Homemade Marshmallows
Fluffy, light-as-air homemade marshmallows come together with a few ingredients for the ultimate melt-in-your-mouth treat. Learn how to make your own with this easy-to-follow recipe then, use the marshmallows for topping hot cocoa, roasting into s’mores, or packaging for gifts.

If you’ve never treated yourself to homemade marshmallows, let me start off by saying yes, they are absolutely, positively, a million times better than any store-bought marshmallow you’ve tasted.
The homemade version is fluffier, tastier, and not as cloyingly sweet…. AND they’re not very difficult to make, either! Marshmallows are made from whipping water, sugar, and gelatin into a soft, fluffy consistency.
Why We Love This Homemade Marshmallow Recipe
What’s not to love about a fluffy marshmallow? Here are some of the reasons we love these soft, gooey confections:
- Better than store-bought. Seriously there is no competition when it comes to homemade vs. store-bought marshmallows. The texture, the flavor, the fluff!
- Melt-in-your-mouth pillowy soft. The texture of these marshmallows is beyond anything you will find at the store.
- Customizable. You can cut them, shape them, dip them, and dress them up any way you want. You can even add some flavors to change things up!
- Keeps forever! Okay well not exactly forever but if you store them properly they keep soft and spongey far longer than any open bag of marshmallows on the shelf.
Ingredients You’ll Need
The list is short, but each one is vitally important!
- Gelatin – The unflavored gelatin powder allows the marshmallows to set without imparting additional flavors. For this recipe, you will need three (3) envelopes of unflavored gelatin (there are usually four packets in a box).
- Granulated Sugar: Sweetens the marshmallows and helps to provide stabilization and fluffy texture.
- Water: Activates the gelatin and helps make a syrup mixture with the sugar.
- Light Corn Syrup: Prevents the crystallization of the sugar, which allows for a spongey finish. This is the key to that sublime consistency! While light corn syrup is preferred, you can substitute golden syrup.
- Vanilla Extract: Adds a wonderful, neutral flavor. You can also use vanilla bean paste for gorgeous flecks throughout the marshmallows. You can also alter the flavor of your marshmallows by using other extracts such as peppermint or use something like maple syrup for a different flavor profile.
- Powdered Sugar: Also sometimes referred to as confectioner’s sugar, it is used with the cornstarch to coat the marshmallows.
- Cornstarch: Paired with the powdered sugar, it is used to coat the marshmallows and keeps them from sticking to each other (and everything else!).
How to Make Homemade Marshmallows
- Prepare the pan by spraying a 9×13-inch baking dish with nonstick cooking spray; or you can line it with parchment paper or aluminum foil. If you line the pan, spray the foil or parchment, as well. Pour ½ cup of the cold water into the bowl of a stand mixer and sprinkle the gelatin over the water. Let stand until firm, about 15 minutes. Meanwhile, make the syrup.
- Combine the rest of the water and the corn syrup in a medium saucepan, then add the sugar and salt. Bring to a boil while gently swirling the pan; the temperature should reach 240 degrees F on a candy thermometer.
- Pour the hot syrup into the gelatin mixture, avoiding the sides of the bowl as much as possible. Begin mixing on low, then gradually increase the speed to high and whip until the mixture is very thick and stiff. Add the vanilla extract and mix until incorporated. Working quickly, scrape the marshmallow mixture into the prepared pan using a spatula that has been sprayed with non-stick cooking spray.
- Smooth the top into an even layer, then dust with the powdered sugar and cornstarch mixture, and allow to sit overnight at room temperature. The next day, turn the marshmallow slab out onto a cutting board, peel off the foil or parchment, and dust with powdered sugar/cornstarch.
- Using a pizza cutter or sharp knife to cut into squares, then toss a few at a time in a ziploc bag with the powdered sugar and cornstarch mixture, to coat the marshmallows.
Cutting and Shaping Alternatives
While it’s easy (and traditional) to cut the marshmallows into squares, you could use cookie cutters to make just about any size and shape. Here are a few different ways to cut and shape these fluffy homemade marshmallows:
- Make “mini” marshmallows by spreading the mixture into a half sheet pan so they are shorter.
- Use a heart-shaped cookie cutter to make them for Valentine’s Day.
- Make round marshmallows by cutting with a small circular cookie cutter.
- Use a small star-shaped cookie cutter for patriotic-themed marshmallows.
Recipe Tips
- Flavor Alternatives: Use different extracts to change up the flavors of the marshmallows, some ideas: peppermint, maple, orange, and coconut.
- Candy Thermometer: A candy thermometer is important, as reaching the correct temperature ensures that the marshmallows will set properly and have that soft, spongey texture.
- Serving: Great for topping hot chocolate or roasting and using for s’mores.
- Gifting: Dip them in chocolate (and roll in festive sprinkles!) or leave them plain and give them as gifts at the holidays or as a hostess gift any time of year. Can pair with a jar of homemade cocoa mix.
- Storage: Keep stored at room temperature in an airtight container or bag for up to 2 weeks.
- Freezing Instructions: To freeze, place in a freezer-safe bag and remove as much air as possible. Wrap the bag in aluminum foil and freeze for up to 3 months.
