Kentucky Derby Cookie Bars Recipe

Kentucky Derby season means big hats, mint juleps, and the kind of food that makes you forget there’s a horse race happening. Kentucky Derby cookie bars are the dessert nobody talks about enough: a buttery shortbread base, a rich chocolate chip and walnut filling that tastes like a bourbon-spiked pecan pie, all baked into neat, shareable bars. I made these for a Derby party a few years ago, and they were gone before the first race even finished.

What Are Kentucky Derby Cookie Bars?

Kentucky Derby cookie bars are a decadent layered bar dessert inspired by the classic Kentucky Derby Pie that beloved Southern combination of chocolate chips, walnuts, brown sugar, and a hint of bourbon baked in a buttery pastry shell. The bar format makes them easier to serve at parties, simpler to transport, and honestly just more satisfying to eat in one hand while wearing a large hat. They deliver all the richness of the original pie with none of the fuss.

Think of them as pecan pie’s more rebellious cousin who discovered chocolate and bourbon and never looked back.

Ingredients You’ll Need

For the Shortbread Base

  • 1 cup (225g) unsalted butter, softened
  • ½ cup (100g) granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup (50g) light brown sugar, packed
  • 2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

For the Derby Filling

  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 cup (200g) light brown sugar, packed
  • ½ cup (115g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled
  • 2 tbsp bourbon, use a good Kentucky bourbon; this is non-negotiable IMO
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • 1 cup (170g) semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1 cup (120g) roughly chopped walnuts or pecans
  • 2 tbsp all-purpose flour

FYI, don’t skip the bourbon. It’s not just for flavour authenticity, it adds a warm, caramel depth that you genuinely can’t replicate with vanilla alone. If you’re baking for children or avoiding alcohol, substitute 1 tbsp of apple cider vinegar plus 1 tsp of vanilla extract. The acidity mimics some of that complexity. It’s not the same, but it’s a decent workaround.

How to Make Kentucky Derby Cookie Bars

Step 1: Prep Your Pan and Preheat

Preheat your oven to 175°C / 350°F. Line a 9×13-inch (23x33cm) baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang on the long sides. That overhang is essential; it’s how you lift the whole slab out cleanly for slicing. Grease the parchment lightly with butter or cooking spray.

Step 2: Make the Shortbread Base

Beat the softened butter with both sugars until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes with an electric mixer. Add the vanilla and mix to combine. Add the flour and salt and mix on low speed until the dough just comes together into a crumbly but cohesive mixture.

Press the shortbread dough firmly and evenly into the bottom of the prepared pan. Use the base of a flat measuring cup to pack it down smoothly. An even base means even baking. Par-bake for 12 minutes until just set and barely golden at the edges. The base should look underdone. That’s right. It bakes again with the filling on top, and you don’t want it overdone.

Leave to cool for 10 minutes while you make the filling.

Step 3: Make the Derby Filling

Whisk the eggs and brown sugar together in a large bowl until combined, about 1 minute. Add the melted butter, bourbon, vanilla, and salt and whisk again until smooth. Fold in the flour with a spatula just enough to bring it together. Then fold in the chocolate chips and chopped walnuts.

The flour is critical here. It gives the filling just enough structure to set into a fudgy, sliceable layer rather than a liquid pool that never quite firms up. Don’t leave it out even if you’re tempted to.

Step 4: Pour and Bake

Pour the filling evenly over the par-baked shortbread base, spreading it right to the edges with a spatula. Scatter any remaining chocolate chips or walnut pieces over the top for a more textured, visually appealing finish.

Bake for 25–30 minutes until the filling is set around the edges but still has a very slight wobble in the very centre. The wobble firms up as it cools, pull the bars at this point and you’ll get that perfect fudgy, gooey centre. Wait until it’s completely firm, and you’ll end up with something drier than you want.

Leave to cool completely in the pan at least 2 hours before lifting out and slicing. Hot Derby bars look tempting, but cut messily, and the filling slides around. Cold bars slice cleanly into neat rectangles. Worth every minute of the wait.

