The thick mint layer is the whole point of mint chocolate brownies, and it’s the part most recipes shortchange. If you’ve made a pan before and the green layer came out as a thin stripe that looked nothing like the photos, the problem wasn’t how you spread it. The recipe didn’t give you enough buttercream for the size of the pan.
Here you spread a full batch of mint buttercream over a small pan of fudgy brownies, then pour chocolate ganache over the top: dark brownie on the bottom, a thick band of mint green through the middle, and a glossy chocolate top.

These are the squares that disappear first from a St. Patrick’s Day tray, and they earn the same spot on a Christmas platter. I kept a boxed brownie mix as the base on purpose: you’re already making two layers from scratch, and the mix is the one shortcut nobody minds.
Getting the Mint Layer Right
The buttercream will look like too much while you spread it. It isn’t. That thickness is the whole middle layer, so use all of it.

Buy mint extract, not peppermint extract, because the two make different desserts. Mint gives these the flavor of mint chip ice cream. Peppermint pushes the same pan toward candy canes.
Extract strength varies from brand to brand, so add it, beat it in, and taste the buttercream before you spread it. You want mint chip ice cream, not toothpaste, and if you can barely taste the mint, beat in a few more drops.
If it’s the candy cane version you want, my peppermint brownie recipe is what you’re looking for.
Go slowly with the green food coloring and judge by the color, not the drop count. Brands vary more than you’d think.

When my recipe tester, Teresia, made this recipe, she needed six drops of grocery store coloring. I needed half that with a different brand. Stop at pale mint green.
Why the Ganache Is Worth the Wait
The glossy poured top is real chocolate ganache, and a ganache layer this thick usually needs several hours in the refrigerator before it will cut cleanly. Not this one. It only needs two hours to firm up.

It’s the same ganache I pour over my Baileys cheesecake and my Skrewball pie, and it behaves the same way here.
You don’t have to trust the clock, because the ganache shows you when it’s ready:
- It sets from the edges of the pan inward, so if it’s soft or it’s wet-looking in the cent, it means the ganache needs more time.
- When the center looks the same as the ganache near the edges of the pan, it’s set. Tilt the pan under the light and the difference shows up.
Cutting Squares That Look Like the Picture
A knife smears these brownies because it passes through three layers with three different textures, and it drags the soft layers through the firm ones.
Chill the pan until the ganache is fully set. If the brownies have been in the refrigerator for hours, let the pan sit on the counter for a few minutes first, so the brownie base softens enough that the blade doesn’t crack the chocolate top.

Then cut with a sharp knife and wipe the blade clean between cuts. The wiping is the step people skip, and it’s the difference between a green band with crisp edges and a green smear dragged down into the chocolate.

What Testing Changed About This Recipe
I first got this recipe from a friend of mine, and for a long time I made it exactly the way she gave it to me. Teresia tested that original version on March 4, 2026, and her results made me want to go back and change it.
The flavor was good, but the old instructions promised the ganache would set in 15 minutes, and it was still soft after an hour. The brownie layer also tasted more like cake than a fudge brownie.
Both findings sent the recipe back into my kitchen. I swapped the base for a brownie mix with the fudge packet included, and that batch stayed fudgy even after hours in the refrigerator. Then I fixed the ganache so it sets fully within two hours.
This post was originally published in November 2021. The recipe was updated and new photos were taken in July 2026.
Making Them the Night Before
Bake and layer them the day before, let the pan chill overnight, and slice the squares the day you serve them. I’ve left a plate sitting out past the hour mark to see what would happen: the squares soften a little but keep their layers.

If you’re carrying them to a party, bring the whole pan, lift the slab out by the parchment when you get there, and cut the squares then. They’ll look better than anything that rode over pre-cut.
- If you’re filling out a St. Patrick’s Day tray, my Baileys brownies and mini mint cheesecakes chill on the same overnight schedule.
- These have a second season in December, and the mint chocolate doesn’t stop at the brownie pan: my mint chocolate chip cookies and mint chocolate fudge fill out the same cookie tray in cookie and candy form.

