Two Easy Honey Candy Recipes (2024)

Two Easy Honey Candy Recipes (1)
For a few years, my son could only have honey as a sweetener, which meant store-bought candy was out of the question. (This was on the advice of his pediatrician who placed him on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet because he had non-responsive celiac disease and was a very sick little boy. The diet worked wonders and he is now a healthy child with no more stomach aches or for that matter, asthma. It’s a fabulous diet!)

I did a lot of experimenting, trying to come up with treats that I could make him. Here are two of his favorites: Honey & Vinegar Candy and Honey Nut Butter Candy; both are fairly easy to whip up when the urge for a sweet treat arises.

One thing that no one ever seems to mention when it comes to making (well, eating!) most honey based candy is that it quickly goes from crunchy to chewy in your mouth. This is more noticeable with the Honey & Vinegar Candy than the Honey Nut Butter Candy, but because of this reason, I recommend these for older children and even then, be sure to break into small serving sizes. The texture of the Honey & Vinegar reminds me quite a bit of the Sugar Babies that I bought as a kid, if that gives you some idea of the chew-factor!

Two Easy Honey Candy Recipes (2)

Honey Nut Butter Candy

This first easy honey candy recipe is inspired by “Glass Candy” from the cookbook Grain Free Gourmet by Jodi Bager and Jenny Lass. I love their cookbooks and highly recommend anyone that wants to cook grain-free and refined-sugar-free own a copy of both! Mine are well worn and worth every penny I spent and then some!

  • 1 cup honey
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup nut butter (I used crunchy almond butter here, you can also use peanut butter, cashew butter, sunbutter, etc)

Pour the honey into a heavy saucepan. Place pan over medium heat until mixture starts to boil. Adjust the heat lower if needed and let boil until honey reaches 300 degrees F (hard crack stage.) This takes around twenty minutes.

Remove from heat, add vanilla and nut butter. Stir thoroughly then immediately pour onto a parchment lined baking sheet. Place in freezer or refrigerator to cool. Once completely chilled, break into long strips, then break those again into smaller, bite-sized pieces. Store in freezer.

Two Easy Honey Candy Recipes (3)

Honey & Vinegar Candy

I’m always looking for ways to use some of my infused vinegars, such as Blackberry Vinegar, and this easy honey candy recipe fits the bill perfectly! For the batch pictured above, I used blueberry infused vinegar (made exactly like the blackberry version.)

  • 1 cup honey
  • 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar (or fruit infused vinegar)
  • (optional) 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Pour the honey and vinegar into a heavy saucepan. Place pan over medium heat until mixture starts to boil. Adjust the heat lower if needed and let boil until honey reaches 300 degrees F (hard crack stage.)

Remove from heat, add vanilla, if desired. Immediately pour onto a parchment lined baking sheet. Place in freezer or refrigerator to cool.

Once completely chilled, break into long strips, then break those again into smaller, bite-sized pieces. Store in freezer. These start off crunchy, but turn rather chewy after a few seconds!

Two Easy Honey Candy Recipes (4)

A few tips to remember:

  • Be sure to calibrate your candy thermometer periodically. Dip the tip of it in a small pot of boiling water (you can do this while cooking pasta too, as a time saver) and let it stay for a few minutes without touching the sides or bottom. It should read 212 degrees F (at sea level). My candy thermometer happens to be ten degrees off! So, I have to keep that in mind when making candies and adjust accordingly. It WILL make a difference in your recipe. (For more information on this, check out Ray’s comment below.)
  • Honey can scorch and burn if heated too high – be sure to stay nearby and keep checking the temperature with your candy thermometer.
  • Store honey based candies in the freezer (in single layers, between parchment paper) until right before ready to eat.
  • You can also pour the hot candy into lollipop molds. (Just remember the “chew factor” for small kids!)
  • Try different flavored extracts instead of vanilla – such as: lemon or peppermint for a great taste variation.
  • Fill your still-hot pot with warm, soapy water soon after pouring out the candy and let it soak for a while in your sink – it will make cleaning up infinitely easier!

