Awesome Edible Sugar Glass (2024)

Introduction: Awesome Edible Sugar Glass

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About: Hello and Welcome to In the Kitchen With Matt. I am your host Matt Taylor. My goal for the show is to teach you how to cook really good food at home for cheap. Eating out everyday can get expensive, but it doe… More About In The Kitchen With Matt »

In this episode of In the Kitchen with Matt, I will show you how to make sugar glass. This easy edible glass recipe is awesome! It takes very few ingredients. You can make movie props, fun decorations, use it for Halloween, whatever you like. :) You could get some silicone molds and make candies with it. Glass candy lego men, green glass Christmas trees, got nuts! It looks like glass, it behaves like glass, it is sharp like glass, but you can eat it! If I can do it, you can do it. Let's get started! :)

Don't forget to follow me and check out my other Instructables. :)

Follow the easy steps below or watch the video tutorial or do both. :)

Step 1: Ingredients and Tools

You can print this recipe here on my website.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups white granulated sugar (450g)
  • 1 cup of corn syrup (Karo syrup) (300g)
  • 1/2 to 1 cup water (125 to 250ml)
  • pinch of cream of tartar (optional)

Tools:

  • Bowl
  • Pot or deep skillet
  • wooden or silicone spoon
  • sheet pan
  • kitchen spray or a silicone mat
  • candy thermometer

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Step 2: Water, Sugar, Corn Syrup and Cream of Tartar

First add the water, sugar, corn syrup, and cream of tartar to a deep pot or skillet.

Step 3: Prepare the Pan

Now prep a sheet pan with a silicone mat or spray the pan with kitchen spray. You could also use aluminum foil as a liner. Spray the foil as well. We don't want the sugar glass to stick to the pan.

Step 4: Stir and Heat

Now we place the pot on the stovetop and set the heat to medium-low. Stir gently until the mixture starts to boil. We want to get the candy up to the hard crack stage, which is right around 290 F to 300 F. (150 C). But, we don't want to heat it up too fast otherwise it will get too dark. My thermometer is old and doesn't register the heat properly anymore. After the mixture starts to boil you can stop stirring and let it heat the rest of the way. If you don't have a candy thermometer pull off the hot sugar right when the mixture barely starts to turn color, yellowish color. Also, I usually turn up the heat to medium after it starts to boil. You can see in the third photo it is an amber color. It will still work, but harder to color when it is this dark. Once it has gotten to the proper temp remove the candy from the heat and add in any food coloring or flavored extracts.

***Please be very careful this mixture is tremendously hot. If you are a young child please have adult supervision while making this.

Step 5: Pour and Wait

Next just pour out the candy onto your pan and allow it to spread out. Make sure the pan is level. The thinner you spread it out the thinner the glass will be. Then wait for it to set. This usually takes an hour or two.

Step 6: Check Out That Sugar Glass

Now we can check out the sugar glass. It is incredible. It looks like glass, it feels like glass, it shatters like glass, it is sharp like glass. But it is edible and tastes super yummy! haha.

Step 7: Breaking Bad Blue Glass

Any Breaking Bad fans? This glass I took off the heat right when the mixture started turning color. It took the color very nicely. I should have poured this into my lego molds! haha. By the way, it tastes very similar to a jolly rancher if you are familiar with that candy.

Step 8: Clear Glass

And if you don't color it, it should turn out similar to this. Nice and clear with a hint of yellow.

Step 9: Burned Sugar Glass

Or you could wait longer and get it really dark. So even if you burn it or wait too long it will still work, it winds up looking like the color of a beer bottle. But it doesn't taste very good at this point.

Step 10: Video Tutorial

There you go! Awesome edible sugar glass. :)

Now check out those steps in action by watching the video tutorial. :)

Awesome Edible Sugar Glass (5)

Runner Up in the
Candy Challenge

Awesome Edible Sugar Glass (2024)

FAQs

Awesome Edible Sugar Glass? ›

Pour the sugar, water, light corn syrup, and cream of tartar into a pot. Place the pot on the stove. You must use light corn syrup, or the glass will turn out too dark. Slowly bring the ingredients to a boil over medium heat while stirring them.

How do you make edible glass at home? ›

Pour the sugar, water, light corn syrup, and cream of tartar into a pot. Place the pot on the stove. You must use light corn syrup, or the glass will turn out too dark. Slowly bring the ingredients to a boil over medium heat while stirring them.

How long does sugar glass last? ›

Sugar glass does not last long...at all. As I said before, keep it in the fridge until you need it. After only 10-15 minutes at room temperature the glass will start to sweat and get sticky. The longer you leave it out the more it will just bend instead of break.

How does sugar glass work? ›

Description. Sugar glass is made by dissolving sugar in water and heating it to at least the "hard crack" stage (approx. 150 °C / 300 °F) in the candy making process. Glucose or corn syrup is used to prevent the sugar from recrystallizing and becoming opaque, by disrupting the orderly arrangement of the molecules.

Does sugar glass taste good? ›

How does sugar glass taste? Sugar glass tastes very similar to a jolly rancher if you have ever tried one of those, depending on the flavor used. It melts very easily in your mouth.

How do you make fake glass with sugar? ›

Pour the sugar into a small pan on a stove over low heat. Stir continuously until the sugar melts (takes a while). If you have a candy thermometer, remove from heat at the hard crack stage (clear glass). If the sugar is heated just past the hard crack stage it will turn amber (coloured translucent glass).

What is a substitute for isomalt? ›

Isomalt Substitute

Since isomalt is a sugar substitute, sugar can be used instead of isomalt. For decorations, candies made with sugar, water, and corn syrup can be used. Another option is to skip isomalt-based decorations and use pre-made edible or non-edible decorations.

Do I need water with isomalt? ›

Isomalt comes in crystals and sticks. A basic recipe will have a ratio of 4 parts Isomalt to 1 part water. When cooking Isomalt, it is important to have a candy thermometer around, because if it was not cooked using the correct temperature, you won't achieve the perfect consistency to work with.

Why do you put cream of tartar in sugar glass? ›

The corn syrup helps prevent the sugar molecules from joining back together and forming large granules (or crystals) as the syrup cools. The cream of tartar helps break the sucrose molecules up even father, into the simple sugars glucose and fructose. And the food dye makes the whole thing a work of art!

Can you dissolve sugar glass in water? ›

It looks reasonably like normal (silica) glass but breaks much more easily, making it ideal for stage or television props which break for the viewer (such as smashing a bottle on someone's head). So sugar glass will dissolve readily in water.

Where do you store sugar glass? ›

You can make flower sugar glass ahead of time and store it until needed for cake decoration. To store flower sugar glass, wrap it in parchment paper or plastic wrap, then place it in an airtight container in the fridge.

Is sugar glass harmless? ›

While stunt glass made from resin or sugar is pretty safe, it can still hurt a person who isn't trained to perform stunts.

Is sugar glass sticky? ›

Glass sugar works just like a lollipop, so you can even wrap it in parchment paper to store it – but if it gets wet, it will start to get sticky and melt.

Is sugar glass safe? ›

While stunt glass made from resin or sugar is pretty safe, it can still hurt a person who isn't trained to perform stunts.

How do you make sugar glass for movies? ›

Pour the sugar into a small pan on a stove over low heat. Stir continuously until the sugar melts (takes a while). If you have a candy thermometer, remove from heat at the hard crack stage (clear glass). If the sugar is heated just past the hard crack stage it will turn amber (colored translucent glass).

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