Tips for the Best Kentucky Derby Cookie Bars

  • Use good bourbon. Maker’s Mark, Woodford Reserve, or Buffalo Trace all work beautifully. Cheap bourbon tastes cheap in the finished bar. The amount is small, but the flavour impact is real.
  • Toast the walnuts first. Spread them on a dry baking tray and toast at 180°C for 8 minutes before chopping. Toasted nuts have a deeper, nuttier flavour that makes a noticeable difference in the finished bar.
  • Don’t overbake. The centre wobble is your friend. Trust it and pull the bars early, they always set firmer than you expect as they cool.
  • Chill before slicing for the cleanest cuts. An hour in the fridge after cooling at room temperature gives you sharp, professional-looking bars rather than soft, pulled edges.
  • Storage: Keep in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days, or refrigerate for up to a week. They taste even better on day two when the bourbon flavour has mellowed and deepened throughout the bar.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the difference between Kentucky Derby Pie and these cookie bars? Kentucky Derby Pie is a single-serve pie baked in a pastry shell. These bars use a pressed shortbread base instead, making them far easier to portion and serve at parties without needing individual pie dishes or careful slicing of a round pie.

Can I use pecans instead of walnuts? Absolutely, pecans are actually the more traditional choice and give a slightly sweeter, butterier result. Walnuts add a slightly more bitter edge that balances the sweetness beautifully. Both are great use whichever you prefer or have on hand.

Can I make Kentucky Derby cookie bars ahead of time? Yes, these actually improve overnight. Bake them the day before your event, cool completely, and store uncut in the pan at room temperature. Slice the morning of your event for perfect, clean portions.

Final Thoughts

Kentucky Derby cookie bars are one of those crowd-pleasing recipes that work for any occasion, not just the first Saturday in May. The combination of buttery shortbread, fudgy chocolate, and walnut filling, and that bourbon warmth running through every bite, is genuinely hard to resist.

Bake a batch, cut them into generous bars, and put them out before your guests arrive. Then stand back and watch the tin empty faster than a thoroughbred clearing the final furlong. Some things are just inevitable.

Kentucky Derby Cookie Bars Recipe

Recipe by Hannah BrooksCourse: Desserts
Servings

4

servings
Prep time

30

minutes
Cooking time

40

minutes
Calories

300

kcal

Ingredients

  • For the Shortbread Base

  • 1 cup (225g) unsalted butter, softened

  • ½ cup (100g) granulated sugar

  • ¼ cup (50g) light brown sugar, packed

  • 2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour

  • ½ tsp salt

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • For the Derby Filling

  • 3 large eggs

  • 1 cup (200g) light brown sugar, packed

  • ½ cup (115g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled

  • 2 tbsp bourbon, use a good Kentucky bourbon; this is non-negotiable IMO

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • ¼ tsp salt

  • 1 cup (170g) semi-sweet chocolate chips

  • 1 cup (120g) roughly chopped walnuts or pecans

  • 2 tbsp all-purpose flour

Directions

  • Prep Your Pan and Preheat
    Preheat your oven to 175°C / 350°F. Line a 9×13-inch (23x33cm) baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang on the long sides. That overhang is essential; it’s how you lift the whole slab out cleanly for slicing. Grease the parchment lightly with butter or cooking spray.
  • Make the Shortbread Base
    Beat the softened butter with both sugars until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes with an electric mixer. Add the vanilla and mix to combine. Add the flour and salt and mix on low speed until the dough just comes together into a crumbly but cohesive mixture.
    Press the shortbread dough firmly and evenly into the bottom of the prepared pan. Use the base of a flat measuring cup to pack it down smoothly. An even base means even baking. Par-bake for 12 minutes until just set and barely golden at the edges. The base should look underdone. That’s right. It bakes again with the filling on top, and you don’t want it overdone.
    Leave to cool for 10 minutes while you make the filling.
  • Make the Derby Filling
    Whisk the eggs and brown sugar together in a large bowl until combined, about 1 minute. Add the melted butter, bourbon, vanilla, and salt and whisk again until smooth. Fold in the flour with a spatula just enough to bring it together. Then fold in the chocolate chips and chopped walnuts.
    The flour is critical here. It gives the filling just enough structure to set into a fudgy, sliceable layer rather than a liquid pool that never quite firms up. Don’t leave it out even if you’re tempted to.
  • Pour and Bake
    Pour the filling evenly over the par-baked shortbread base, spreading it right to the edges with a spatula. Scatter any remaining chocolate chips or walnut pieces over the top for a more textured, visually appealing finish.
    Bake for 25–30 minutes until the filling is set around the edges but still has a very slight wobble in the very centre. The wobble firms up as it cools, pull the bars at this point and you’ll get that perfect fudgy, gooey centre. Wait until it’s completely firm, and you’ll end up with something drier than you want.
    Leave to cool completely in the pan at least 2 hours before lifting out and slicing. Hot Derby bars look tempting, but cut messily, and the filling slides around. Cold bars slice cleanly into neat rectangles. Worth every minute of the wait.

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