Chocolate Peanut Butter Smoothie with Dates
A creamy, naturally sweet, protein-packed smoothie you’ll actually want every day
If you think smoothies are just a “quick fix,” this one will change your mind. This chocolate peanut butter smoothie with dates is rich, thick, slightly indulgent—but still clean enough to fit into a healthy routine. It’s the kind of breakfast (or late-night craving fix) that feels like dessert, but actually fuels you.
I’ve made this more times than I can count, and honestly… it’s hard to mess up—but easy to mess up balance if you don’t understand your ingredients. So let’s do it properly.
Why This Recipe Works
Most smoothies fail because they’re either:
- Too sugary (store-bought syrups, flavored yogurts)
- Too thin (no structure, no fat)
- Or just bland
This one hits all 3 fundamentals:
- Natural sweetness from dates
- Healthy fats + protein from peanut butter
- Depth from real cocoa
You get energy, satiety, and actual flavor—not just “sweet cold liquid.”
Ingredients (Serves 1 large or 2 small)
Core Ingredients:
- 1 frozen banana (medium, sliced before freezing)
- 2 Medjool dates (pitted)
- 1 tablespoon unsweetened cocoa powder
- 2 tablespoons creamy peanut butter (natural preferred)
- 1 cup milk (whole milk, almond milk, or oat milk)
- ½ cup Greek yogurt (plain, full-fat or low-fat)
- ½ cup ice cubes
Optional Boosters (recommended but not required):
- 1 scoop chocolate or vanilla protein powder
- 1 teaspoon chia seeds or flaxseeds
- ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
- Pinch of sea salt (this makes it better, don’t skip if you serious)
Ingredient Breakdown
Banana (frozen)
Gives thickness and natural sweetness. If it’s not frozen, your smoothie will feel watery.
Dates (Medjool preferred)
These are your sweetener. Unlike sugar, they bring fiber + caramel-like depth. But don’t overdo—too many and it becomes heavy.
Peanut Butter
Adds fat, protein, and creaminess. Cheap peanut butter works, but natural ones taste cleaner.
Cocoa Powder
This is where flavor lives. Use unsweetened—don’t cheat with chocolate syrup.
Greek Yogurt
Adds protein and tanginess. Also helps texture stay thick.
Equipment Needed
- High-speed blender (Ninja, Vitamix, or similar)
- Measuring cups & spoons
- Knife (for prepping banana/dates)
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Slice your banana and freeze it at least 4 hours ahead (overnight is best).
- Remove pits from the dates and soak them in warm water for 5 minutes if they feel hard.
- Add milk to the blender first (this prevents sticking).
- Add Greek yogurt next.
- Drop in the frozen banana slices.
- Add the softened dates.
- Spoon in peanut butter carefully (don’t just dump randomly).
- Add cocoa powder evenly over the top.
- Toss in ice cubes.
- Add optional ingredients like protein powder or seeds.
- Blend on high for 30–60 seconds until smooth.
- Stop and check texture—too thick? Add splash of milk. Too thin? Add more ice or banana.
- Blend again for 10–15 seconds.
- Taste before serving (adjust sweetness or cocoa if needed).
- Pour into a chilled glass and serve immediately.
What It Tastes Like
It’s basically like drinking a peanut butter chocolate milkshake, but cleaner. Not overly sweet, slightly nutty, and thick enough to feel like a meal.
Sometimes I mess up and add too many dates—it becomes too heavy and almost sticky. Keep it balanced.
When to Make This
- Best Time: Morning breakfast or post-workout
- Season: Works year-round, but especially good in summer
- Mood: Low energy, craving sweets, or need comfort food
- Occasion: Quick breakfast, gym recovery, late-night snack
Estimated Cost
- Banana: $0.25
- Dates (2): $0.80
- Peanut butter: $0.40
- Milk: $0.30
- Greek yogurt: $0.60
- Cocoa powder: $0.20
Total per serving: ~$2.50 – $3.50
(Protein powder adds extra cost if used)
Nutrition Facts (Per Serving – Approximate)
- Calories: 350–450 kcal
- Protein: 15–25g (depending on protein powder)
- Carbohydrates: 45–55g
- Sugars: 25–30g (natural sugars)
- Fat: 12–18g
- Fiber: 6–8g