A sheet pan candy apples recipe gives you a backyard-stand look without standing over a stove dipping one apple at a time. You lay halved apples on a tray, spoon warm candy syrup over them, and let the oven set a thin glassy coat. The result is a firmer shell than a thick dipped coating and far less splatter on your counters.
This version uses a light corn syrup and sugar base that stays clear until food coloring goes in, so you control the shade. Because the apples bake briefly, the flesh stays crisp instead of turning mealy. You get a dessert that travels well to a potluck and needs only parchment to clean up. If you enjoyed this, our chicken quesadillas is worth trying next. Making this sheet pan candy apples at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You’ll Love These Sheet Pan Candy Apples
- One tray coats six apple halves at once, saving you a half hour of stove-side dipping.
- The candy sets in the oven, so there’s no guesswork about syrup temperature dropping mid-dip.
- You can swap the red color for orange or purple and keep the same cook time.
- Paraffin-free coating means fewer specialty stores to visit for supplies.
- Leftovers keep their snap in the fridge for days without weeping syrup.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 3 medium firm apples (Honeycrisp or Granny Smith), halved and cored — about 600 g total
- 200 g granulated sugar — builds the glassy shell structure
- 120 ml light corn syrup — prevents sugar crystallization during baking
- 60 ml water — thins the syrup for even spooning
- 1/4 tsp salt — rounds the sweet edge
- 1 tsp red food coloring — gives the classic candy-apple shade
- 1 tbsp unsalted butter, cut into small pieces — adds sheen and slows sticking
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract — added after baking for aroma
Ingredient Substitutions
Light corn syrup: Replace with an equal volume of golden syrup if corn syrup is unavailable. Golden syrup carries a mild caramel note that deepens the coating color slightly and makes the shell a touch softer at room temperature. You won’t need to change the bake time, but the finished apples may stick a bit more to parchment, so use a fresh sheet. The sheet pan candy apples works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Honeycrisp apples: Swap in an equal weight of Fuji apples for a sweeter, less tart base. Fuji holds shape well under heat but releases more juice, so pat the cut faces dry before coating to avoid thinning the syrup. Expect a milder contrast between fruit and candy. Storing leftover sheet pan candy apples correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Red food coloring: Use 1/4 tsp of gel beet powder dissolved in the water for a natural dye. The coat will read brick-red rather than bright candy red and the syrup may look cloudy. Keep the oven time the same; the powder won’t affect set.
Unsalted butter: Replace the 1 tbsp with an equal amount of refined coconut oil for a dairy-free version. Coconut oil sets harder when chilled, giving a snappier shell, though it can look matte instead of glossy. No change to baking temperature is needed. For another easy option, check out our shrimp tacos cilantro.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Heat your oven to 180°C / 350°F and line a rimmed sheet pan with parchment. Set the apple halves cut-side up with a 2 cm gap so syrup can spread.
- Combine sugar, corn syrup, water, and salt in a small saucepan over medium-low heat. Stir until the sugar dissolves and the liquid runs clear, about 4 minutes.
- Stop stirring and let the syrup bubble gently for 2 minutes, then remove from heat. Stir in red food coloring and butter until the butter melts into the mix.
- Spoon the warm syrup evenly over each apple half, covering the cut face and dripping slightly down the sides. Use the back of the spoon to smooth thick spots.
- Bake on the center rack for 12–14 minutes, until the syrup looks glossy and the edges of the apples show faint browning. Pull the pan when the coat shines, not before.
- Cool on the pan for 10 minutes, then move to a wire rack. Drizzle vanilla over the tops and let the shell harden fully, about 20 minutes.
Pro Tips
Dry the apple cut faces with a paper towel before coating so the syrup grabs instead of sliding off into the pan. Moisture is the main reason the candy layer pools at the bottom.
Use a rimmed sheet pan, not a flat one, because the syrup drips and a rim keeps it from baking onto the oven floor. A half-sheet size fits all six halves without crowding.
Read the candy making guide from Serious Eats if you want the science behind why corn syrup stops crystals from forming in a thin bake.
Let the syrup cool for 60 seconds off heat before spooning; too hot and it thins out, too cool and it clumps on the spoon. Aim for a pourable honey consistency.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Overbaking the apples turns the flesh soft and the candy dark. Pull the tray at the first sign of edge browning rather than waiting for a deep red shell.
Skipping the parchment leads to a glued-on mess since the syrup bakes into glass on bare metal. Always line the pan even if it’s nonstick.
