Homemade Fudge With Variations
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Take this easy, melt-in-your-mouth, and creamy homemade fudge recipe and with one simple adjustment, you can create the fudge flavor of your dreams. That might be Cinnabon fudge, peanut butter fudge, or classic chocolate fudge.
For me, the ultimate Christmas treat (besides anything and everything my mother makes) is homemade fudge! Decadent, rich, and so good, you’d best not make it too many other times of the year. Today I’m going to take my standard fudge recipe and show you how to make several kinds of fudge from it. But this show has one grand star and that is… (drumroll please) Cinnabon fudge!
I got this idea last night while in the grocery store and thought it might be good. Once it cooled and I had my first bite, I knew chocolate fudge had forever been dethroned. Cinnabon fudge tastes like all that is good and wonderful in a cinnamon roll and it has become an instant showstopper.
Besides cinnamon-spiced fudge, with one simple flavor swap, you can also use this homemade fudge recipe to make chocolate fudge, peanut butter fudge, and even butterscotch fudge. Let your imagination run wild! So, what ingredients do you need to make fudge? Butter, marshmallow creme for that deliciously fluffy and creamy texture, evaporated milk, vanilla extract, sugar, and your choice of chocolate chips.
Follow my easy step-by-step guide and you’ll be enjoying a batch of melt-in-your-mouth rich fudge swiftly.
Recipe Ingredients
- Unsalted butter
- Marshmallow creme
- Evaporated milk
- Vanilla extract
- Sugar
- Your choice of chips
FYI, these babies right here are cinnamon chips and these are the chips I use for peanut butter fudge.
Now let’s make our base and then we can add in whatever flavor we want.
How to Make Homemade Fudge
Place your butter, sugar, and evaporated milk in a pot.
You’ll need a candy thermometer because we are going to cook this to the soft-ball stage.
The candy thermometer will have that written on it so you know.
While that is heating up in your pan, take some butter and smear it all over the bottom and sides of a 9×13 pan.
Shortcut: Just spray a little nonstick cooking spray over your baking dish. Works just as well and it’s quicker and easier.
Who doesn’t need a little “quicker” and “easier” in their life?
Place your candy thermometer in the pot. Make sure just the tip is beneath the liquid but don’t let the tip touch the bottom.
It has a handy dandy clip that lets it hook onto the sides.
Bring that to a boil, stirring constantly.
Keep a watch on your thermometer so you will know when it gets to the soft-ball stage.
This is going to take about five minutes on medium-high heat after it begins to boil.
Once it gets to the soft-ball stage, remove the pan from the heat and pour in your chips of choice.
Add in marshmallow creme.
Then your vanilla.
Stir that all up until the chips melt. It is gonna take a few minutes but don’t worry, it’ll melt.
Pour into your buttered or greased baking dish.
Allow to cool for at least 3 to 4 hours (or even overnight) and then your homemade fudge is ready to eat!
If you need to cut it into little pieces to put on a platter, it is easier if you stick it in the fridge until it gets cold. It will cut much better that way.
Which flavor of homemade fudge will you choose?
Storage
Fudge has an amazing shelf-life when stored in an airtight container in the fridge. It will last for up to 3 weeks. You can also freeze the fudge for up to 3 months.
Fudge Variations
Here are lots of fun additions to make the fudge of your choice:
- Use Reese’s peanut butter chips for peanut butter fudge.
- Cinnamon chips equal Cinnabon fudge.
- Use dark, white, or milk chocolate chips to make chocolate fudge.
- Opt for butterscotch chips for butterscotch fudge.
- Make half of the recipe with white chocolate chips and the other half with semi-sweet chocolate chips. Add them to the prepared pan and then use a butter knife to swirl the flavors together to make marbled fudge.
- Swap the vanilla extract for peppermint extract and use milk chocolate chips to make mint chocolate fudge.
- Use caramel bits for caramel fudge. Sprinkle the fudge with sea salt before setting it in the fridge for salted caramel fudge.
- Want chocolate nut fudge? Fold in 1/2 cup of your chopped nuts of choice, such as walnuts or pecans, once the chips have melted.
- Add chopped Oreos to make Oreo fudge (here’s another recipe).
- Fold in crushed candy cane pieces to make peppermint fudge.
- Add dried fruit.
- For Rocky Road fudge, add chopped peanuts and mini marshmallows to your chocolate fudge.
Recipe Notes
- You can use marshmallows in place of marshmallow cream, so if you can’t find the cream just get a bag of little marshmallows. We are using 7 ounces of marshmallow cream, so I just eyeball and use a little over half of a 12-ounce package of mini marshmallows in its place.
