Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

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Seven Minute Microwave Caramels are rich, buttery, creamy, sweet, and softly flavored with vanilla and incredibly easy to make!.

Some recipes sound absolutely too good to be true and this is one of them. But it works.

And they’re the best caramels I’ve ever had. And I’m not just saying because they’re made in the microwave in seven minutes without a candy thermometer.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

I love caramels and my mom used to make them when I was growing up but there was nothing quick and easy about them. I remember pots of boiling hot liquid, molten sugar, candy thermometers, and just thinking about the absolute precision required stresses me out. I don’t like making things where a few degrees can turn a pound of butter and sugar into a hard worthless rock. I like to have fun in the kitchen and not worrying about soft ball and hard crack stages is why this easy microwave recipe is perfect.

Theoretically I knew it was possible to make caramels in the microwave and did some digging and saw this recipe, but there wasn’t enough butter in it. I fixed that problem by doubling the butter. I recently doubled the butter in these, too. I guess Butter does make everything better, especially in caramels, which are nothing more than sugar, cream, and butter.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

Once you begin this is a fast-moving recipe and with any candy-making, in the microwave or traditional stovetop methods, the resulting liquid gets incredibly hot and using caution and common sense is necessary. Have the small children go play in their room so you can concentrate fully, put your phone down and stop texting, and have all your supplies lined up and ready to go, including oven mitts. And clear a space out in advance in your refrigerator to place the screaming hot pan to cool.

Also, this is not a time to shave calories. Don’t use lite anything here. Use real butter not margarine, real corn syrup and not honey or agave or lite corn syrup. Don’t use fat-free or lite sweetened condensed milk. The recipe is designed for full-fat ingredients and making substitutions will adversely effect results. Eat fewer caramels or do more cardio, but don’t use substitutes.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

Begin by lining an 8-by-8-inch square pan with aluminum foil, spraying with cooking spray, and setting the pan aside. It’s mandatory to line your pan and don’t even think about not doing it. In a large microwave-safe mixing bowl, melt the butter, about ninety seconds. I use unsalted butter but for saltier caramels, salted butter is fine. Make sure the bowl you select is large, probably the largest size that still fits in your microwave, because over the next seven minutes, there will be lots of bubbling and you’ll need the depth. Also, make sure it’s truly microwave-safe. I’ve used bowls in the past for other microwave projects that were a little iffy and they melted. The bowl will get extremely hot so make sure it’s up to the task.

To the melted butter, add one-half cup of each of the following: white granulated sugar, light brown sugar, light corn syrup (light in color, not lite in calories), sweetened condensed milk, and stir until smooth. The recipe uses about half of one standard-sized 14-ounce can of sweetened condensed milk and rather than wasting 89 cents worth of sweet milk, use the remainder to make either No-Bake Vanilla Cake Batter Chocolate Truffles or Chocolate Peanut Butter Fudge (in the microwave), both of which use partial cans. I hate to waste and if I can make more candy or chocolaty treats in the process of making caramels with spare sweet milk, life is good.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

Place the bowl in an 1100-watt microwave and heat on high power for three minutes and thirty seconds (3 and 1/2 minutes). Likely your microwave is 1100 watts, most are these days; if it’s not, you may need to tinker with the cooking times by 15 or 30 seconds in either direction if your microwave is lower or higher wattage.

Using a hot pad, remove the bowl from the microwave, scrape down the sides, and stir. You may wonder why I say to scrape down the sides because it won’t appear that much of anything is on the sides. Well, this is key. 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 gross mess over time.

I hate to use this analogy but it’s like a wart or a rash that starts out small and in a tiny place but if you don’t treat it, it will spread and pretty soon it takes over. The solution to heading off potential graininess and crystallization is to make sure each and every sugar granule that’s on the side of the bowl is cooked. So scrape down the bowl well with a spatula, making sure no chunks of sugar are clinging on the sides. My Chocolate Saltine Toffee is one of the most popular recipes on my site and the overwhelming majority of people make it with great success, but when there’s an issue, it’s usually one of crystallization, which can happen in any candy-making endeavor unless you’re careful.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

Return the bowl to the microwave and heat it on high power for another three minutes and thirty seconds (3 and 1/2 minutes). While cooking, the mixture will foam, bubble vigorously, and become very active. I recommend standing in front of the microwave and watching it the whole time, just on the very unlikely chance you had to power off the microwave immediately.

Seven minutes total cooking time is perfect for me (two rounds of 3 and 1/2 minutes), but if your caramels turn out a bit too hard, reduce cooking time by 30 seconds; and if your caramels are too soft, increase cooking time by 30 seconds or so. Microwaves and ingredients vary and although seven minutes is perfect for me, some minor tweaks may be necessary.