Adding vanilla before baking burns off the aroma and can spot the coating. Stir it in only after the apples come out of the oven.
Serving Suggestions
Plate the halves on a fruit smoothie bar so guests can pair the tart candy shell with a cold blender drink. The contrast works especially well with a pineapple base.
Cut each cooled half into wedges and stand them in a ring around a bowl of oat bites for a Halloween spread that isn’t all sugar. The wedges are easier for small kids to hold than a whole apple.
Serve alongside cucumber bread to balance the sweet with a savory slice. The bread’s moist crumb absorbs any syrup that cracks off the apples.
Storage and Reheating
Store cooled sheet pan candy apples in a single layer in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Keep a sheet of parchment between layers if you stack them. Don’t leave the tray on the counter longer than 2 hours after baking.
The candy shell softens if frozen, so skip the freezer for this recipe. To re-serve, set the container at room temperature for 15 minutes; do not microwave or the coat will melt to syrup.
Recipe Variations
Orange Citrus Version
Replace the red coloring with 1/4 tsp orange gel and add 1 tsp grated orange zest to the syrup before baking. The shell reads sunset-orange and carries a bright peel note that cuts the sugar. Bake time stays the same at 180°C / 350°F.
Spiced Version
Stir 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon and a pinch of clove into the sugar before heating. The coat bakes to a warm brown with a mulled aroma that suits fall gatherings. Watch the edges closely as spices can darken faster than plain syrup.
Grape Version
Use 1/4 tsp purple gel color and swap vanilla for 1/2 tsp grape extract added after baking. The shell looks like a concord grape and pairs well with a fruit martini for adults. Keep the same 12–14 minute bake window.
Caramel-Topped Version
After the candy shell hardens, drizzle 2 tbsp melted store caramel over each half and return to a sheet pan under the broiler for 1 minute. You get a two-layer topping with a chewy ribbon under the glass. Broil only until the caramel bubbles, not longer.
Sheet Pan Candy Apples
Description
A sheet pan candy apples recipe gives you a backyard-stand look without standing over a stove dipping one apple at a time. You lay halved apples on a tray, spoon warm candy syrup over them, and let the oven set a thin glassy coat that stays crisp and travels well to potlucks.
Ingredients
Instructions
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Heat oven and prep pan
Heat your oven to 180°C / 350°F and line a rimmed sheet pan with parchment. Set the apple halves cut-side up with a 2 cm gap so syrup can spread without crowding. Use a half-sheet size rimmed pan so the six halves fit and any syrup drips stay contained.
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Combine syrup base
Combine sugar, corn syrup, water, and salt in a small saucepan over medium-low heat. Stir until the sugar dissolves and the liquid runs clear, about 4 minutes, so you have a smooth uncolored base before adding dye.
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Bubble and remove syrup
Stop stirring and let the syrup bubble gently for 2 minutes to thicken slightly. Remove from heat once it is evenly bubbling and avoid over-reducing so the coat stays pourable.
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Add color and butter
Stir in red food coloring and butter until the butter melts into the mix. The syrup should look glossy and uniformly red with no butter lumps remaining.
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Spoon syrup on apples
Spoon the warm syrup evenly over each apple half, covering the cut face and dripping slightly down the sides. Use the back of the spoon to smooth thick spots so every half gets a thin even layer.
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Bake the apples
Bake on the center rack for 12–14 minutes at 180°C / 350°F, until the syrup looks glossy and the edges of the apples show faint browning. Pull the pan when the coat shines, not before, to avoid overbaking the flesh.
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Cool on pan
Cool on the pan for 10 minutes so the shell begins to set on the warm apples. Move to a wire rack after that to finish cooling without trapping steam underneath.
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Add vanilla and harden
Drizzle vanilla over the tops and let the shell harden fully, about 20 minutes. The candy should be firm and glassy to the touch before serving or storing.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 6
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 220kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 2g4%
- Saturated Fat 1g5%
- Cholesterol 5mg2%
- Sodium 110mg5%
- Total Carbohydrate 52g18%
- Dietary Fiber 3g12%
- Sugars 47g
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Store cooled apples in a single layer in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days; keep parchment between layers if stacked and don't leave out longer than 2 hours after baking.
- Pro tip: Dry the apple cut faces with a paper towel before coating so the syrup grabs instead of sliding off into the pan.
- Reheating: Set the container at room temperature for 15 minutes to re-serve; do not microwave or the coat will melt to syrup.
- Related: For a savory sheet pan match, try our shrimp tacos alongside the apples.