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Two Easy Honey Candy Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What candy can be made from honey? ›

Torrone (Italian Nut and Nougat Confection)

This impressive looking candy is easy to make. All it takes is a little time stirring at the stovetop. Honey and egg whites combine to create a chewy nougat that envelopes crunchy almonds and pistachios.

How to make honey harden? ›

You can harden honey by boiling the honey to a temperature of 300 degrees and then letting the honey cool. This causes the honey to thicken and harden. If left alone, honey will also harden naturally or crystalize over time.

How to get honey to hard crack stage? ›

In a pot, mix together the sugar, water and lemon juice and put it on the fire on a medium flame. When the mixture boils, decrease the flame to low and stir in the honey. Caramelize the mixture and cook it until it reaches the hard crack stage (146°C-155°C/295°F-310°F) on a candy thermometer.

How rare is the honey candy in Adopt Me? ›

Honey Candy is a common food item in Adopt Me! that can be obtained through collecting the candy shot out from a BEES!

How do you make fake honey with sugar? ›

Directions
  1. Pour water, sugar, and alum into a large saucepan or Dutch oven. Place over high heat and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium and boil for 10 minutes. Skim any scum that forms on the top.
  2. Remove syrup from the heat and stir in flowers. Allow to steep for 10 minutes, then stir, and strain into storage jars.

Can honey go bad? ›

Honey does not spoil, however for best quality, the USDA recommends storing honey for up to 12 months,” Amidor says. “After that time, it remains safe but the quality may not be as good. If the honey becomes cloudy, crystallized or solidified this is not a food safety concern.”

Does honey harden like sugar? ›

Real Honey Crystallizes

The natural sugars in honey (glucose and fructose) will bind together and begin to form little crystals, which can start making your honey harder. With differing blends, some honey will begin to crystallize faster than others.

Can I whip crystalized honey? ›

Sinple add your crystallized honey to a mixer abd whip on high for 30 minutes or until it has a consistency of melted marshmallows. Enjoy!!

How to turn sugar into candy? ›

Stir white sugar, corn syrup, and water together in a medium saucepan. Cook, stirring, over medium heat until sugar dissolves, then bring to a boil. Without stirring, heat to 300 to 310 degrees F (149 to 154 degrees C), or until a small amount of syrup dropped into cold water forms hard, brittle threads.

Does real honey freeze? ›

Yes, you can store honey in the freezer. But raw honey doesn't quite “freeze” like water because of its low water content. As honey gets colder, it gets thicker and more viscous, meaning it flows less easily. If you put it in your freezer, it will solidify and keep — but it won't become rock-solid like an ice cube.

What pet is rare in Adopt Me? ›

Often considered the rarest pet in Adopt Me, the Monkey King is a limited legendary pet from the Monkey Fairground event.

What is Honey worth? ›

The retail price range in Canadian Dollar for natural honey is between CAD 15.48 and CAD 34.69 per kilogram or between CAD 7.02 and CAD 15.73 per pound(lb) in Ottawa and Montréal.

Is the hugging egg in Adopt Me rare? ›

Rarity. The Hugging Egg is a limited rare toy in Adopt Me! that was obtainable during the 2018 Easter Event.

What kind of candy is bit of honey? ›

Made with real honey and almond bits, Bit-O-Honey is a delectable bite-sized chew that's satisfied sweet tooths for nearly one hundred (!) years. And now that Spangler Candy has added Bit-O-Honey to its roster of some of the most iconic names in candy, there's no better time for Bit-O-Honey's big reintroduction.

What can be crafted with honey? ›

Other things you can do with honey include crafting blocks of honey (which, as we've already established, are pretty neat) with four bottles arranged in a square in a crafting grid. You can also make sugar – one bottle of honey in a crafting grid all on its lonesome will give you three piles of sugar. Sweet.

Does pure honey go candy? ›

Yes. Crystallization is a natural process that pure, raw honey goes through. Not every honey will crystallize, and some will crystallize faster than others. But it's a good sign that your honey is real and less processed.

How do you substitute honey for sugar in candy? ›

Depending on the honey, it can be two or three times sweeter than sugar. For every 1 cup of sugar, replace it with 1/2 to 2/3 cups of honey.

References

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