Homemade honey marshmallows are surprisingly easy to make, and they’re a delicious treat easily made healthier without corn syrup. These homemade herbal marshmallows are made with just a few ingredients, honey sweetened and flavored with dandelion petals for extra honey goodness.
Dandelion petals taste a bit like honey, and they’re even used to make something called “vegan honey” which is basically just a sugar syrup flavored with dandelion petals. Though I haven’t tried it personally, I hear it’s very convincing.
I love honey, especially from our own backyard bees, so I’ve never sought a honey substitute. Quite the contrary, I’m always looking for ways to use honey in our favorite treats, replacing store-bought sugar or processed corn syrup.
When my pre-school age daughter tried her first s’more, she was hooked. We camp out in the yard regularly, cooking over the campfire as often as we can. Every time that fire gets lit, my little marshmallow junkie starts negotiating for a toasted treat.
It’s completely unavoidable, but that doesn’t mean that special treat has to be a corn syrup bomb.
Honey marshmallows without corn syrup only take a few minutes to make (really, start to finish in under 30 min active time, then a few hours to set). Since we’re on an “all things dandelion” spree in the kitchen, I decided to make them herbal marshmallows too. We’ve already made dandelion gummy bears and dandelion shortbread this week, so marshmallows aren’t too much of a stretch.
While my daughter loves marshmallows, my toddler son won’t touch sweets…but he loves nothing more than beheading dandelions. This way, we add a bit of herbal honey flavor our homemade marshmallows, and both little ones get to help bring it all together.
This recipe uses 1 cup of dandelion petal tea, but that could easily be any other herbal tea that suits your purpose. I’ve seen others make medicinal herbal marshmallows, using their herb of choice to make a strong tea. While these aren’t made as “medicine,” they could be a good way to get a reluctant patient to take their herbal medicine.
How to Make Honey Marshmallows
Making marshmallows starts with placing a small amount of liquid in a stand mixer, and dusting gelatin on the top. While the gelatin “blooms,” absorbing water and getting ready, you begin heating honey with a small amount of liquid in a saucepan. In this case, both liquids are dandelion petal tea, but it could just as easily be water or another type of herbal tea that suits your purpose.
For the gelatin, while any generic gelatin will work, I’m using Vital Proteins Grassfed Beef Gelatin. If I’m going to go through the process of making honey marshmallows, I might as well make them as healthy as possible. High in both collagen and protein, it adds something a bit more substantial to the recipe.
Once the honey syrup reaches 240 degrees F, or “soft ball stage” on a candy thermometer, the syrup is poured into the stand mixer with the gelatin. A few minutes of whipping, and you have a fluffy batch of marshmallow batter…
After about 10 minutes of whipping, the marshmallow batter is light and fluffy. At this point, it’s basically marshmallow fluff, but that won’t last. In about 20-30 minutes this fluff will start to set into regular marshmallows. It’s important to get it out of the bowl and into a tray so that the honey marshmallows can setup.
The problem is, the fluff is VERY sticky. Grease a 9×9 baking pan and dust it with either powdered sugar or arrowroot powder. If you’re avoiding cane sugars altogether, arrowroot powder works as a substitute.
Use a greased spatula to scoop the marshmallow batter into the tray. Not kidding, grease a silicone spatula with a neutral oil (or butter), you’ll regret it otherwise.
Allow the marshmallows to set for 4 to 6 hours, or overnight before cutting. When it comes time to cut them, use a spatual to gently separate the sides and flip the pan over onto a surface dusted with either powdered sugar or arrow root powder.
Use a sharp knife to cut them into squares (or go crazy and use cookie cutters for shaped marshmallows). Then dust them on all sides with more powdered sugar or arrowroot to keep them from sticking back together.
At this point, you have quite a few marshmallows. Roughly 24 to 36 depending on how big you cut them, which is a lot of marshmallows to eat. Unlike heavily processed marshmallows, these won’t keep long. They’re perfect for about 48 hours, but after that things change.
Honey is hydrophilic, which means it attracts water. They’ll start to get soft and sticky, and though they’re not “spoiled” it makes them harder to use or handle. I put most of them in a tupperware in the freezer, and they’ll keep in the freezer for 1-2 months. When you’re ready to use them, just bring them up 20-30 minutes before using.
We kept plenty of them out to test at our backyard campfire, you know, for science…
They toast beautifully, caramelizing on the outside and quickly melting through to the inside. I’d say they toast much faster than conventional marshmallows, but that’s not a bad thing with an impatient pre-schooler.
The best part, they taste amazing! All that honey comes through wonderfully in the finished marshmallows, and the extra honey flavor from the dandelions really kicks it up a notch. I’m totally sold on these, and we’ll be trying out other herbal marshmallow flavors this summer for sure.
Homemade honey marshmallows are really easy to make, and adding dandelion petals makes for an extra special herbal treat. Note: To make dandelion petal tea, be sure to remove the petals from the flower heads. Use the petals only, without any green parts. The green parts of the flower buds will make the tea bitter. Pour about 1 cup of boiling water over about 1/2 cup of petals and allow it to steep for about 15 minutes before straining. As an Amazon Associate and member of other affiliate programs, I earn from qualifying purchases.Dandelion & Honey Marshmallows (No Corn Syrup!)
Ingredients
Instructions
Notes
Recommended Products
- Honey Marshmallow Fluff ~ Attainable Sustainable
- Dandelion Root Infused Honey ~ Homespun Seasonal Living
- Dandelion and Honey Ice Cream ~ Practical Self Reliance
- Dandelion Gummies ~ Adamant Kitchen
- Dandelion Shortbread Cookies ~ Adamant Kitchen
Jeannie B Palmer
Do you think these would freeze dry well? My Granddaughter loves marshmallows freeze dried but not sure how the honey would do. Thank you!!
Ashley Adamant
I bet they would do well, but I’ve never used a freeze dryer so I can’t say for sure. You can freeze dry cheesecake and ice cream, this should be a walk in the park though. If you do try it, will you let me know? Or, maybe try asking in the harvest right group?
Danica Jamieson
I just made these. They are delicious!
Ashley Adamant
Wonderful, glad you’re enjoying them!
Coleen Goree
I heard you’re not supposed to cook honey as a lot of the benefits are altered. I really want to try these though. Can you use maple syrup?
Ashley Adamant
Yes you can! I haven’t (yet) made maple marshmallows, but I have friends who have made them and say it works the same as honey.
Tomi
To make these vegetarian, do you think one could substitute agar for the gelatin?
Ashley Adamant
I haven’t tried making marshmallows without gelatin, but I did a bit of research for you. Apparently making marshmallows with agar is actually a bit difficult, and you need a number of other ingredients in there to get it to work. Every recipe I can find has xantham gum, guar gum, and other additions in there to balance things out. Here’s the best looking version I can find. It’s a vegan recipe without the honey I used, but I would guess it’d work with honey instead of the sugar.
https://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2010/12/vegan-marshmallows-recipe.html
Tomi
Thank you so much!
Cate
Instead of using powdered sugar you could use powdered erythritol. I have had great results powdering erythritol with the Ninja blender cups. Looks like, acts like powdered sugar.
Uncle Don B Fireland Fanning
If you want to go *really* herbal, look at this article about the origins of marshmallows. …uncle don.
Jamie
Can I use normal gelatin?
Admin
I haven’t tried it, but it should work the same!
Becca
Have you ever experimented with gelatin substitutes like agar agar or pectin? These marshmallows sound amazing, but I am vegetarian and don’t use animal-based gelatin.
Admin
You can use agar agar, but because I’ve never done it, you’ll need to find a recipe online for the proper ratio.