- You can’t use sweetened condensed milk in this recipe, only whole evaporated milk!
Check out these other delectable holiday treats:
Southern Plate’s Must Make Christmas Cookies
Christmas Tie-Dyed Cheesecake Brownies
Oreo Cookie Balls (3 Ingredients Only)
Ingredients
- 3 cups sugar
- 2/3 cup evaporated milk
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter or 1.5 sticks
- 1 package flavored chips of choice
- 1 1/2 cup marshmallow cream
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
- Combine sugar, milk, and butter in a heavy saucepan and heat to boiling. Stir constantly for about 5 minutes over medium heat or until the mixture reaches the soft-ball stage (238 degrees - this is really important).3 cups sugar, 2/3 cup evaporated milk, 3/4 cup unsalted butter
- Remove from the heat and add the remaining ingredients. Stir vigorously until well blended. Pour into a greased 9x13-inch baking dish. Cool (refrigeration is even better) and then cut into squares.1 package flavored chips of choice, 1 1/2 cup marshmallow cream, 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
It’s not what you gather,
But what you scatter tells what kind of life you have lived.
Submitted by Miss Millie Wallace, my grandmother’s best friend for as long as I can remember and someone who I cherish every bit as much as my grandmother. Submit your quote here.
Can you use White chocolate chips as well? I have always wanted to try white chocolate fudge….
I have found if you put a binder clip on the edge of your pan it will hold your
thermometer. Mine wouldn’t clip on the pan.
Ruth
I made the cinnamon fudge and it is awesome.
Thanks for another winner Christy…
Hey Christy,
I am having a strange moment here, in this receipe do we add 1 and 1/2 cups of marshmellow or just 1/2 cup? I am so confussed. Thanks for your help. Also in Kansas City could not find the cinnamon chips so had to order them from prepared pantry. At least could not find them at my local Wal-mart or Price Chopper.
Bill
Hi!
I have recently discovered your website last month via a friend posting the peppermint bark recipe on Facebook (which I made!) I have looked on here for many of recipes since. Thank you so much for this fun, quirky and delicious website. Now to the reason for my comment, I cannot find cinnamon chips anywhere in my small town or neighboring small towns and really want to try your cinnabun fudge. Do you think it would work to substitute cinnamon flavoring or oil instead of vanilla flavoring with vanilla chips? I am not brave enough to try it, yet. Figured I’d ask an expert person first! I am going out of town next week and will look there for the chips, though. I hope to find them!
I Love Your Site, by the way, and the way you post recipes with stories and all!
Thank you!
Hey!
You have to be careful what you add because water will cause the chocolate to clot and ruin it. But, tell me where you live and I’ll ask the facebook family if they’ve seen it there!;)
hopefully we can track them down for ya!
I live in Kentucky, (Louisa). Thanks! I appreciate it and your quick response!
Sarah
Hey Sarah,
I too was having trouble finding the Cinnamon chips in my town Kansas City. So went online and found them at Prepared Pantry. Hope this helps.
Bill
I am thinking about making some of this for the holidays and decided to do some searching since people were having problems finding the cinnamon chips. The Hershey web site has a product locator http://www.hersheys.com/productlocator/index.asp so you can search by product and ZIP code. Turns out all that the Winn Dixies in my town carry them so I’ll start there even though I usually rarely shop at Winn Dixie!
I meant to say “Turns out that all …” Southern Plate needs post editing for those dyslexic moments! 🙂
Okay so a funny story for you. ( I hope this doesn’t get long) My wonderful husband comes home from work the Monday before Christmas and ask me to make some peanut butter fudge for him to take to work on Christmas day. So of course I remembered receiving an email from Southern Plate with the fudge recipes. They sounded delicious and so easy. I showed my husband the recipe and he said that looks good. Let’s try it. So I go to the store get the ingredients and make the fudge Christmas Eve. Of course we had to sample it before sending it off to work the next day. It was delicious!!!! He takes it to work and everyone loved it!! Your fudge was a hit!
The funny part of the story…..
I didn’t know it but he had told everyone at work the Monday before Christmas that his wife makes the best peanut butter fudge ever! I had never made peanut butter fudge before in my life. 🙂 So thanks for the recipe. It saved me and my husband! :O)
LOL! I LOVE IT!!!!!!
YOU GO, Ant!! YOU ROCK!
I remember our conversation back on the 18th when you were helping me with my Apple Butter dilemma and you mentioned the fudge you made for your daughter’s school Christmas party…well, I had a gift certificate at a local market and snatched up a candy thermometor so I can make some fudge for a New Year’s Party I am going to…Thank you, I never knew what happened if you didn’t actually “use” one when making fudge. =)