Homemade Butterscotch Drops Recipe

I keep a small jar of these on the counter for days when coffee needs a friend. Warm butter and brown sugar make the kitchen smell like an old candy shop. The flavor is deeper than store candy, not sticky sweet, with a little salt that keeps you going back for one more.

What these are

Hard little drops with a clean snap and a round buttery finish. They melt slow on your tongue. Great for lunch boxes, road trips or the 3 pm slump.

Recipe snapshot

  • Prep: 10 minutes
  • Cook: 15 to 18 minutes
  • Cool: 20 minutes
  • Yield: about 80 small drops

Ingredients

Syrup base

  • 200 g (1 cup) granulated sugar
  • 110 g (1/2 cup, packed) light brown sugar
  • 120 ml (1/2 cup) water
  • 110 g (1/3 cup) light corn syrup or golden syrup
  • 28 g (2 tbsp) unsalted butter, room temp
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 tsp fine sea salt
  • 1 tsp molasses, optional for deeper color and flavor

Tools

  • Heavy 2 to 3 qt saucepan
  • Silicone spatula
  • Candy thermometer
  • Silicone mat or parchment
  • Two small spoons or a 1/2 tsp measuring spoon
  • Kitchen shears if making ribbons

Instructions

  1. Line a sheet pan with a silicone mat or parchment. Lightly oil it. Keep spoons nearby.
  2. Add granulated sugar, brown sugar, water and syrup to the saucepan. Stir over medium heat until fully dissolved and clear.
  3. Clip on the thermometer. Stop stirring. Boil until the syrup reaches 300°F to 305°F hard crack. Watch closely near the end.
  4. Pull off the heat. Wait 15 seconds. Stir in butter, vanilla, salt and molasses if using. It will bubble. Stir until smooth.
  5. Work fast. Drop 1/2 teaspoon puddles onto the mat or pour a thin line for ribbons. If it firms up, warm the pan for 10 seconds to loosen.
  6. Cool until hard. Toss with a teaspoon of powdered sugar to prevent sticking or wrap in small parchment squares.

Pro tips

  • Golden syrup adds a gentle toffee note. Corn syrup keeps the texture extra clear and snappy.
  • Check your thermometer. Hard crack is 300°F to 310°F and threads that snap in cold water.
  • Silicone makes cleanup easy. Parchment works too.
  • A few drops of neutral oil or cocoa butter will thin thick chocolate-style coatings if you ever dip them.

Variations

  • Salted butterscotch drops: sprinkle flaky salt while still warm.
  • Butter rum: replace half the vanilla with butter rum extract.
  • Espresso: stir in 1/2 tsp very fine espresso powder with the vanilla.
  • Honey butterscotch: swap 2 tbsp of the corn syrup for honey for a rounder flavor.

Make ahead and storage

  • Store airtight at cool room temp for up to 1 month.
  • For gifts, pack in glassine bags. If your kitchen runs warm, chill filled bags 5 minutes so the finish stays shiny.

I started making these because the store bag tasted flat to me. The homemade version feels calmer. One drop buys me five quiet minutes at my desk, which is sometimes all a day needs. If you make them, keep a few in your pocket. They turn a long line at the post office into a small win.

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Jacklyn is a San Diego–based food journalist with a background in the confectionery world. Before diving into food reporting, she worked at a startup crafting plant-based, low-sugar sweets designed to make candy a little healthier

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