Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Classic Chex Mix Recipe

The crunchy, savory party snack with buttery seasoning and crisp edges in every handful. Easy to customize, hard to stop eating.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A large rimmed baking sheet filled with classic Chex Mix: toasted cereal squares, pretzels, bagel chips, and nuts with a golden buttery sheen

Chex Mix is one of those snacks that makes people hover near the oven like it is a campfire. The smell hits first: butter, garlic, Worcestershire, and that toasty cereal thing that somehow feels like a holiday even if it is a random Tuesday.

This is the classic oven-baked version, the one that turns out evenly crunchy and deeply seasoned without tasting greasy. It is low-drama, pantry-friendly, and basically built for game days, road trips, and the moment you realize you invited people over and need a snack that looks like you tried.

A hand holding a small bowl of Chex Mix over a kitchen counter, with the baking sheet blurred in the background

Why It Works

  • Even crunch, no soggy surprises: Low-and-slow baking dries everything out and toasts it at the same time.
  • Seasoning that actually sticks: Drizzling in stages and stirring every 15 minutes means each piece gets coated, not just the ones on top.
  • Big savory flavor with simple ingredients: Worcestershire brings the umami, seasoned salt brings the nostalgia, and garlic powder does the heavy lifting.
  • Flexible mix-ins: Use what you have, just keep the overall volume about the same so the seasoning ratio stays on point.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Room temp: Let the mix cool completely, then store in an airtight container for about 1 to 2 weeks (best flavor in the first week). If your kitchen is warm or humid, or your nuts are delicate, it may stale faster.

Keep it crunchy: Moisture is the enemy. Do not store it near the stove or dishwasher vents, and do not put it away warm.

Refresh if needed: If it loses crunch, spread on a baking sheet and bake at 250°F for 10 to 15 minutes, stirring once. Cool before re-lidding.

Freezing: Not my favorite because texture can get a little weird, but it is doable. Freeze airtight up to 2 months and re-crisp in a low oven.

Common Questions

Can I make Chex Mix in the microwave?

Yes, but the oven gives the best all-over crunch. If you microwave it, use a large microwave-safe bowl, cook in short bursts, and stir a lot so nothing steams or burns. For classic results, stick with the oven.

Why is my Chex Mix not crunchy?

Usually one of three things: the oven temp was too high (it browns before it dries), it was not baked long enough, or it got stored before fully cooled. Bake low and slow, stir, then cool completely on the pan.

Can I make it gluten-free?

You can, but check labels. Corn and Rice Chex are often labeled gluten-free, but Wheat Chex is not. Also swap in gluten-free pretzels and use a gluten-free Worcestershire if needed.

Can I use different nuts or skip them?

Absolutely. Cashews, peanuts, pecans, or almonds all work. If skipping nuts, replace the volume with extra pretzels, bagel chips, or more Chex so the seasoning ratio stays balanced.

How do I make it spicier?

Add 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon cayenne to the butter mixture, or toss in a tablespoon of your favorite hot sauce with the Worcestershire. A little goes a long way.

Any easy dietary swaps?

Dairy-free: Use a plant-based butter. Nut-free: Skip the nuts and add pepitas or sunflower seeds, or just increase pretzels or cereal by 1 cup. Vegan: Use plant-based butter and a vegan Worcestershire-style sauce.

I learned early that the best party foods are the ones you can make while still half-dressed and cleaning the house at the same time. Chex Mix is that friend. It is hands-off enough to let you do life, but it still makes your kitchen smell like you have your act together.

My favorite part is the stirring. Every 15 minutes you get to sneak a piece, “quality control,” obviously. The mix starts soft and buttery, then slowly turns into this salty, crisp, toast-everything situation. It is the kind of snack that disappears before the main event even starts, so I always make a little extra and pretend I did not notice how fast it went.