More Delicious Marshmallow Recipes:
- Homemade Marshmallow Cream
- Homemade Peppermint Marshmallows
- Marshmallow Brownies
- Chocolate Marshmallow Cookies
Watch the Recipe Video:
If you make these homemade marshmallows and love them, please stop back and give it a 5-star rating – it helps others find the recipe! ❤️️
Homemade Marshmallows
Ingredients
- ⅔ cup (76 g) powdered sugar
- ⅓ cup (37 g) cornstarch
- 1 cup (240 ml) cold water, divided
- 2½ tablespoons unflavored gelatin, about 3 (0.25-ounce packets)
- ⅔ cup (208 g) light corn syrup
- 2 cups (198 g) granulated sugar
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Instructions
- Line a 9×13-inch pan with foil, enough so that excess foil hangs over the sides of the pan. Spray with non-stick cooking spray; set aside.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the powdered sugar and cornstarch; set aside.
- Pour ½ cup of the cold water into the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment. Sprinkle the gelatin over the water. Let stand until the gelatin becomes very firm, about 15 minutes.
- Meanwhile, combine the remaining water and the corn syrup in a medium saucepan. Pour the sugar into the center of the saucepan and add the salt. Place the pan over medium-high heat and bring to a boil, gently swirling the pan, until the sugar has dissolved completely and the mixture reaches 240 degrees F, about 6 to 8 minutes.
- Turn the mixer on low speed and carefully pour the hot syrup mixture into the gelatin mixture, avoiding the side of the bowl as much as possible. Gradually increase the speed to high and whip until the mixture is very thick and stiff, 10 to 12 minutes, scraping down the bowl as needed. Add the vanilla extract and mix until incorporated, about 15 seconds.
- Working quickly, scrape the mixture into the prepared pan using a spatula that has been sprayed with non-stick cooking spray. Smooth the top into an even layer. Sift 2 tablespoons of the powdered sugar mixture over the pan. Cover and let sit overnight at room temperature.
- The next day, turn the marshmallow slab out onto a cutting board and peel off the foil. Sift 2 tablespoons of the powdered sugar mixture over the slab. Using a pizza cutter or a sharp knife that has been sprayed with non-stick cooking spray, cut into 1-inch strips one way, and then across the other way for square marshmallows. You could also use round cutters to cut them out as well.
- Place the remaining powdered sugar mixture in a large ziploc bag. Working with 3 or 4 marshmallows at a time, toss the marshmallows in the bag with the powdered sugar mixture, then toss in a fine-mesh strainer to remove any excess powder. Marshmallows can be stored at room temperature in an airtight container or bag for up to 2 weeks.
Notes
- Flavor Alternatives: Use different extracts to change up the flavors of the marshmallows, some ideas: peppermint, maple, orange, and coconut.
- Candy Thermometer: A candy thermometer is important, as reaching the correct temperature ensures that the marshmallows will set properly and have that soft, spongey texture.
- Serving: Great for topping hot chocolate or roasting and using for s’mores.
- Gifting: Dip them in chocolate (and roll in festive sprinkles!) or leave them plain and give them as gifts at the holidays or as a hostess gift any time of year. Can pair with a jar of homemade cocoa mix.
- Storage: Keep stored at room temperature in an airtight container or bag for up to 2 weeks.
- Freezing Instructions: To freeze, place in a freezer-safe bag and remove as much air as possible. Wrap the bag in aluminum foil and freeze for up to 3 months.
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!
This recipe was originally published in December 2015.
Photography by Dee Frances.
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Your homemade marshmallow recipe is too good! Tried it last weekend, and my friends couldn’t believe I made these from scratch.
These marshmallows look like fluffy clouds captured in a jar! The homemade touch makes them extra special. Thanks for sharing this delightful recipe!
I just do not understand. Do these bakers never use their own website on mobile? Or other recipe websites that make the same infuriating decision as on this one: not putting the measurements within each written out step. Why list a link to a candy thermometer THREE TIMES, but fail to list how much corn sugar and granulated sugar, for example, should go in step 4? There are other baking recipe websites (which I won’t name because that’s in poor taste) that would have added “208g light corn syrup” and “198g white sugar” at the bottom of step four in italics, so the mobile phone user with likely sticky hands doesn’t need to scroll back and forth between the ingredients list and the step by step section.
Please, please make this small but critical adjustment on your site. It will make me and my circle of girlfriends much more inclined to spend time and resources on this site.
These are fantastic! Delicious just to eat, or put on hot cocoa, or gift. A big hit with the family!
Easy and delicious!!
If you love marshmallows like my kids/grands do then this is the recipe for you! So light and fluffy, delicious! They fly out of the container! Easy to follow recipe!
Homemade marshmallows are so sweet. I can try making this with my sisters.
I’m thinking, if you plan to use them for rice krispie treats, you could just proceed from when the mixture is whipped in the bowl. Why spread the mixture in a prepared pan, let them dry overnight, sprinkle with cornstarch and cut into pieces – only to melt them down again to make the cereal treats, right? If you stop at the end of step 5, you basically have melted marshmallows.
good work
Confusingly written – it’s not made clear enough what you are supposed to do with the cornstarch and powdered sugar and when.
