Making Marshmallow Candy

Until the mid 1800’s, marshmallow candy was made using the sap of the Marsh-Mallow plant. Gelatin replaces the sap in the modern recipes. Today’s marshmallows are a mixture of corn syrup or sugar, gelatin, gum Arabic and flavoring.

The candy makers needed to find a new, faster way of making marshmallows. As a result, the “starch mogul” system was developed in the late 1800s. Rather than making marshmallows by hand, the new system let candy makers create marshmallows in molds made of modified cornstarch (like jelly beans, gummies and candy corn are made today). At about the same time, mallow root was replaced by gelatin, providing marshmallows with their “stable” form.

In 1948, Alex Doumak, a marshmallow manufacturer, began experimenting with different methods of marshmallow making. Doumak was looking for ways to speed up production and discovered the “extrusion process”, which revolutionized marshmallow production. Now, marshmallows can be made by piping the fluffy mixture through long tubes and cutting its tubular shape into equal pieces.

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  • Marshmallows by Juju Z. Treat Company are delicious right out of the package. But the flavor really comes out when they’re slowly roasted or heated. Enjoy with s’mores, hot chocolate, coffee, or combined with desserts.