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My candied pecans recipe makes for crispy, crunchy candied nuts. Ready in minutes, you can make them on the stovetop OR the oven!
Craving more sweet and crunchy nuts? Try my candied almonds, candied cashews, and candied nuts next.
I am an old hand at making candied pecans, and when the holidays are near, I take this task seriously.
Now, just because I make them all the time doesn’t mean I cut corners. I prefer the low and slow method of cooking them in the skillet. You know what that means? There’s no egg to bind them and definitely NO corn syrup.
Table of Contents
Why I love this recipe
- The smell is amazing! I make a small batch whenever I’m hosting, and let me tell you, a candle has nothing on the smell of candied nuts!
- Diet-friendly. There’s no egg, no dairy, and no gluten.
- Crispy, sweet, and a little salty. They’re crispy and crunchy, with an almost toffee-like texture. The taste is sweet, a little salty, and has notes of vanilla throughout.
- Versatile. Use the pecans in salads, cheese boards, or ice cream, or store them in cute mason jars and give them away as gifts!
Ingredients needed
- Pecans. Use a mix of whole pecans and pecan halves. Be sure to use unsalted and raw pecans.
- Sugar. White sugar works best, but brown sugar and coconut sugar can also be used. Avoid liquid sweeteners like maple syrup, as they can make for a tough, sticky candy coating.
- Water. Replaces the need for any egg white by creating a mock syrup with the sugar, which crystalizes over the nuts.
- Vanilla extract. Gives a light vanilla flavor.
- Salt. Perfect to balance out the sweetness, and fabulous if you love the sweet and salty combination. I used kosher salt, but table salt is just fine.
- Ground cinnamon. Optional, but gives some lovely spice.
How to make candied pecans
I’ve included step-by-step photos below to make this recipe easy to follow at home. For the full printable recipe instructions and ingredient quantities, scroll to the recipe card at the bottom of this post.
Step 1- Melt the sugar mixture. Heat a large skillet over medium heat. When hot, add the sugar, water, vanilla extract, salt, and cinnamon (if using), and mix until fully combined. Allow to heat up, stirring occasionally.
Step 2- Add the pecans. Once the sugar has dissolved, add the pecans. Stir often until most of the cinnamon sugar mixture has coated the nuts and begins to crystalize.
Step 3- Cool. Remove the pan from the heat and allow them to sit for 1-2 minutes. Use a wooden spoon to stir almonds together to stop clusters from forming. Allow to cool completely before breaking up.
Oven option!
With just a few tweaks, you can bake these instead of pan-frying them.
In a large bowl, whisk all the ingredients together before adding in the pecans. Toss to coat, then place them in a single layer on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper and bake at 120/250F for around an hour, stirring the pecans every 15 minutes.
Arman’s recipe tips
- Be patient. The sugar takes time to crystallize, so don’t turn up the heat. I’m watching you!
- Change the spices. Swap cinnamon for pumpkin pie spice, gingerbread spice, or a dash of cayenne pepper for a little heat.
- Use different types of nuts. For a different flavor and texture, try a mixture of walnuts, cashews, and pecans.
Storage instructions
To store: Candied nuts can be stored at room temperature in an airtight container for up to one month. If you’d like them to keep longer, refrigerate them.
To freeze: Place pecans in a ziplock bag and store in the freezer for up to six months.
Frequently asked questions
If you remove the pecans from the saucepan too early, you risk the sugar syrup softening the nuts. You want to ensure most of the moisture has evaporated before removing them from the heat.
More sweet holiday treats
Candied Pecan Recipe
Ingredients
- 3 cups pecans unsalted pecan halves
- 1 cup sugar white, brown, or coconut
- 1/4 cup water
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon optional
Instructions
- Heat a large saucepan or skillet pan on medium heat. When hot, add the sugar, water, vanilla extract, salt, and cinnamon, if using it, and mix until fully combined. Allow to heat up, stirring occasionally.
- When the sugar has completely dissolved, add the raw, unsalted pecans. Watch over the pan and continue stirring often until most of the sugar mixture has been coated and beginning to crystallize.
- Remove pan from the heat and allow to sit for 1-2 minutes, before using a wooden spoon to stir almonds together to avoid immediate, overlarge clusters forming. Allow to cool completely before breaking up properly.
Notes
Nutrition
Originally published November 2020, updated and republished September 2024
Do you need to grease the pan first?
