Homemade marshmallows not roasting, just melting

Homemade marshmallows not roasting, just melting - Cupcakes on White Table Cloth

I'm trying to make homemade marshmallows for smores. I found this recipe and the marshmallows turned out great (taste/texture):

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Marshmallows-15797

The problem is when I try to roast them over a fire to make smores, the marshmallows just melt. The store bought Kraft 'big' marshmallows I used to use for smores would usually burn/roast on the outer layer.

Is there a way I can get homemade marshmallows to be more 'roastable' over a fire instead of just melting? I also noticed that most marshmallow recipes do not use egg whites, but the one I followed does. Could that be contributing to the issue?

Thanks!



Best Answer

Yes, there are two schools of marshmallow thought - with egg whites and without egg whites. Most recipes without egg whites have another difference that might better explain why your recipe acts so differently from what you see with commercial marshmallows. Egg white recipes use corn syrup as only a fraction of the weight of the sugar in the recipe - recipes without egg white use a LOT of corn syrup.

A cup of sugar weighs about 7 oz. A cup of corn syrup weighs about 11 1/2 oz.

In your Epicurious recipe with egg whites, you would have about 14 oz. sugar and about 5 1/4 oz. corn syrup - so the corn syrup to sugar ratio would be somewhere between 1/3 and 1/2 - you have a fraction of your sugar weight in corn syrup.

If you look at various recipes without egg whites (Alton Brown, Joy of Baking, etc.) what you will see is the inclusion of corn syrup in almost equal weight to the sugar.

I make this point because a glance at the list of ingredients on a package of commercial marshmallows will show corn syrup as the first ingredient - that means that there is more of that ingredient, by weight, than any other ingredient.

I have only made marshmallows one time - without egg whites - and while they didn't behave exactly like commercial marshmallows, they were pretty similar and a LOT better.




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Why are my homemade marshmallows melting?

Even just a couple degrees too hot or too cool makes all the difference. If the sugar isn't cooked hot enough, they'll be mushy (and possibly contribute to the "soggy" factor mentioned above). If the syrup is cooked too hot, they'll set too firm and chewy and lack volume.

Why are my homemade marshmallows wet?

Why are my homemade marshmallows wet? If the sugar in the corn syrup mixture does not get hot enough, 240\xb0F, they will not set properly and be a bit wet or soggy. Be sure to use a candy thermometer to ensure the temperature of the mixture reaches the proper heat to prevent a wet marshmallow.

How do you make marshmallows firmer?

Refrigerator Method
  • Place the marshmallows or rice treats on a plate or tray, and set them in the refrigerator or a cool, dry location. ...
  • Chill the marshmallows for at least 1 hour to allow them to harden.
  • Remove marshmallows from the refrigerator, and cut crispy rice treats or homemade marshmallows into squares.


  • How do you dry homemade marshmallows?

    Add the mini marshmallows to the prepared baking sheet. Spread them out so none of the marshmallows are touching. Place the baking sheet in the preheated oven and bake the marshmallows for 4 hours or until they are completely dry through the middle.



    Homemade Marshmallows




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