Chocolate-Covered 7-Minute Microwave Caramels are rich, buttery, creamy, sweet, and softly flavored with vanilla. Theyโre the perfect balance of soft-yet-firm and just melt in your mouth. Iโll put them up against fancy candy shop caramels. Youโll never need another candy shop caramel or recipe for homemade caramels after trying these. And theyโre so easy.
If there’s one thing I like better than homemade caramels, it’s homemade caramels dipped in chocolate.
And decked out with sprinkles. They make everything better.
Last week when I made the Peanut Butter Cup Cookie Dough Crumble Bars and used half of a can of sweetened condensed milk, the other half was just begging to be made into caramels.
So that’s what I did. In seven minutes in the microwave.
They’re based on my January recipe for Seven Minute Microwave Caramels (no-bake, gluten-free) and yes, it really works. No candy thermometer, nothing fussy, tricky, or complicated.
The recipe is not only easy, it produces the best tasting caramels I’ve ever tried. Move over Godiva and even my beloved Sees. I prefer these.
To make them, combine a half can of sweetened condensed milk with four other halves: half cup of melted butter, half cup of corn syrup, half cup of brown sugar, and half cup of granulated sugar. Microwave it all together for 7 minutes, stopping at the halfway point and stirring briefly.
I wrote in detail in the other post about what to do and not do, tricks and tips, and the following is what I believe bears highlighting.
The bowl will get crazy hot. Make sure your bowl is truly heat-safe.
After stirring at 3:30 mark, take a damp paper towel and wipe around the sides of the bowl to remove any gritty sugar that’s clinging. Undissolved sugar granules that are clinging to the sides could result in your entire batch turning grainy. Grainy-ness spreads like wildfire and it will take over the pan like a bad science experiment.
You must line your pan with foil. Use a non-stick foil like this one, and spray it extremely liberally with cooking spray so that you don’t have molten caramel stuck to either your pan, or your foil.
When slicing the caramels, do it on a piece of parchment on top your cutting board. Use a pizza wheel or an extremely sharp knife, sprayed with cooking spray. They stick to everything so take precautions to avoid it.
When melting the chocolate for dipping, I highly recommend using baking chocolate or chocolate sold in bars, not chocolate chips. They’re more resistant to melting, and thicker and gloppier to work with. I used a medley of Trader’s Joe Pound Plus Bars: Milk (32%), Dark (54%), and Darker (72%).
Normally I don’t gravitate to eating or baking with milk chocolate, but with the caramels, the milkiness is very complimentary to their creaminess. Don’t automatically dismiss milk chocolate, thinking darker is better. Milk chocolate really shines here.
I highly recommend a tablespoon or two of shortening stirred in after the chocolate has melted. This helps the chocolate behave more like Candi-Quik, staying smoother longer. It makes any chocolate dipping project so much easier. I keep a small can of it in my pantry for this purpose only.
When dipping, quick baths in the chocolate are preferred to long, luxurious soaks. Balance the caramel on the tines of a fork, lower it, just cover it with chocolate, and get it out. Too long in the warm chocolate not only begins to melt the caramel, but it adds more chocolate than necessary, and you’ll have to melt more chocolate sooner rather than later, and it’s a pain to stop and start.
Place the dipped caramels on a parchment-lined tray or plate, and before the chocolate sets (you have many minutes if using shortening so not a rush), sprinkle them with your favorite jimmies, sprinkles, slivered almonds, coarse sea salt, graham cracker crumbs, dried cranberries, bacon bits or whatever your heart desires. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours.
There will be chocolate “duck feet” as I call them on the bases of the caramels where it pooled on the parchment. Either nibble it off, break it off with your fingers, or if you want to make them look professional, trim it with a knife.
The caramels are smooth, creamy, buttery, with prominent notes of vanilla.
They’re soft, chewy, rich and simply my favorite caramels ever.
I’m convinced they’re the best possible use of my microwave and 7 minutes of time.
