How to make sugared berries with just water and sugar for a beautiful sparkling garnish for desserts, platters, pies and drinks, made with only 2 ingredients. These frosted berries are made from blueberries, cranberries, raspberries, blueberries, strawberries and more.
How to make sugared berries, also called frosted berries or candied berries. Sugared blueberries, sugared cranberries, sugared raspberries, they all make the easiest prettiest healthy garnish.
These frosted berries can be dazzling and they couldn't be easier to make. They require 2 ingredients. My recipe is egg-free and use it to dress up your favorite pies such as my chocolate cream pie or my peanut butter pie or top your charcuterie platters, or dessert platters. Check out my tutorial on How to Make a Fruit Platter and add sugared berries to your own platter.
Why You'll Love This
Simple syrup is just 2 ingredients. The sugar syrup used to make these crystal berries is made by a simple ratio of 1 to 1 water and sugar. And it can be heated in the microwave, no pan or stove needed.
Use any berries and fruit. This process to make sugared berries applies to any berry, such as blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, cranberries, strawberries and even chopped fruit such as kiwi and even herbs.
Egg-free and no waiting to dip. Traditional recipes for candied cranberries have you dipping berries in egg white - not safe and not necessary because a water sugar syrup works perfectly. Similarly other candied berry recipes also have you waiting an hour for the dipped berries to become sticky before rolling them into sugar. My way is much quicker, and double dipping gives a heavy coating.
Ingredients
- Fresh Berries. Use any sturdy berry such as cranberries, blueberries, raspberries and others. Use them fresh and not frozen.
- Cane sugar. I use organic cane sugar because it tastes better and works best for the coating because the granules are larger and sparkle more as a coating, but any sugar works for both the sugar syrup and the coating.
Tools Needed
- 2 small bowls, one for cane sugar for coating, one for sugar syrup
- A slotted spoon to dip berries in sugar.
- A glass measuring cup to heat the sugar and water in the microwave.
- Cooling rack, parchment paper
Step by Step Instructions
For more detail, visit the complete and printable recipe at the bottom of this post, but here are general steps.
1. Make a simple sugar syrup by microwaving sugar and water together for one minute. Let it cool for ten minutes or until it is cool to touch. Then dip each berry by lowering a few at a time using a spoon.
2. Roll the berries in sugar and let them dry. That's it! You can apply two coats, directions are in the recipe card below.
Expert tip: Be sure to cool the sugar syrup before dipping the berries. If used too warm, it will pop the berries.
Variations & Substitutions
Strawberries. You can use fresh strawberries for this recipe to make candied strawberries. Just chop them into somewhat uniform sizes first.
Raspberries. Fresh raspberries are tricky to coat in sugar because they are so fragile. Try putting them in the freezer for five minutes just prior to dipping in syrup to firm them up. Use light pink raspberries that are firm. Squishy overripe raspberries will not work.
Blackberries & blueberries. To make sugared blackberries and blueberries, just be sure they are firm and dry.
Candy coat herbs. You can also coat rosemary needles, mint leaves, even sage leaves and rose petals to use as garnishes along with your candied berries.
Storage
Store sugar blueberries or sugar cranberries or any berry you sugar coat in a sealed container at room temperature for up to two days.
You can refrigerate for longer, up to 4 days, but spots where the sugar melted may appear. If that happens, just reroll the berries in fresh sugar to repair the bare spots.
Freezing will not work as the berries will collapse.
Ways to Use
I put them on my chocolate cream pie here, but you can do so many things with sugared berries. Here are a few ideas you can add them to:
- Cakes and pies and tarts
- Ice cream and pudding dessert bowls
- Charcuterie platters for splashes of color and sweet
- Speared on tooth picks for cocktail garnishes
- On their own as a dessert
FAQS
You can eat these straight instead of using as a garnish. Of course the berries are nutritious but the sugar isn’t so I’d pop a few but not have a bowl of sugared berries for my breakfast.
Easy, just use my sugared berries recipe right here. Blueberries are a bit sour so they are the perfect berry, just like cranberries, to coat in sugar.
