4 Ingredient Soft Caramels

Jump to Recipe ▼
Reader Rating
Total Time 15 minutes

This post may contain affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.

 EASY 4 Ingredient Soft Caramels you can whip up in about 15 minutes. You don’t need a candy thermometer to make these caramels and they literally melt in your mouth! 

Looking for more easy dessert recipes? I have you covered with my posts for Peanut Butter Fudge, No Bake Peanut Butter Bars, Easy Microwave Peanut Brittle, and 3 Ingredient Old Fashioned Potato Candy.

unwrapped sea salt vanilla caramels

Why This Recipe Works

Old-fashioned flavor — People just LOVE my mom’s candy caramel recipe. Truly, it’s famous. And, while it’s delicious, it’s one of those recipes requires a candy thermometer, a giant pot, and a LOT of pot-stirring. As much as I adore those caramels, I tend to be a slightly less patient person than my mother and need something quick and easy that still delivers a big buttery caramel flavor. That’s where this recipe comes in. Big flavor, little work. I love it.

Easy — These homemade caramels seriously are so easy to make. They only require four ingredients (5 if you decide to go all-out and sprinkle on the sea salt) and you spend about 10 minutes stirring and keeping an eye on the stove pot. 

No fancy gadgets — The best part is that NO fancy gadgets (namely, no candy thermometer) are needed. Do you have a saucepan, a can opener, and a spoon? Then you are good to go! 

Delicious —  Not only is this easy caramels recipe quick, but they are also soooooo melt-in-your-mouth yummy. BIG caramel flavor, with just a hint of sea salt (if you chose to add it). The hardest part is waiting for the caramel to cool before eating it!

Ingredients

ingredients for soft caramels recipe
  • Sugar — Use all-purpose, white sugar here for the best-tasting caramels. 
  • Light Corn Syrup — Make sure you use light corn syrup because this type of corn syrup keeps the sugar from crystalizing as it cooks, ensuring a rich, chewy texture. 
  • Sweetened Condensed Milk — This is the trick to easy caramels because the condensed milk easily caramelizes when put to heat and helps the caramels maintain smoothness and creaminess. 
  • Coarse Sea Salt & Vanilla — Optional flavors you can add to the caramels but not necessary!

Here’s How You Make It

steps 1-5 for homemade caramels recipe
  1. Combine the butter and sugar in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Stir, stir, stir, till the butter is melted and the sugar has dissolved into the melted butter. They’ve become one. 
  2. Add the corn syrup and condensed milk to the butter/sugar mixture. 
  3. Allow the candy syrup to boil then decrease the heat and let it simmer for about 7-10 minutes or so.  
  4. Keep stirring till the caramels have reached a deep golden color.
  5. Pour the caramels into a foil-lined 8×8 inch pan and let them cool completely. (Here’s where you’ll sprinkle them with coarse sea salt if you choose.) 
  6. When the candy has completely cooled, you can cut the caramels into squares and wrap them in wax paper.
soft caramels with sea salt wrapped in wax paper

Expert Tips & Tricks

  • This recipe creates roughly 20-30 caramels (depending on how large you cut them). 
  • Store wrapped caramels in an airtight container at room temperature. 
  • For additional richness and flavor, stir in 1/2 teaspoon vanilla after removing the caramel from the heat and before pouring it into your prepared pan.
  • Want to add a little salty zing to your caramel? Sprinkle coarse sea salt on top of them after you pour them into a pan to cool.

Frequently Asked Questions

How Do You Wrap Homemade Caramels?

Once the caramels have cooled, you can cut them up and wrap in wax paper. I use wax paper because it will not stick to the caramels. Depending on what size you want to cut your candy you’ll want to cut squares or rectangles of wax paper the same shape as your caramels, and slightly larger (I give them about a half inch extra on each side). 

Once you have all your wax paper cut, add a caramel to the center and roll the caramel up in it, then twist both ends tight to keep it secure.

What Looks Good With Caramel?

