Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (2024)

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This salted chocolate honeycomb recipe is surprisingly easy to make and you only need four ingredients. It makes a fantastic homemade edible Christmas gift. Make it in just 15 minutes with 5 ingredients! Naturally vegan and gluten-free.

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (1)

Commissioned by Thermapen.

Chocolate honeycomb

Do you make foodie Christmas gifts for people? I'll be honest that I often intend to, but then life gets in the way.

I'd love to make some of those Christmas biscuits iced like lacy doilies, but I always seem to run out of time.

And frankly, I probably don't have the patience to decorate them very artistically!

But there are some homemade food gifts that don't take long to make, and are always welcome from the lucky recipient!

Enter: salted chocolate honeycomb. You only need 15 minutes and 5 ingredients to make these fantastic treats.

Reader testimonials

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"OMG I LOVE this chocolate covered honeycomb and have made this over Xmas to give as gifts! Thanks for the recipe" - Jane
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"WOW!!! I just made this, so EASY, and so DELICIOUS!!! I’m not sure one batch will be enough…my kids are devouring it…and I may be helping them!" - Terri
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"These were so dreamy! I didn't know chocolate honeycomb was so easy to make!" - Taylor
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"Made this recipe many times for honeycombed ice cream" - Anj

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (2)

Homemade honeycomb

If you've ever had a Crunchie bar, you've had chocolate covered honeycomb.

Regardless of the name, it doesn't actually have any honey in it!

It's a mix of sugar, syrup and baking soda - meaning it's actually vegan.

And, let me tell ya, people - IT IS AMAZING! Seriously.

Even if you make it as a gift, you will want to keep it all to yourself and give them a box of chocolates. Really.

Chocolate covered honeycomb

You can enjoy honeycomb on its own, but I love it dipped in melted dark chocolate and sprinkled with a few flakes of sea salt.

The creamy chocolate is lovely against the brittle and sweet shards of honeycomb, which are then offset with the sea salt.

This is definitely my best honeycomb recipe and I hope you all love it too!

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (3)

Making honeycomb

Although hot sugar can seem scary, it's actually quite easy to make honeycomb.

It's much easier with a food thermometer so you know when you get to the 'hard crack' stage of 140C.

I use a digital candy thermometer so it's super-easy to know when the sugar has reached the right temperature.

Then just stir in the bicarb of soda, pour it into a pan and let it cool.

This is a basic honeycomb recipe (it's naturally vegan), that I've made extra special with salted chocolate.

Ingredients

Caster sugar (superfine sugar)
Golden syrup (or corn syrup)
Bicarb of soda (baking soda)
Dark chocolate
Sea salt

Heavy bottomed pot
Wooden spoon
8"/20cm square baking pan
Baking paper
Food thermometer (optional, but useful!)

Vegan honeycomb

It may be surprising, considering there is honey in the name (honey isn't vegan), but honeycomb is naturally vegan!

This recipe doesn't have any swaps to make it vegan, it just naturally is because none of the traditional honeycomb recipe ingredients contain animal products.

How to make honeycomb

Scroll down for step-by-step honeycomb recipe instructions and the full recipe!

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (4)

1 - mix the sugar and syrup in a heavy-bottomed pot. Prepare the bicarb of soda (baking soda), and keep a thermometer and wooden spoon to hand. You'll need these quickly and won't have time to search for them!

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (5)

2 - heat the sugar and syrup in a heavy saucepan to hard crack stage (150C / 300F) or see below for how to tell without a thermometer. Remove the pan from the heat.

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (6)

3 - quickly but carefully (it will be hot!) stir in baking soda with a wooden spoon, then pour into prepared pan to set at room temperature.

Making honeycomb without a thermometer

Although a candy thermometer makes it easier to make homemade honeycomb, you can still make it without one.

You'll just need to test the hot sugar syrup in cold water to reach the correct stage: hard crack stage.

Hard crack stage

With a food thermometer, you can easily determine if your hot sugar syrup has reached hard crack stage: test with the thermometer until it reaches 300F/150C.

To tell if your sugar syrup is at hard crack stage without a thermometer, you'll need a bowl of very cold water.

Once the hot sugar mixture begins to darken, take a small teaspoonful and drop it into the bowl of cold water. Leave it for a few moments the reach into the water and pick up the syrup. If it's soft and pliable, then it's at soft ball stage and is not ready.
Try again until the sugar syrup instantly hardens in the water and 'cracks'.

Please see this great short video about the stages of sugar syrup.

Tips & tricks

  • Be sure to gather all the ingredients and tools before you start. Once the toffee mixture is hot it's a very quick process!
  • When the sugar syrup begins to darken and reaches the hard crack stage, it's not long until it could burn. Work quickly (but carefully!) and take the pan off the heat.
  • Once the baking soda (bicarb of soda) is added to the oozy hot toffee mixture, it will fluff up and grow more than double in size. So choose a large or high sided pot.
  • It's important that your sugar is the right temperature or stage.
  • You can still make honeycomb without a thermometer - just scroll up for the method to determine hard crack stage without a thermometer.
  • For tidy edges, cut while the honeycomb is still slightly warm with an oiled knife. You can also cut it while cold - it will just shatter slightly.