I appreciate, cause I found exactly what I was looking for. You’ve ended my 4 day long hunt! God Bless you man. Have a nice day. Bye
You skipped the most essential part of a marshmallow. Use marshmallow root and now you make it into an item that you can eat that also works and helps your digestive system. :)
What is marshmallow root?
It is an herb that is very good for you and does many things.
Marshmallows today usually forget this main ingredient….
Basically, take whatever liquid you are using and infuse something in it, then make like the recipe says.
Finding a recipe with marshmallow root is proving to be hard, which is why I made this comment four years ago. Hoping that this recipe could change and that this site could have the first marshmallow root infused marshmallow that is easily found online.
You can find some recipes online that include various herbs/items. Here is one example I found using rose petals, etc.
https://joybileefarm.com/healthy-homemade-marshmallows-rose/
I make these lovely marshmallows
occasionally and I love them! I recently
made homemade graham crackers, topped with marshmallows and dipped in dark
chocolate…homemade mallomars! YUM!
This is a very general question, but it comes up in this recipe! Something I’ve never understood…
When a recipe says “line a pan with foil/parchment to leave enough for an overhang,” does that mean on all four sides…? Or just the long sides? Or the short sides?
Similarly, when a recipe ONLY says “line with foil/parchment” does it mean leave an overhang, just the bottom of the pan (like is seen with most cakes), or enough to cover the bottom and all four sides?
I need to get this figured out because it’s a conundrum I run into all the time!
Hi Lisa, If it’s a square pan or rectangle, and brownies or bars, I always line with overhang on the long sides so I can easily lift them out and slice them on a cutting board. If it’s a cake in a pan that size, then I just grease, since I normally don’t lift out cakes with frosting. For round cakes, I just fit rounds of parchment onto the bottom (not up the sides). I hope that helps!!
Homemade marshmallows far outshine those you buy in a store. They’re not only delicious, but they also look amazing! These marshmallows are dense and melt well when added to a cup of hot cocoa.
Hi there,
I’m just confirming the amount of gelatin. I’ve made marshmallows before and the recipe I have says to use 3 packages of gelatin. Yours is much more detailed so I want to use your recipe but was thrown by the small amount. Thx!
Elisa, I made these today and used 3 packets of gelatin. I measured them and each packet was a little less than a tablespoon. Also, Alton Brown’s recipe on Food Network calls for 3 packets of gelatin and has similar measurements for the rest of the recipe. Mine turned out fluffy and wonderful.
Thanks, Michelle! These are amazing!
Hi Elisa, Yes, it does come out to about 3 packets of gelatin, I should note that above. Sorry about that!
I love homemade marshmallows. It’s been too long since I whipped up a batch. I always use and love Alton Brown’s recipe. Have you tried it?
Hi Laura, I haven’t, I’ll have to check it out and give it a try!
OMG so delicious
I think this is the year that I’m going to bite the bullet and make homemade marshmallows! I wonder–could I substitute the scrapings of a vanilla bean for some (or all) of the extract?
Hi Kerry, Yes, absolutely! And all those little flecks will be gorgeous!
These look amazing! I do have a question tho, if I wanted to make them vegan and Swop out the gelatin for something like agar-agar, would the recipe still work??
Hi Susan, Unfortunately I am not at all sure, I’ve never tried working with gelatin alternatives.
These look awesome. But, everything on your site does. What got me to comment for the first time is the quantity. It’s so precise. And then there’s the word “about” in there. Made me literally laugh out loud. :)
I’ve always wanted to try homemade marshmallows but I figured they’d be tough to get right. I’m going to try this recipe!
I made them! It was easy and they came out great. Thanks!
Do you use the paddle or whisk attachment on your mixer?
Whisk, sorry that I did not clarify that!
What’s not to love about this recipe? Looking forward to making these for holiday gifts!~Carolyn @ Cabot
I too have been making this recipe for quite a long time. Helen nailed it describing them as clouds. I do warn my gift recipient of roasting and hot sugar.
I have found mine to melt faster than toasting so be careful.
I also love them out of the freezer!
I can vouch for this recipe. Like Helen, I agree that peppermint adds a nice touch. You can make chocolate marshmallows, too. I’ve forgotten what recipe I used for chocolate.
Maybe BEB can refresh my memory?
Hi Joe, I’ve yet to make chocolate marshmallows, on my list!
These are like eating clouds! I’ve been making them for several years and people are always sooooo impressed that I hate to tell them how easy they are to make. I add 1/2 teaspoon almond extract and a few drops red food coloring for pink almond clouds or 1/2 teaspoon peppermint extract for peppermint clouds! And YES! Dip them halfway in dark chocolate and sprinkle with crushed candy canes for a yummy treat! The possibilities are endless!
Soft pillowy goodness :)
The English teacher in my just loves your description~! This is that project that I mean to get to every year and just don’t. But this year, I’m doing homemade cocoa gifts for my daughters teachers, aids, bus drivers, cafe workers, just found a good cocoa recipe but needed marshmallows and bam, this popped up. Feeling lucky today!