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Chocolate-Covered 7-Minute Microwave Caramels
Ingredients
- ยฝ cup butter, 1 stick, melted (I use unsalted, use salted for saltier caramels)
- ยฝ cup granulated sugar
- ยฝ cup light brown sugar, packed
- ยฝ cup light corn syrup, light in color, not lite
- ยฝ cup sweetened condensed milk
- 1 ยฝ teaspoons vanilla extract
- chocolate for dipping โ I used about 4 ounces each of Milk, 32%, Dark (54%), and Darker (72%)
- 1 to 4 tablespoons vegetable shortening, optional but recommended
- sprinkles, or jimmies, non-pareils, slivered almonds, coarse sea salt, graham cracker crumbs, etc., optional for sprinkling
Instructions
- This is a fast-moving recipe once it begins. Have everything in place including a large oven mitt because the bowl becomes extremely hot. Make sure your bowl is truly microwave-safe because it will get very hot. Clear out a space in your refrigerator in advance for placing the hot pan to cool. Do not use lite or reduced fat ingredients; use real butter, corn syrup, and sweetened condensed milk. Send small children out of the kitchen while making these and fully concentrate on the recipe because the mixture is incredibly hot.
- Line an 8-inch or 9-inch square pan with non-stick aluminum foil, and spray very generously with cooking spray; set aside. (For these, I used a 9-inch pan; for the previous recipe I used an 8-inch).
- In a very large microwave-safe bowl (nearly the largest your microwave can accommodate because the depth is necessary for the bubbling-up), melt the butter, about 90 seconds. To the melted butter, add the sugars, corn syrup, sweetened condensed milk, and stir until smooth. Place bowl in the microwave and heat on high power for 3 minutes and 30 seconds (3 and 1/2 minutes).
- Using a hot pad, remove bowl from the microwave, scrape down the sides incredibly well, and stir. Very important โ it wonโt appear that much of anything is on the sides but if there is sugar or sugar granules that are not dissolved and fully incorporated into the bubbling mixture and they remain uncooked, they can cause graininess or crystallization in the finished caramels. Uncooked sugar crystals have regrowth that spreads and can take over a whole pan, rendering it a grainy and inedible. After scraping down the sides of the bowl very well, wipe around the sides using a damp paper towel, making sure no sugar granules are clung to the sides.
- Return bowl to microwave and heat on high power for 3 minutes and 30 seconds (3 and 1/2 minutes). During this time, the mixture will foam, bubble vigorously, and become very active. I recommend standing in front of the microwave and watching it the whole time so you could power off the microwave immediately if necessary. Using a hot pad, remove the bowl from the microwave.
- Very carefully add the vanilla extract, standing at armโs length. The mixture will likely still be boiling when you add it, it will bubble up even more. Use extreme caution and stir to incorporate the vanilla as the mixture continues to bubble quite rapidly.
- Pour the bubbling mixture into the prepared pan, cover pan with aluminum foil, and place it in the refrigerator to firm up for at least four hours, or overnight, before slicing caramels.
- Lift the caramels out using the foil overhang and flip them over, upside-down-cake style, onto a piece of parchment on top of the cutting board. Spray knife or pizza wheel with cooking spray before slicing, repeating as necessary. I made 6 rows of 6, for 36 caramels.
- Melt chocolate in a small microwaves-safe bowl, about 1 minute. Stir in 1 to 2 tablespoons shortening for every 4 to 6 ounces of chocolate. This helps keep the chocolate smoother and less prone to becoming gloppy or firming up too fast. I like to work in batches of 4 to 6 ounces of melted chocolate at a time.
- Balance 1 caramel on the tines of a fork, slowly lower it into the chocolate, and dip to coat. Donโt let it linger in the hot chocolate or it could melt the caramel, and more chocolate than necessary is used. Use another fork to help lift it out of the chocolate and slide it off the fork and onto a parchment-lined large plate. Add sprinkles before chocolate sets up. Repeat process with all remaining caramels, reheating or adding more chocolate and shortening as necessary.
