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7 Chocolate Bar Cookie Mix Gifts in a Jar That Are Better Than Overpriced Hollow Easter Eggs – Edible Crafts


Every Easter I have the same little grumble in the supermarket aisle: how did we get to the point where a giant hollow egg costs a small fortune and still somehow disappears in about four minutes?
If you are looking for a more thoughtful Easter gift idea this year, these chocolate bar cookie mix gifts in a jar are such a fun alternative. They still have all the novelty of Easter chocolate, but they feel more personal, more useful, and honestly a lot more exciting for anyone who actually likes baking. Each CraftBits recipe is designed as a gift in a jar, using a quart-size jar and simple tag instructions so the recipient can turn the mix into fresh cookies at home.
I also love that these feel a bit more substantial than handing over yet another boxed egg. You get the cute Easter gifting moment, but with a homemade twist that feels thoughtful without needing a huge budget. And let’s be honest, a jar layered with sugar, flour, and chopped chocolate bars looks ridiculously cute tied up with ribbon on an Easter table.
Why cookie mix jars make such a great Easter gift
A gift in a jar hits that sweet spot between homemade and practical. You get the charm of a handcrafted present, but you are not spending all day in the kitchen baking batch after batch. Most of these recipes use the same basic format too: a 1 quart wide-mouth jar, dry ingredients layered inside, then a tag telling the recipient to add 1 cup softened unsalted butter and 1 egg, before baking the cookies at 350°F / 165°C for 10–12 minutes.
That makes them ideal for:
- Easter hostess gifts
- Teacher gifts
- Teen gifts
- Budget-friendly handmade presents
- Something a bit different from the usual Easter egg overload
And unlike those hollow eggs, these keep going. One jar becomes a whole tray of cookies, which feels a lot less underwhelming than cracking open a big egg and finding mostly air.
The best chocolate bar cookie mix jars for Easter gifting
Here are the seven CraftBits recipes that would make a really fun Easter gift basket addition or standalone jar gift.
Turkish Delight Cookie Mix
This one is such a fun choice if you want something a little different from the usual chocolate-heavy Easter treats. The jar recipe includes sugar, brown sugar, powdered vanilla, baking soda, flour, and 1 cup chopped Turkish Delight bars or chocolates.
It feels a little more old-fashioned and nostalgic, which I know a lot of us secretly love. This would be lovely for someone who always reaches for the Turkish Delight in the mixed chocolate box first.
White Chocolate & Macadamia Cookie Mix
If you want an Easter jar gift that feels a bit more bakery-style, this is the fancy one. The mix uses white sugar, chopped macadamia nuts, chopped white chocolate candy, optional dried cranberries, flour, baking soda, and baking powder. The tag instructions say it makes 2 1/2 dozen cookies and bakes at 375°F / 190°C for 12 to 14 minutes after adding butter, egg, and vanilla.
This is the jar I would make for adults who aren’t really into novelty eggs but still want a treat. It feels a bit more grown-up, but still deliciously giftable.
Boost Bar Cookie Mix
This recipe keeps the classic jar base and adds 1 cup chopped Boost chocolate bars. The instructions follow the basic gift-in-a-jar method and bake at 350°F / 165°C for 10–12 minutes.
This one feels like a great choice for teens, chocolate lovers, or anyone who likes their cookies extra candy-bar loaded.
Bounty Bar Cookie Mix
For coconut lovers, this is the Easter winner. The jar includes the usual dry base plus 1 cup chopped Bounty bars, and the instructions again call for butter and egg before baking at 350°F / 165°C for 10–12 minutes.
If you want something that feels a little tropical and a bit different from the sea of plain milk chocolate Easter treats, this one stands out nicely.
Butter Finger Cookie Mix
This version uses 1 cup chopped Butter Finger bar with the standard layered jar ingredients. The recipe page describes it as a gift you can put together in a jar, attach the instructions to, and gift ready-made.
I love this kind of recipe for Easter because it feels playful. It has that “look what I found you” energy instead of the usual grabbed-at-the-checkout chocolate egg.
Cherry Ripe Cookie Mix
This one might be my favourite for Easter because it already feels festive and a little bit special. The jar ingredients include sugar, brown sugar, optional powdered vanilla, baking soda, flour, and 1 cup chopped Cherry Ripe bars or 10 fun size bars. It uses the same add-butter-and-egg method and bakes at 350°F / 165°C for 10–12 minutes.
Cherry and chocolate together always feel a little bit indulgent, which makes this a lovely homemade Easter treat for grown-ups.
Mars Bar Cookie Mix
A proper crowd-pleaser. This jar recipe includes 1 cup chopped Mars Bars layered with the standard dry ingredients, then finished with the usual butter, egg, and bake instructions.
If you are only making one jar recipe for Easter gifting, this is probably the safest all-rounder. Hard to go wrong with Mars Bar cookies.
How to turn these into Easter gifts that look extra cute
You really do not need to overcomplicate this. A simple jar with a ribbon and handwritten tag already looks lovely. But if you want to make them feel extra Easter-ready, try:
- pastel ribbon or twine
- mini wooden bunny tags
- a fabric jar topper in floral or gingham
- a little Easter baking spoon tied to the side
- printable gift tags with baking instructions
This is also a great stash-busting project if you have random ribbon, cardstock, or scrap fabric lurking in the craft drawer. Every crafter has that drawer. Usually more than one.
Why these are better than hollow Easter eggs
Not to start a seasonal scandal, but these cookie jars genuinely make more sense for a lot of people.
They feel:
- more personal
- more useful
- more budget-friendly
- more memorable
- less likely to be demolished before lunchtime
You are still giving chocolate, just in a more creative form. Plus the recipient gets the fun of baking their own treat, which makes the gift feel like an experience, not just a sugar hit.
A fun idea for Easter hampers
These would also be adorable grouped together in an Easter baking hamper. Add one cookie jar, a wooden spoon, a tea towel, and maybe a cute spatula or mixing bowl, and suddenly you have a really impressive handmade Easter gift without spending ridiculous Easter-egg money.
For family gifts, you could even make a few different jars and let everyone pick their favourite flavour. That has a much better success rate than pretending everyone likes the same chocolate egg.
The full recipe collection
Here are the seven recipes again if you want to browse them all:
This Easter, instead of paying a premium for hollow chocolate eggs wrapped in shiny cardboard, a homemade chocolate bar cookie mix gift in a jar feels warmer, more useful, and a whole lot more fun. And honestly, I would be much happier receiving a jar of Mars Bar cookie mix than another egg the size of my head with three teaspoons of chocolate in it