Thermapen

I've been using my trusty Thermapen digital food thermometer for a few years now. It takes the guesswork out of so many recipes, from candy to bread.

  • The SuperFast Thermapen® 4 Cooks Thermometer is the number one selling food thermometer in the UK. Here are a few highlights:
  • Temperature range of -49.9 to 299.9 °C.
  • Fast and accurate
  • Reads the true temperature in just three seconds.
  • Stainless steel probe that conveniently folds into the unit when not in use.
Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (7)

Edible gifts

Looking for more edible gifts besides honeycomb for Christmas or other holidays? Try these!

  • Pecan Brittle
  • Christmas Chocolate Tiffin
  • Rosemary Maple Roasted Nuts
  • Avocado Reindeer Brownies
  • Beet Chocolate Truffles

Get the recipe

Did you make this honeycomb recipe? Please let me know how it turned out for you!
Leave a comment and star rating below and share a picture with the hashtag #veggiedesserts. I love seeing your recreations of my vegetarian and vegan recipes and cakes.

Disclosure: This chocolate vegan honeycomb recipe was commissioned by Thermapen. All opinions are my own. Thanks for supporting the brands that make it possible for me to be a food blogger and write Veggie Desserts.

📖 Recipe

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe

Kate Hackworthy | Veggie Desserts

Salted chocolate honeycomb recipe is surprisingly easy to make and you only need four ingredients!It's vegan and gluten free and makes a great edible gift.

5 from 29 votes

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Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Cook Time 10 minutes mins

Total Time 15 minutes mins

Course Dessert

Cuisine American, British, Vegan, Vegetarian

Servings 16

Calories 109 kcal

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup (150g) superfine / caster sugar
  • 4 tablespoon corn syrup (golden syrup)
  • 2 teaspoon baking soda (bicarb of soda)
  • 5.5 oz (150g) dark chocolate
  • Sea salt flakes

Instructions

  • Line a 20cm/8” square baking pan with baking paper. You’ll need to work quickly when the sugar is hot, so measure the baking soda and be sure to have a candy thermometer and wooden spoon handy.

  • In a large, heavy bottomed pan, stir the sugar and syrup together. Melt them over a low/medium heat, checking with a candy thermometer until it reaches 150C/300F (hard-crack stage).

  • Remove the hot sugar mixture from the heat, add the baking soda and quickly beat it in with a wooden spoon - be careful as the mixture will foam up and be very very hot!

  • Immediately pour the mixture into the prepared baking pan, then leave it to set at room temperature.

  • When it has cooled and set, cut or break it into shards.

  • Melt the chocolate in a microwave or in a bowl over a pan of gently simmering water, but don’t let the water touch the bottom of the bowl.

  • Dip the shards of honeycomb into the melted chocolate and sprinkle with a few flakes of sea salt. Allow the chocolate to set.

Video

Notes

  • Be sure to gather all the ingredients and tools before you start. Once the toffee mixture is hot it's a very quick process!
  • When the sugar syrup begins to darken and reaches the hard crack stage, it's not long until it could burn. Work quickly (but carefully!) and take the pan off the heat.
  • Once the baking soda (bicarb of soda) is added to the oozy hot toffee mixture, it will fluff up and grow more than double in size. So choose a large or high sided pot.
  • It's important that your sugar is the right temperature or stage.
  • You can still make honeycomb without a thermometer - just scroll up for the method to determine hard crack stage without a thermometer.

Making honeycomb without a thermometer

Although a candy thermometer makes it easier to make homemade honeycomb, you can still make it without one.

You'll just need to test the hot sugar syrup in cold water to reach the correct stage: hard crack stage.

Hard crack stage

With a food thermometer, you can easily determine if your hot sugar syrup has reached hard crack stage: test with the thermometer until it reaches 300F/150C.

To tell if your sugar syrup is at hard crack stage without a thermometer, you'll need a bowl of very cold water.

Once the hot sugar mixture begins to darken, take a small teaspoonful and drop it into the bowl of cold water. Leave it for a few moments the reach into the water and pick up the syrup. If it's soft and pliable, then it's at soft ball stage and is not ready.
Try again until the sugar syrup instantly hardens in the water and 'cracks'.

Please see this great short video about the stages of sugar syrup.

Nutrition

Calories: 109kcalCarbohydrates: 18gFat: 3gSaturated Fat: 2gSodium: 1mgPotassium: 67mgFiber: 1gSugar: 15gVitamin A: 5IUCalcium: 7mgIron: 1.1mg

The nutritional information provided is approximate and can vary depending on several factors, so is not guaranteed to be accurate. Please see a registered dietician for special diet advice.

Tried this recipe?Mention @kateveggiedesserts or tag #veggiedesserts! I love seeing your recreations.

