Skip to main content

How to make marshmallows: This recipe is the perfect Easter treat

Marshmallows: The homemade version of this popular Easter candy is easier to make than you think

Homemade Easter Marshmellow Peeps
McCormick

Marshmallow candies are as much a hallmark of the Easter holiday as chocolate, ham, and drinking Champagne until your burps come out speaking French. Of course, you can always go out and buy the beloved Easter marshmallows we all know and love, but making your own at home is actually a really fun activity for the holiday, especially if you have little ones at home.

We absolutely love this recipe from McCormick. Learn how to make marshmallows this Easter.

Easter marshmallow recipe

homemade easter marshmallow sugar dip
McCormick

Ingredients:

For colored sugar:

  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • McCormick Assorted NEON! Food Colors & Egg Dye

For marshmallows:

  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • 1 cup cold water, divided
  • .5 cup light corn syrup
  • 2 envelopes (.25 oz each) unflavored gelatin
  • 1 tablespoon McCormick Pure Vanilla Extract

homemade easter marshmallow sugar

Method:

For the colored sugar:

  1. Place sugar in a large resealable plastic bag. Select your desired Marshmallow Variation in the tips section below and add the designated amount of Food Color with the sugar.
  2. Seal the bag and knead gently until the color is evenly distributed.
  3. Spread colored sugar in a thin layer on a large rimmed baking sheet and break up any large lumps. Allow to dry thoroughly, about 15 to 20 minutes.
  4. Sift or press through the sieve, if needed. Spray 13 x 9-inch baking dish with no-stick cooking spray then coat with some of the colored sugar. Set aside.

For the marshmallows:

  1. Microwave .5 cup of the water, sugar, and corn syrup in a medium microwavable bowl on high for 7 minutes. Stir to dissolve sugar.
  2. Microwave on high for 5 minutes longer. (Mixture will have a slight yellow tint.) Carefully remove the hot bowl from the microwave.
  3. Place the remaining .5 cup water in a large mixer bowl. Sprinkle with gelatin. Let stand 5 minutes.
  4. Gradually beat in hot syrup mixture with a whisk attachment on medium-low speed. Beat 8 minutes. Increase speed to medium-high.
  5. Beat 10 to 12 minutes longer or until the mixture is fluffy, shiny, and has at least tripled in volume. Beat in vanilla.
  6. Spread marshmallow mixture in the prepared dish. Smooth top with a spatula. Sprinkle some more of the colored sugar on top to coat. Let stand at room temperature overnight or refrigerate for at least 3 hours.
  7. Reserve the remaining colored sugar in a large resealable plastic bag or airtight container.
  8. Cut marshmallows with 1- to 2-inch Easter cookie cutters. Add marshmallows in batches to reserved colored sugar in the bag; toss to coat well. Shake off excess. Store marshmallows in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days.

For marshmallow color variations:

  • Pink: For the colored sugar, add 10 drops of pink color with the sugar.
  • Purple: For the colored sugar, add 5 drops purple color and 8 drops blue color with the sugar.
  • Blue: For the colored sugar, add 15 drops of blue color with the sugar.
homemade easter marshmallow face
McCormick

Note: To prepare marshmallows as seen in the photo, prepare the baking dish as directed, sprinkling the pink, purple, and blue colored sugars in stripes in the bottom of the dish. Prepare marshmallows as directed. Decorate the top of the marshmallows with stripes similar to the bottom. Cut into bunny shapes and sprinkle sides with remaining sugar. Melt chocolate chips as directed on the package and use to paint or pipe on the bunny face, if desired.

To prepare Colored Sugar using McCormick Nature’s Inspiration Food Colors, add .25 teaspoon desired color and 1 teaspoon water to sugar. Continue as directed.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Lindsay Parrill
Lindsay is a graduate of California Culinary Academy, Le Cordon Bleu, San Francisco, from where she holds a degree in…
How to grill filet mignon on a gas grill: Advice from an expert
Time to pull out the grill and grab your favorite cut of meat
Grill barbecue gourmet filet entrecote steaks at summer party

The weather is changing, and your grill beckons. Longer, warmer days beg for full propane tanks and your favorite meats and vegetables thrown atop the flame.

One of the most iconic cuts within the wide world of animal protein is filet mignon. This delicate steak is prized for both its texture and its scarcity. Simply put, there's just not much of it per cow. The tender cut is pulled from the smaller front end of the tenderloin, around the animal's upper midsection. It tends to show up as a round cut, which makes sense as it runs around the cow's spine.
Grilling filet mignon

Read more
The 10 best banana liqueur cocktails for a taste of the tropics
You and banana liqueur ought to know each other better. Get close with these great cocktail recipes
Banana liqueur cocktail

 

Banana may not jump to mind when you think of the best cocktails, but perhaps it should. With the right liqueur at your side, you can whip something that tastes like a warm breeze in palm tree country. The very best of the bunch play off of complementary spirits like rum and like-minded ingredients like coconut and orgeat.

Read more
How to make a buttery hollandaise sauce like a professional chef
Here's everything you need to know about this mother sauce
Eggs Benedict from Hash Kitchen

As Chef Joey Maggiore of the Arizona Brunch restaurant chain Hash Kitchen said, "Perfecting hollandaise is not necessarily the hardest, but it is a less forgiving sauce. You must pay attention to detail when making hollandaise so that you get the consistency and taste you need for the perfect sauce." Chef Maggiore couldn't be more spot on. Hollandaise is one of the five mother sauces, meaning, it's the base sauce for other, more complex sauces like béarnaise, choron, and maltaise sauces.

Before the technological age of blenders, the old-school method of making the perfect hollandaise sauce took some practice. But now, with technology, there are more foolproof ways to make the mother sauce. We'll cover all those methods, plus give you some of Chef Maggiore's tips and tricks on how to make hollandaise sauce. Also, stick around until the end for an easy hollandaise sauce recipe.
Hollandaise sauce ingredients

Read more