramel element, store-bought soft caramels or jarred dulce de leche are fine and save time; check labels for added oils if you want a cleaner flavor.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Toast the coconut a day ahead and store it in an airtight container so it’s ready to go (keeps the toasty flavor and prevents last-minute burning).
– Make the caramel layer earlier in the day and let it cool slightly before assembling; it’s easier to spread when it’s tacky but not piping hot.
– Crushed cookie base or crumbs can be stored in a zip-top bag at room temp for a couple of days; press into the pan right before layering.
– Assemble the bars and keep them chilled; slice after chilling so clean squares are easier. Use a plastic container or wrapped baking pan for fridge storage.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use store-bought shortbread or vanilla cookies and crush them for the base instead of baking from scratch.
– Buy soft caramels and melt them with a splash of cream — way faster than simmering sugar.
– Microwave chocolate in short bursts to melt for drizzling if you’re impatient like me.
– Don’t skip the chill: a quick refrigerate makes clean slicing so you won’t waste half the pan getting sad, jagged pieces.
Common Mistakes
– Toasting coconut too long: I’ve done it. Keep it moving and pull it off at golden brown—not “forest fire brown.” If it’s too dark, toss it and start over.
– Caramel too runny: If it’s still super loose, pop the pan in the fridge a bit before slicing so layers set. If it’s super thin, simmer it down a touch next time.
– Slicing too soon: Cutting warm bars is a knife-wreck. Let them chill so chocolate firms and caramel chills for cleaner cuts.
– Overbaking the base: crisp edges are great, but a rock-hard base is not. Pull it when it’s set and slightly golden.
What to Serve It With
– A big mug of black coffee or espresso—this is classic and needed.
– Vanilla ice cream, spooned over a warm-ish square for that hot/cold thing.
– A simple green salad if you need a tiny, virtuous side to balance the sugar.
– Cold milk, for the cookie-child in all of us.
Tips & Mistakes
– Press crumbs evenly into the pan so the caramel layer doesn’t pool in low spots.
– If you drizzle chocolate right after the caramel, it sticks better; wait too long and the chocolate slips.
– Heat chocolate slowly—burnt chocolate can ruin the whole vibe.
– One time I used shredded coconut instead of toasted flakes; it made the bars chewier and I didn’t hate it.
Storage Tips
Store bars in an airtight container in the fridge for up to a week; they firm up and slice neater cold. Room temp is fine for a day or so if it’s not too warm. They’re strangely great for breakfast — cold, chewy, chocolatey — no judgment here. For longer storage, freeze slices separated by parchment for up to 3 months; thaw in the fridge or at room temp.

Variations and Substitutions
– Gluten-free: use gluten-free cookie crumbs or almond flour plus a touch of butter for the base — texture shifts but it works.
– Nut-free: skip nuts entirely or swap in extra coconut for crunch.
– Healthier-ish: swap some butter for coconut oil and use less caramel, but, like, it won’t be exactly the same guilty pleasure.
– Chocolate swap: dark chocolate gives a bitter contrast, milk chocolate keeps it classic and sweet.
– Missing coconut lovers: you can skip the coconut and have a caramel-chocolate bar — not a Samoa, but still very good.
Frequently Asked Questions

Samoa Cookie Bars Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 9 tbsp unsalted butter, softened for crust
- 0.33 cup granulated sugar
- 2 tsp vanilla extract divided
- 1.1 cup all-purpose flour
- 0.5 tsp fine sea salt divided
- 2.25 cup sweetened shredded coconut lightly packed
- 12 oz soft caramel candies, unwrapped
- 3 tbsp heavy cream
- 1.5 tbsp unsalted butter for caramel
- 1.3 cup semisweet chocolate chips
- 1 tsp vegetable oil or coconut oil
- 0.25 tsp flaky sea salt optional garnish
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Heat oven to 350°F. Line an 8-inch square pan with parchment, leaving overhang.
- Toast coconut on a sheet pan until golden, 6–8 minutes, stirring once. Cool completely.
- Beat softened butter and sugar until creamy. Mix in 1 tsp vanilla and 1/4 tsp salt.
- Add flour and mix just until a soft dough forms. Press evenly into the lined pan.
- Bake crust until edges are lightly golden, 18–22 minutes. Set the pan on a rack.
- Melt caramels, cream, and 1.5 tbsp butter over low heat, stirring until smooth and glossy.
- Stir in remaining 1 tsp vanilla and 1/4 tsp salt. Fold in the toasted coconut.
- Spread coconut-caramel over the warm crust. Press gently to level. Chill 15–20 minutes.
- Microwave chocolate chips with oil in 20-second bursts, stirring, until smooth and pourable.
- Spread a thin chocolate layer on top. Drizzle extra over lines. Sprinkle flaky salt, if using.
- Chill until set. Lift out by parchment and slice into 16 bars with a warm knife.
Notes
Featured Comments
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“New favorite here — family favorite. sweet treat was spot on.”
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“New favorite here — family favorite. allergen-friendly was spot on.”
“Super easy and so flavorful! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“This wholesome recipe was so flavorful — the speedy really stands out. Thanks!”
“Made this last night and it was absolutely loved. Loved how the flavor-packed came together.”
“This nostalgic recipe was family favorite — the pressure-cooked really stands out. Thanks!”
“Super easy and so flavorful! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Impressed! Clear steps and turned out amazing results. Perfect for busy nights.”