Using a hot pad, remove the bowl from the microwave, set it on the counter, and very, very, very carefully add the vanilla extract with while standing as far back from the bowl as possible with an outstretched arm. The mixture will still be boiling when you add it, and after doing so, it will bubble up even more. Stir to incorporate the vanilla and the mixture will continue to bubble like a science project. Pour the bubbling mixture into the prepared pan, cover it with another sheet of aluminum foil, and place it in the refrigerator to firm up for at least four hours, or overnight, before slicing caramels.

I made this batch at night and after 16 hours in the refrigerators, this is what it looked like. The color gradient is from the light reflecting wickedly against the aluminum foil, the aluminum pan, and the shiny caramels. In person, it’s all a uniform shade of caramel.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

Lift the caramels out using the foil overhang and I flip them over, upside-down-cake style, onto a piece of parchment that’s waiting on a cutting board. You could just slice them in the pan but I don’t want knife marks scratching my pan.

I slice them into 64 one-inch squares, but any shape you desire from logs to triangles is fine. If you have a bench scraper for bread or pasty-making, that’s handy to use for slicing. If your knife is sticking to them, spray it with cooking spray and repeat as necessary to prevent sticking.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

Depending on if you’re eating them or giving them away, wrapping them individually in parchment paper is a nice touch. I don’t bother with individual wrapping for something I know we’ll devour soon anyway. I place them side-by-side without touching on top of large pieces of parchment paper inside a large plastic airtight container. They keep at room temperature for many weeks, and in the refrigerator or freezer for months. I store them in the refrigerator because I like them slightly chilled and they never get rock hard like storebought caramels do; they’re firm yet malleable.

Feel free to sprinkle them with coarse sea salt, dip them in chocolate, sandwich a layer of peanut butter or marshmallow fluff in between two of them and dip the whole stack in chocolate, or just eat them as is and savor the luxuriousness.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

They really are too good to be true. They’re the best caramels I’ve ever had and I’ll put them up against Godiva, See’s Candy, or fancy candy-shop caramels. Yes, I really would and I am super picky. I guarantee no one will ever suspect you made them in the microwave and even if you’ve never made candy or caramels, this recipe is the easiest you’ll ever find. I love it when the simplest recipes produce the best results.

They’re creamy, buttery, sweet, and the vanilla adds a special touch and depth of flavor that makes them irresistible. They’re the perfect balance of firm-yet-soft, and after I’ve sank my teeth in, they just melt in my mouth.

What are you doing for the next seven minutes?

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

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5 from 2 votes

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

By Averie Sunshine
This recipe seems too good to be true because the caramels are made in the microwave in seven minutes, and no candy thermometer is required. But I assure you the recipe works and produces the best-tasting caramels I've ever had. They're rich, buttery, creamy, sweet, and softly flavored with vanilla. They're the perfect balance of soft-yet-firm and just melt in my mouth. They're everything I could ask for in a caramel and will put them up against fancy candy-shop caramels. I will never need another candy-shop caramel, or another recipe for homemade caramels, after this easy and fast recipe that produces amazing results.
Prep Time: 3 minutes
Cook Time: 7 minutes
Total Time: 10 minutes
Servings: 64
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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
  • ยฝ cup sweetened condensed milk
  • 1 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • coarse sea salted and/or melted chocolate for dipping, optional

Instructions 

  • This is a fast-moving recipe once it begins. Have everything in place including a large oven mitt because the bowl will be very hot. Also clear out a space in your refrigerator in advance for placing the hot pan to cool. Make sure your bowl is truly microwave-safe because it will get very hot. 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-by-8-inch pan with aluminum foil, spray with cooking spray; set aside. In a very large microwave-safe bowl (nearly the largest your microwave can accommodate because you will need the room and depth for the bubbling-up), melt the butter, about 90 seconds on high power. To the melted butter add the granulated sugar, light brown sugar, 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 - it wonโ€™t 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 gross mess over time. Scrape down the sides of the bowl very well making sure no sugar is 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, set it on the counter, and very, very carefully add the vanilla extract, standing at arm's length. The mixture will still be boiling and when you add it, it will bubble up even more. Use extreme caution and stir to incorporate the vanilla. The mixture will continue to bubble quite rapidly.
  • Pour the bubbling mixture into the prepared pan, cover it with another sheet of 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 thatโ€™s waiting on a cutting board. You could slice them in the pan but I donโ€™t want knife marks scratching. I slice them into 1-inch squares with a sharp knife or pasty-making bench scraper works well. Spray knife or scraper with cooking spray if it's sticking to the caramels and repeat as necessary until finished slicing.
  • Store caramels by wrapping them individually in parchment paper or by placing them side-by-side without touching on top of large pieces of parchment paper inside a large plastic airtight container. I store them in the refrigerator, but they keep at room temperature for many weeks, and will keep in the refrigerator or freezer for months. Optionally, sprinkle them with coarse sea salt, dip them in chocolate, sandwich a layer of peanut butter or marshmallow fluff in between two of them and dip the stack in chocolate.