Mint Brownies
Ingredients
Brownie
- 16 ounce box brownie mix with the fudge packet included plus the ingredients called for on the back of the box for fudgy brownies (Betty Crocker Delights Original Supreme used – 1 large egg, ⅓ cup oil and 3 tablespoons water)
Mint Buttercream
- ¾ cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 2 cups powdered sugar sifted
- 2 tablespoons heavy cream
- 1 teaspoon mint extract
- 3-4 drops green food coloring McCormick brand used
Chocolate Ganache
- 2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips Ghirardelli brand used
- ⅔ cup heavy cream
- 2 tablespoons light corn syrup
Instructions
Brownie
- Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line an 8×8 baking pan with parchment paper being sure to leave enough to overhang the sides of the pan. This will make lifting the chilled brownies out of the pan easier.
- Prepare the boxed brownie mix according to package directions for fudgy brownies. Bake according to the box directions (our brownies baked for 35 minutes). The edges should be set and the top crackly. A toothpick inserted into the center should come out with a few moist crumbs but no wet batter.
- Allow the brownies to cool completely in the pan before adding the mint buttercream layer.
Mint Buttercream
- In a large mixing bowl using a handheld electric mixer on medium-high speed, beat the butter for 1-2 minutes or until light and fluffy.
- Add the powdered sugar and mix on low just until fully incorporated. The mixture will be dry and resemble coarse crumbs.
- To the bowl add the heavy cream, mint extract, and green food coloring. Beat for 1-2 minutes or until fluffy and a uniform light mint green color.
- Top the cooled brownie with the mint buttercream and spread to an even layer.
- Place the pan into the freezer for 20 minutes to allow the buttercream layer to chill until firm to the touch and no longer soft or sticky before adding the chocolate ganache. This will help to ensure that the warm ganache does not melt the buttercream when added.
Chocolate Ganache
- To a microwave-safe bowl, add the semi-sweet chips and heavy cream. Heat for 1 minute. Remove the bowl from the microwave and allow the chips to sit in the hot cream for an additional 1 minute. Stir until smooth. Heat for an additional 30 seconds if needed to fully melt all the chocolate chips.
- Add the corn syrup and gently stir until fully incorporated and the ganache is smooth and glossy.
- Allow the chocolate ganache to cool on the counter for 5-6 minutes or until cool to the touch and thickened slightly before spooning over the chilled mint buttercream layer.
- Remove the brownies from the freezer, gently pour the cooled ganache over the top of the buttercream layer and smooth into an even layer.
- Chill the mint chocolate brownies in the refrigerator for 2 hours or until the ganache has fully set before slicing and serving. Use a sharp knife wiped clean between cuts for the cleanest layers. Slice into 16 small or 9 large pieces.
Notes
- Do not use a boxed brownie mix with chocolate chips in the batter. The chips get very hard when chilled and will make it tougher to slice when ready to serve.
- Betty Crocker Delights Original Supreme (with the syrup pack included) was used for this recipe. It calls for baking at 350°F for 35-38 minutes in an 8×8 pan. If using a different brand than the Betty Crocker, be sure to follow the baking instructions on your box for temperature and time. You may want to note that mixes that are made to be baked in a 9×13 pan, may yield different results.
- The chocolate ganache layer needs at least 1 ½ to 2 hours to fully chill and set in the refrigerator for clean slices. However, you can refrigerate the brownies for up to overnight if desired. You may want to allow them to rest at room temperature for 10-15 minutes to allow the brownie layer to soften slightly for easier slicing.
- Use pure mint extract, not peppermint extract, for these brownies. Peppermint extract will give a flavor profile more like a candy cane if used.













Comments
Jessica says
Absolutely rich and delicious!
Terri Melvin says
These are delicious. Pretty easy to make too . However, mine were not as pretty as the picture is ,but yum yum. I substituted the mint for peppermint schnapps. A little xmas kick ๐
Tracy says
I want to make these but I dont use cups I use grams when using a recipe, is there any chance you can let me know what each cup size is in grams.
many thanks
tracy
Layne Kangas says
Hi, Tracy – one cup is 128 grams. Enjoy!
Tammy Benton says
Would it be ok to use this recipe with chocolate cake?
Layne Kangas says
Hi, Tammy – we’ve only tested this with brownie mix, I’m not sure how cake mix would turn out. If you end up trying it, please let me know. Enjoy!
Peggy Ash says
These are delicious….. thinking ahead; splitting the mint filling in two; one colored green, one pink or reddish then divide/score pan of brownies in half; one side for each color…for a Christmas theme… & way ahead to cherry extract & pink for Washington/Presidents day or Valentines Day….
Jessica B says
Looks so delicious! Canโt wait to try these!
Suzanne Verrall says
going to make this without the mint flavoring, it is going to be delish
lynn Doane says
can’t wait to make this. Love your tips
Nadia Logan says
Yummy!!
Nutan Verma says
This recipie was definitely a crowd pleaser.
This was so good, mint and chocolate is my favorite combination, I am definitely going to make this again
Crystal Cook says
These would to rich for me but my adult daughters would love them