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Quick and Easy Holiday Dessert: 30-Minute Candy Apples


  • Author: ushinzomr

Description

This candy apple recipe gives you a perfectly glossy, hard-crack sugar coating that shatters cleanly on the first bite — every single time. Made with just 5 pantry ingredients and ready in 30 minutes, these classic homemade candy apples bring back every carnival and Halloween memory you have.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 6 medium apples, firm variety — Granny Smith (tart) or Fuji (sweet) strongly recommended
  • 2 cups (400g) granulated white sugar
  • 1/2 cup (120ml) light corn syrup
  • 3/4 cup (180ml) water
  • 1/2 teaspoon red gel food coloring (gel gives deeper color than liquid)
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon extract or flavoring oil (optional)
  • 6 wooden candy apple sticks or sturdy lollipop sticks
  • Non-stick cooking spray
  • Parchment paper or silicone baking mat

Instructions

  1. Set up your workspace before you start: line a baking sheet with parchment paper and coat lightly with non-stick cooking spray. Have your sticked apples ready and within reach. Once the sugar reaches temperature, you must move fast — preparation is everything.
  2. Remove all wax from your apples. Store-bought apples have a food-grade wax coating that will prevent the candy from sticking and cause bubbles. Dip each apple in boiling water for 5 seconds, then scrub dry with a rough kitchen towel. Insert a wooden stick firmly into the stem end of each apple, pushing it at least halfway through. Set aside on your prepared baking sheet.
  3. In a heavy-bottomed medium saucepan, combine the sugar, corn syrup, and water. Stir gently just until the sugar is moistened. Clip a candy thermometer to the side of the pan, ensuring the tip is submerged in the mixture but not touching the bottom of the pan — an inaccurate reading will ruin the coating.
  4. Place the saucepan over medium-high heat. Bring the mixture to a full rolling boil without stirring. Once boiling, use a wet pastry brush to wipe down any sugar crystals clinging to the sides of the pan — any crystals that fall back in can cause the whole batch to crystallize.
  5. Continue boiling, without stirring, until the candy thermometer reads between 300°F and 310°F (149°C–154°C) — this is the hard crack stage. This takes approximately 15 to 20 minutes. The temperature will climb slowly at first, then speed up dramatically near the end. Do not walk away during the last 5 minutes.
  6. Remove the pan from heat immediately once it hits 300°F. Stir in the gel food coloring and cinnamon extract if using. Do not overstir — a few gentle turns are enough. Now wait. Allow all the bubbles to fully subside, about 1 to 2 minutes.
  7. Tilt the saucepan to one side so the syrup pools deeply in one corner — this makes full coverage easier. Working one apple at a time, dip and rotate each apple to coat completely, letting the excess drip back into the pan for 3 to 4 seconds. Place each coated apple stick-side up on the prepared baking sheet. Do not touch or move the apples while they set. Allow to cool completely at room temperature for at least 20 minutes before serving.

Notes

  • Why is my candy apple coating sticky or chewy? The syrup did not reach 300°F (hard crack stage).
  • Why is my candy apple coating cloudy or full of bubbles? You dipped before the bubbles fully settled after adding the food coloring.
  • Why won’t the coating stick to my apple? The apple surface was still waxy or slightly wet.
  • Never refrigerate candy apples. Cold air and humidity cause the hard candy coating to absorb moisture and turn sticky.
  • If the syrup thickens too much while dipping, return the pan to low heat for 20 to 30 seconds to loosen it. Do not add water.
  • To make candy apples without corn syrup: substitute with 1 teaspoon of white vinegar or fresh lemon juice.
  • For Halloween candy apples: swap red gel coloring for black, deep purple, or forest green.
  • Best day to make candy apples: a cool, dry, low-humidity day.
  • Apple variety matters: Granny Smith gives a tart-sweet contrast that cuts through the sugar coating.

Nutrition

  • Calories: 271
  • Sugar: 65
  • Sodium: 3
  • Fat: 1
  • Carbohydrates: 71
  • Fiber: 4
  • Protein: 1
  • Cholesterol: 0

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