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 34kcal, Carbohydrates: 5g, Fat: 2g, Saturated Fat: 1g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g, Cholesterol: 5mg, Sodium: 15mg, Sugar: 4g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Seven Minute Microwave Caramels

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Do you like caramels? Have you ever tried making your own?

I love them for all the buttery, creamy, sweet, and rich glory and this is going to be my go to recipe forever. I feel that strongly about it.

If you have favorite tried and true recipes, feel free to link them.

Thanks for the Valentineโ€™s Day Treats Giveaway entries

5 from 2 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

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Comments

  1. Microwave caramels sound awesome! I wish I found out about these before the holidays so I could’ve included them in my holidays baking list, but I think it is perfect timing because now I can plan ahead for Valentines Day ;)

    1. I wish I had figured them out, too. There’s always V-Day and…next Xmas. Prepared in advance!

  2. I still have a batch of my grandma’s caramels in the fridge from Christmas, and now I’m tempted to make these to do a side-by-side taste test. :-) I just couldn’t possibly tell my grandma!

    1. I realized I should say these tie with my mom’s…hers are awesome too. But they are wayyyyy more work! If you do try the taste test, LMK!

  3. Oh my goodness — I had no idea this was possible! I’m a huge caramel lover. Totally going to try this!!

  4. Sea-salted caramels are my new weakness. I am dying to try making them by your GENIUS 7-minute microwave method! Thanks so much for sharing!

  5. I have a slight obsession with caramels and spend a small fortune stocking up on them every week… why have I never tried making them at home?! I love that this is such a quick recipe, and yours truly look like the came out perfect, Averie. Now, if only my microwave didn’t bust last week….

    All the more reason to head to Traget tonight and get a new one!

    1. That’s twisted irony that your microwave broke! And if you spend a small fortune stocking up, you just freed up some cash with these! LMK how it goes!

      1. It didn’t just break; it burst into flames! Nuts. Thank god my boyfriend knows how to take out a fire! We just bought a shiny new one though, and I’ll let you know when I make them – can’t wait!!!

  6. I can vouch for these (or very close to this recipe). I’ve made them the past few years and people LOVE them. They’re so good!

  7. Love caramel but have always shied away from candy making. I’m the one who can turn chocolate bark into a brownie trying to melt it ;-)

    1. You’re not the only one – the two most common emails I receive are: my cookies didn’t turn out …and…I can’t melt chocolate. Short bursts, 15-30 secs at a time, wait, stir, wait, stir.

  8. Wow, really? Huh… that’s awesome that you can make these in the microwave! My goal in life is to never own a candy thermometer. It feels just too hardcore for me so anyway that I can avoid it, and I’m game!

    1. I use my candy thermometer to test the water temp of bread yeast. I do not want to go to the work of making bread and all that time and energy only to realize my temp was off by 5 degrees too much and the yeast either didnt activate or died. I’ve done both. Lol

  9. Okay, first of all, these look so. dang. good. Second, I’m pretty sure I’ve said it before (if I haven’t, I’ve thought it a lot) – I just love love love how thorough and thoughtful you are with your tips and recipes. The first paragraph in the directions? SO many people are going to appreciate the heads-up about being prepared and having everything at the ready, and such a good idea to suggest keeping little ones out of the kitchen when making them.

    1. There are just some recipes you do NOT want to mess around with texting your friend, your child needs a snack, your hair is in your eye and you need a ponytail holder, your pan isn’t lined, you can’t find the foil…like….you need to always go into the kitchen with that stuff handled and done, but in this recipe especially, you HAVE to! I am glad you appreciate it. I mean it is common sense but does sometimes bear repeating!

  10. I’ve only made caramels a couple of times, and it involved a saucepan, candy thermometer and more than 7 minutes of my time! I like the 1/2 cup amounts of all the ingredients–makes it easy to remember. I have made peanut brittle in the microwave and it is so much faster than the stove top—and like your caramels, it is a fast moving process with a lethally hot sugar mixture. These look delicious and very buttery!

    1. And part of that is cooking spray that I had to spray on them so they wouldn’t stick to the wood for photography…but yes they are very buttery! And I liked the 1/2 cup principle, too. And every other recipe I’ve ever seen for caramels included a candy thermometer & way more than 7 mins. I have actually seen Peanut Brittle recipes for the microwave & want to try that next!

  11. wow! This is definitely a must-try. I love caramels but am always intimidated at the thought of making them… but these sound foolproof! Going to try to give this a go sometime this week!

      1. Thanks so much for making them and for taking the time to come back and comment with a photo! I really appreciate that and maybe it will inspire others who see it and have any doubts the recipe works :) Hope you’re enjoy all your caramels!