Of course, but sugared berries are even prettier.
Yes, you can eat them fresh or frozen, and sugared cranberries look festive on holiday pies and cakes.
No, quite low, so that makes them the perfect candidate for sugared berries.
Garnishes & Desserts
If you tried this recipe or any other recipe on my website, please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it went in the 📝 comments below. Thanks for visiting!
📖 Recipe
How to Make Sugared Berries (Frosted Berries)
Equipment
- glass measuring cup
- slotted spoon
- 2 small bowls
- Cooling rack
Ingredients
Sugar Syrup
- ½ cup organic cane sugar
- ½ cup water
Berries
- 1 cup blueberries
- 1 cup cranberries
Sugar for coating
- ½ cup cane sugar* I used organic because of the larger grain
👉Want to Save This Recipe?
Instructions
Prep
- Rinse and pat dry fresh berries. Remove any soft berries or those that are gone. Set aside.
- Set out a cooling rack with a protective paper or cookie sheet beneath to catch loose sugar.
- Pour ½ cup sugar to a bowl to prepare for rolling the berries to coat.½ cup cane sugar*
Make Sugared Berries
- First, make the simple sugar syrup by adding ½ cup of sugar to ½ cup of water and set into microwave for 1 minute. Remove cup and stir until all sugar is melted. Microwave another 15 seconds if you need to dissolve any further.½ cup organic cane sugar, ½ cup water
- Set the syrup aside to cool, about 20-30 minutes. Don't use it warm or it will pop the berries.
- 1st coating: When the syrup is at room temperature, dip each berry using a slotted spoon or fork to coat it completely. Lift the berry out and let excess syrup drip off. Pro-tip: Tap the fork or slotted spoon for about 15 seconds to be sure the berry is left with a sheen of syrup, not a thick layer that might cause clumps.
- Then roll the berry in the sugar in the bowl. Set coated berry on cooling rack to dry. Do this until all berries are coated.1 cup blueberries, 1 cup cranberries, ½ cup cane sugar*
- 2nd coating (optional): If you want to apply a second coat, dip each freshly coated berry once more in the bowl of sugar.Pro-tip: For second coating, there is no need to dip in syrup again.½ cup organic cane sugar
Dry the Coated Berries
- Whether dipped once or twice, line the berries on the rack to dry.Drying takes 30 minutes at room temperature to dry the berries well enough to be able to work with them.
Store Sugared Berries
- Store them uncovered in the refrigerator for 4 days. If they get wet and the sugar coating seems to dissolve, simply roll them in sugar to refresh the coating.
Jennifer Hewitt
Hi. I’m giving this recipe a try to decorate my blueberry cupcakes. In the ingredient list you have listed 1/2 cup water, however in the instructions you mention 1/4 cup water mixed with the sugar. Thank you for clarification. The pictures look so pretty I want to make sure I get it right.
Dee
I updated the ingredients to clarify! Thank you!
Jennifer Hewitt
Thank you. They came out perfect and look so nice decorating the tops of my cupcakes!
Dee
That's the terrific, thanks for your comment!
E
Thank you for this recipe! I was looking for something that didn’t include egg white as I’m pregnant! This worked perfectly and the sugared blueberries decorating my lemon cake look AMAZING!
Dee
I am so glad to hear that! I never use eggs, even in cakes and cookies! Congratulations on your pregnancy!
Pam
Set aside after coating in syrup or not?
Dee
Hi Pam, you do not need to set aside the berries after coating them in syrup. You can dip them in sugar right away, however be sure to tap the berries once you coat them in syrup for at least 15 seconds to thin the coating.
Donna
When I dipped mine in the sugar they turned into sugar globs that weren't pretty Going to try setting them aside to dry awhile this evening. Hoping for prettier results this time.
Dee
When they have dried a bit, sit a few berries on a fork, and tap to allow excess sugar to fall off.
To avoid clumping going forward, after you dip berries in the syrup, tap them so syrup drips off and the berry wears a sheen. Also, using organic cane sugar sometimes gives a prettier "diamond" result because it is a coarse sugar, as opposed to plain cane sugar which is dustier.