Salted Chocolate Honeycomb Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is honeycomb chocolate made of? ›

Ingredients: milk chocolate 93% (sugar, cocoa butter, whole milk powder, cocoa mass, emulsifier: soya lecithin, natural vanilla flavouring), honeycomb pieces 7% (sugar, glucose syrup, raising agent: bicarbonate soda, rice flour).

Why is my honeycomb candy not hardening? ›

If your sugar syrup isn't hot enough, it will make your honeycomb very chewy. The best way to make sure your sugar is at the right temperature is to use a sugar thermometer. The mixture should be at the 'hard ball' stage, which is normally between 121-130 degrees Celsius.

Why is my honeycomb chewy but not crunchy? ›

Chewy honeycomb happens when the mixture hasn't been cooked for long enough. This is most common when you don't use a sugar thermometer. If you don't heat the mixture to 149°C the sugar won't achieve the brittleness required for that crumbly, crunchy texture.

What to do with failed honeycomb candy? ›

Instead, if it is enjoyable as is, I would suggest just eating it as a toffee like candy. Otherwise, chalk it up to experience and watch the temperature more closely next time. I have a batch of gooey toffee now too. So im just either enjoying it as is or adding bit or chunks of it to my coffee or ice cream.

What is honeycomb made of? ›

Honeycombs are made from beeswax, a substance created by worker bees. When the temperature is right, worker bees secrete wax scales from special glands in their body. Then they chew the wax with a bit of honey and pollen to produce the beeswax.

What is the name of the chocolate with honeycomb? ›

Crunchie is a brand of chocolate bar with a honeycomb toffee (or known as "sponge toffee" in Canada and "honeycomb" or "cinder toffee" in the UK as well as "hokey pokey" in New Zealand) centre. It is made by Cadbury but was originally launched in the UK by J. S. Fry & Sons in 1929.

Does honeycomb candy go bad? ›

Immediately store any uneaten honeycomb in an airtight container, otherwise it will absorb moisture from the air and soften. Enjoy! Note: Honeycomb will keep for 3–4 days at room temperature in an airtight container.

Why does my honeycomb taste bitter? ›

Once the sugar has melted fully, increase the heat slightly and bring it to a simmer until it turns bubbly and amber in colour, almost like maple syrup – any darker and the honeycomb will taste bitter.

Why does honeycomb turn brown? ›

When you leave comb in the hive for months, especially in the brood section, it will start to turn dark brown. This is mostly from propolis. Propolis is plant sap. It is super sticky and usually various shades of dark brown or a reddish brown (but not always).

What does baking soda do in candy making? ›

The secret is in the baking soda. As the sugar is cooking and begins turning amber in color it accumulates small amounts of acid, and that acid reacts chemically with the alkaline baking soda releasing about a zillion minuscule bubbles of CO2 that get trapped, making the sugar porous and, well… brittle.

Why is my honeycomb salty? ›

It is really important to make sure the sodium bicarbonate is well mixed or else your honeycomb may taste a bit salty (from excess sodium).

What is the honeycomb problem? ›

The honeycomb conjecture states that a regular hexagonal grid or honeycomb has the least total perimeter of any subdivision of the plane into regions of equal area. The conjecture was proven in 1999 by mathematician Thomas C. Hales.

Why is my honeycomb not setting? ›

Choose the best honeycomb

It's all good unless the melted sugar is cooked for too long, when it will burn and the bitterness detracts from the acid-sweet pleasures expected. If you undercook it, it will not set properly.

Can you store honeycomb candy in the fridge? ›

How Long Can You Store Honeycomb Candy? Honeycomb can be stored at room temperature in an airtight container for up to one week. It tends to absorb moisture in the air and become sticky so it will not last as long in a more humid environment. Do not refrigerate your honeycomb.

How do you rescue toffee? ›

If your candy separates during the cooking process there is a chance you can save it. Sometimes separated toffee or caramel can be saved by removing the saucepan from the heat and stirring constantly until it comes back together into a smooth mixture.

What is honeycomb candy made of? ›

Honeycomb toffee, honeycomb candy, sponge toffee, cinder toffee, seafoam, or hokey pokey is a sugary toffee with a light, rigid, sponge-like texture. Its main ingredients are typically brown sugar (or corn syrup, molasses or golden syrup) and baking soda, sometimes with an acid such as vinegar.

Is honeycomb just wax? ›

Honeycomb is basically beeswax and raw honey, so it's 100% edible and safe to eat. The beeswax alone has very little nutritional value, with the exception of trace amounts of Vitamin A. However, since our system does not break down beeswax, it can help the body move food and waste through the gut.

What does honeycomb taste like? ›

The honeycomb tastes like the honey inside the comb. So honeycomb from different plants and trees will have a different flavor. Most people prefer a mild tasting honeycomb, like acacia, clover or gallberry (holly). You can also find wildflower honeycomb at some markets, which is generally darker in color.

What is the science behind honeycomb candy? ›

They're all names to describe a candy that's made from combining brown sugar, corn syrup and baking soda. The lattice structure of the candy is caused by the baking soda reacting with the acid, resulting in these little air pockets throughout the candy. These pockets of air make it look like honeycomb!

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