Want to use your homemade caramel for more than just individual candies? You could: 

– Make caramel apples by dipping and twirling apples into the caramel while it is still warm in the pot (put the apples on a stick or use a fork inserted into the top of the apples before dipping). 
– Don’t want whole caramel apples? Slice apples up and put them in concentric rings on a plate and drizzle warm caramel over the top of them. Bonus: Sprinkle chocolate chips on top of the warm caramel over the apples before it cools for an extra treat.
– Have an ice cream social and pour warm caramel over the top of ice cream sundaes. 
– Dip pretzel sticks into the caramel and then roll in sprinkles or chocolate chips or crushed candy. 
– Add caramel to brownie batter before or after baking. 
– Add a little square of caramel into the middle of a chocolate chip cookie before baking.

partially eaten caramel candy stacked on more caramels

More Recipes for Caramel Lovers!

Did you make this recipe? FANTASTIC. Please rate the recipe below and be sure to tag me on social when you share a photo on social – I love seeing what you’re up to in the kitchen!

unwrapped sea salt vanilla caramels
4.64 from 104 votes

Easy 4 Ingredient Soft Caramels (no candy thermometer required)

EASY soft caramels with just 4 ingredients. You can whip these up in about 15 minutes with NO candy thermometer and they literally melt in your mouth!
Prep: 5 minutes
Cook: 10 minutes
0 minutes
Total: 15 minutes
Servings: 25 servings
Save this recipe!
Get this sent to your inbox, plus get new recipes from us every week!

Ingredients 

  • 1 ½ sticks butter , (12 tablespoons)
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 3 tablespoons light corn syrup
  • 14 ounces sweetened condensed milk
  • optional: coarse sea salt, ½ teaspoon vanilla , (see note)

Instructions 

  • In a medium sauce pan combine butter and sugar and stir over medium heat until melted. Stir in corn syrup and condensed milk.
  • Bring to a boil and then decrease to simmer 7-10 minutes or until mixture achieves deep golden color, stirring constantly. (*For lower altitudes, simmer time may need to be reduced 2-3 minutes, watch carefully for coloring and read note!)
  • Pour caramel into a foil-lined 8×8 inch pan and allow to cool completely. Sprinkle with coarse sea salt if desired.
  • When completely cooled, cut into squares and wrap in wax paper.

Notes

Step 2 – After bringing the mixture to a rapid boil (step 2), reduce the heat to medium heat. The caramel will continue to bubble from here on out. Keep stirring over medium heat for about 10 minutes or until your caramel reaches a deep golden color and the caramel starts to “pull away” from the edges of the pan. Also, if your butter starts to separate, remove from heat and whisk whisk whisk like crazy and it will come back together – then continue to whisk over heat until deep golden color is reached. 
*Weather – If you aren’t familiar with candy making – it is commonly known that candy making can be temperamental due to location (altitude) and weather. That being said, I have personally never had an issue with this recipe, it always comes out perfectly! 
Batch size – makes about 20-30 caramels (depending on how large you cut them)
*Cooling time – recipe prep time does not include cooling time which may be 1-2 hours
Add-ins – for additional richness and flavor, you can stir in 1/2 teaspoon vanilla after removing the caramel from the heat and before pouring it into your prepared pan. sprinkle coarse sea salt on top of caramels for a boost of rich salted caramel flavor!

Nutrition

Calories: 74kcal | Carbohydrates: 15g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 5mg | Sodium: 22mg | Potassium: 59mg | Sugar: 15g | Vitamin A: 42IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 46mg | Iron: 1mg

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

Did you make this?Leave a star rating or comment below!
Tiffany of Creme de la Crumb in the kitchen

Welcome!

Hey there, I’m Tiffany – chef, photographer, mother, and avid taco eater. I am passionate about turning simple flavors and ingredients into tasty meals the whole family will love, with minimal prep and cleanup so there’s more time to spend eating and enjoying. Stay awhile, and help yourself to a taco or two!

More Recipes To Love

4.64 from 104 votes (41 ratings without comment)

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




395 Comments

  1. Carolyn Newman says:

    can you tell me the size of your butter sticks please?

    1. Tiffany says:

      Each butter stick is 8 tablespoons!

  2. Phyllis G Davis says:

    May I ask what altitude you made these?

  3. amber says:

    My caramel came out runny. What did I do wrong and can I fix it? It tastes great but its more of a sauce then candy.

    1. Tiffany says:

      Hi Amber! Did you let it cool completely? Maybe even overnight? It will be runny when it first is poured into the pan after cooking it on the stove. If after letting it set up overnight it is still runny, then you might not have cooked it long enough!