- Place caramels in the refrigerator to firm up for at least 2 hours, or overnight. Caramels will keep airtight in the refrigerator for many months. I prefer to store them in the fridge rather than at room temperature. Note that because microwaves, ingredients, and climates vary, there could be variances in cook times; for my microwave 7 minutes is perfect.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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Do you like caramels? Do you make your own caramel sauce or caramels? Or homemade candy?
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Duuuuuude. These look so good. 7 minutes??? awesome.
These sound too good to be true! I’ve made candies before but never caramels – but just stick it in the microwave for 7 minutes? I think I can do that! And, everything is better covered in chocolate ;)
Those PB Dreams of yours look pretty amazing, speaking of covered in chocolate!
These are gorgeous! I need to try your microwave caramels. I love caramel but the stove kind freaks me out. And you’re right – sprinkles DO make it better!
And I’ve made it both ways and I prefer this way for all reasons – easier, faster, better results, less mess, less to worry about with candy thermometers, etc.
I think you may have just changed my life for the better. Microwave caramel? You evil, evil, beautiful genius!
Thanks for the shortening tip–I think that might improve my overall chocolate-dipping skills. Whenever I try, the stuff usually comes out looking like a crazed cat got a hold of them…not pretty :)
Yes the shortening will eliminate the crazed cat phenomenon. Lol :)
These are so beautiful! I don’t know if I have the patience to make them, but I’d love to try.
Thank you and they’re not hard!
I’ve always loved caramel. And I love how simple, yet pretty these are. Always so many awesome ideas for gifts! I’m waiting for you to open up a bakery/candy shop!
Don’t hold your breath. That’s one thing I am smart enough not to embark on! lol So much work! Although I do have enough leftovers and baking experiments, I could use a venue to donate them :)
It still blows my mind that this works! Chocolate and sprinkles are a fabulous addition!
These look so fun! I find homemade candy (especially dipped in chocolate) soooo much better than any box of chocolates! Can’t wait to try your microwave caramels recipe! Pinning!
Thanks for the pin!
I’ve been a caramel junkie lately and this recipe is great. Thanks so much! :)
And it works and it’s so easy. Too easy :)
Microwaves are so under used for pastry/baking applications! I used to always have hard time making caramel and custards but I found recipes for both that use microwaves instead of stove top cooking and they worked so well!
One of the things I found interesting in Christina Tosi’s cookbook (Momofuku Milkbar) is that she talked about how she does tons in the microwave. Such a high-brow chef…and she browns her butter in the microwave!
Do these count as breakfast? ;) Absolutely drooling! Nothing better than caramels, unless they’ve been dipped in chocolate!
They definitely count as breakfast :)
Okay, I know I said it before, but if I leave now, I can be at your place by dinnertime.. soooo… can I please have like, fifty of these caramels? I still can’t believe you can get those gorgeous, gooey caramels in 7 minutes AND from made in the microwave. If that isn’t a superfood, I don’t know what is :)
Plus, I can’t resist anything smothered in chocolate and sprinkles. You truly know the way to my heart.
When I first started making these, I totally had my doubts, too. But the recipe has always worked like a champ!
You’re kidding! WOW! I’ll see you in 7 minutes! :-)
Holy wow! These look perfect! Perfect! Your chocolate is perfectly dipped!! Loving how simple these are!
Super.simple. !!
I bookmarked your other recipe, and was waiting to try it until I thought of a cookie I wanted to add it to. Oh, you added chocolate? The wait is over :)
Perfect timing then!
Making homemade candy is so much fun, and as always, yours look beautiful! Such clean cuts and festive toppings! Your raw caramel recipe has been a favorite of mine since seeing it on here a couple of years ago. I’m a See’s candy lover too, but can only find them when I travel.
Sees are everywhere in CA but I know they are hard to find when I leave the state!