      1. mary says:

        mine came out the same – looks like they’re started to set – but after a few hrs – there’s no way i’d be able to cut it into sqrs – it’s just too runny yet. Can i throw it back in a pan and cook it longer, or will i need to restart a whole new batch?

        1. Tiffany says:

          Hi Mary – You probably didn’t cook the caramel long enough. You can try chilling it!

        2. Terry says:

          It worked for me to put it back in the pan and cook some more except I did it before it cooled. Also in Montana, over 5,000 ft elevation, after bringing to a rapid boil I need to cook it for around 16 minutes at a slow boil.

      2. Tiffany says:

        Hi Sharla, if the color is very light and it’s still runny, you didn’t let it cook long enough. You should stir it constantly over medium heat for about 10 minutes or until the color is a deep golden brown.

        1. Jessica says:

          They don’t deepen in color as they cool, do they? I’m a little anxious because I kept seeing “deep golden” everywhere, but this comment says “deep golden brown!” 😱 Very different descriptions! I poured them over fudge so I hope it turns out…there’s no going back to the pan for me!

      3. Tiffany says:

        Hi! What you’re describing with the butter separating can happen when the weather is not ideal. I know that sounds weird but candy making is very fragile and altitude and weather can ruin a whole batch – so frustrating! Can I ask where you live and what the weather was like when you made this recipe?

  4. Edith says:

    They look delicious, but I have a question: Could the corn syrup be substituted with maple syrup?

  5. Thalia @ butter and brioche says:

    These are the best looking caramels I have ever seen.. they look incredibly golden, delicious and packed full of flavour. I can imagine they would make great little gifts too! Thanks for the recipe & idea!

  6. anna says:

    in your list of ingredients, the sugar and butter are listed as divided but in the instructions, it looks like they are all added in one step with the condensed milk and corn syrup. why divide the two?

    1. Tiffany says:

      Oops, that was a typo! Thanks for the catch! 🙂

  7. Victoria says:

    I love how easy these look! I always have a hard time cooking caramels perfectly. Can’t wait to try this recipe! Also, your blog is adorable and I’m so glad I just found it!

  8. Bev says:

    How well do these keep? Like mailable to someone for Christmas??

    1. Tiffany says:

      These could definitely be mailed in a box if you wrap them in wax paper like you see in the pictures! Somebody is getting a very delicious Xmas present!! 😉

  9. Deb says:

    Is your mom’s recipe the one with whipping cream where you add and stir and stir and stir? I make those EVERY Christmas.

  10. Phyllis G Davis says:

    These sound wonderful! I live in Colorado Springs and we do have to extend cooking time when making caramels and using sweetened condensed milk is “the” plus. Looking forward to trying your recipe. Thanks so much!

    1. rosa says:

      I just sprinkled mine with salt 😀 So excited! Going to be giving these out in coffee cups for Christmas 🙂 I used French Sea Salt: Fleur de Sel, and since I used unsalted butter I also put a little salt into the butte/sugar mix; for that I used Real Salt. Lastly, I added a little more than 1/2 of a vanilla bean (well, you know, the seed portioned that I removed from the bean 😉 I never knew making caramel could be so fun. Can’t wait to sample these 🙂 Thanks again!!

      1. Tiffany says:

        That’s a cute idea in coffee cups!!!

      2. Angela says:

        5 stars
        Delicious! Super easy and so yummy! Patience is the key 🥰😋

    2. Lynnette Baker says:

      My caramels havnt set prooperly, i have read your comments about undercooking, so can i recook and acheive caramel that will set properly

      1. Lynnette Baker says:

        Follow up. have recooked caramel with an extra half cup of sugar, lets see if these set 🙂 will keep everyone posted,,also a sprinkle of sea salt on top,,,fingers crossed 🙂

    3. Leslie Montes says:

      5 stars
      I just made these FABULOUSLY awesome caramels. And at the risk of sounding a bit rude I have to say, this recipe IS really just as quick, easy & simple as it reads. No Ph.d required just following simple instructions folks.

      🍬 And darling these are truly devine.😍

      1. Rd Featherstonehaugh says:

        I have a Ph.D. Does that mean i am exculded from Makingthese?

        1. Steve says:

          Yes Rd FeatherstoneHaugh YOU ARE quite right. Superbrainy folks like yourself must use a traditional recipe (no sweetened condensed milk) and an elderly sugar thermometer your grandma bought. good luck!