Not necessary 🙂
Best candied pecans recipe EVER!
Really good! I did half brown sugar and half white sugar, and added a small pat of butter in the mix as well. Winner recipe, and will be using it on different nuts (cashews??) soon!
I found this recipe a couple of years ago while searching the world wide web for a candied pecan recipe that was vegan. Since then, I make them every year for holiday treat boxes I make and they are by far the most popular & requested item every year. I have several people that I make them for throughout the year because the request them.
Made these last Christmas at my son’s house. I wanted a skillet recipe that made a big batch.
He loved them, out then on perisher, salads, a lot of food.
I couldn’t find the recipe for the longest time them found it still on my phone. Happy that I did.
These were excellent. Thank you!
This is a staple in my kitchen!
Great to hear that, Sharon!
We tried this with mixed nuts, with pecans, with cashews, and all turned out great! We DID add the cinnamon to all, and I’m glad we did. This seemed much easier – and great for our vegan friends! – than the normal egg wash/oven method, so thanks for posting. 🙂
I found this recipe a couple of years ago when looking for ideas for holiday treat boxes I make for about 40-45 coworkers, friends, and clients of my job. This is the number one requested recipe. Since the first year these are now a staple in the boxes and will remain that way for many years to come.
Amazing!!
Excellent recipe! They taste pretty much the same as the ones you cook in the oven, takes a lot less time and you can do a lot more at a time with this recipe (and you don’t even miss the egg white binder)! Will definitely keep and reuse this one going forward…
My son who is vegan does not like ot eat a lot of sweets. These are the only ones he regularly asks me to make for him. Thanks for giving ma a treat to give him!
Wow, these look great!
I made these with mixed nuts and they turned out awesome. This recipe was my second attempt at making sugar free candied nuts, as first time I ended up burning them.
Thank you!!!!
Thanks so much. I thought so but needed the reassurance. Again, thank you for the quick reply. Can’t wait to make this. looks so Good.
Can you use a brown sugar substitute?
I’ve made other holiday pecan recipes. It’s always a disaster. they burn quickly. so I’m excited to try this recipe. Which method is the preferred in your opinion. Stove top or oven. I couldn’t bear another waste of good pecans. Thank you
Definitely stovetop 🙂 I never have issues with it that way!
Made my second batch and used cinnamon. Still yummy and a def guilty pleasure.
LOVE IT! 😀
I missed the alternative granulated sweetners for the candied pecans.
Have you tried this with coconut sugar?
Hi! YES! It will be darker in color, and have a delicious taste!
would swerve or xylitol work instead of the monkfruit?
You can try- Xylitol works!
I was only able to find the single packs of the monk . Do I still measure out a cup
That is correct, Karen 🙂
I get almost all my nuts at Costco. You can’t be the price for a giant big of unsalted almonds, walnuts and apparently pecans too. These look delicious.
I’m old school. I like to do the math, except after two drinks. Then it gets dicey.
Wait, they have walnuts too? I sense a certain salad may be made soon 🙂
Blue cheese calling.
I very rarely have cash on hand! I use Venmo for bill sharing with friends, but I think it’s so awesome that there are even options for that these days. So convenient!
YES! I was surprised at how easy this was. I went to withdraw $$ the other day and forgot my pin code….
I have a maple spiced pecans recipe that I make every year and I’m going to have to get ready to buy every single pecan so I can make them for people as gifts. SO MAGICAL.
omg seriously…Why do we ignore pecans until Christmas!
This is the same as Venmo! I have both, but more people I know Venmo, sooo that’s my primary, but either way, it’s honestly so much better than exchanging cash when splitting grocery/restaurant bills with my friends.
And somehow I’ve never given monk fruit sweetener a try, but this might be the recipe to convince me. I adore candied pecans!
SO funny, I only learnt about Venmo in Columbus! Candied pecans = associated with Christmas!
Oh I love candied pecans! I could totally eat my weight in these for the holidays. 🙂 Not familiar with square cash, but I do totally remember those days of passing the bill around the table and everyone chipping in. But oddly enough, when the bill came back around it was always short. Always! Not sure how that happened. Haha. But, yeah, I’ll need to check out Square Cash. Thanks, bud!
Haha there is ALWAYS that one person who always shortchanged gah!
I have never heard of square cash. I need to get on that and these nuts look amazing! Best gifts EVER.
😀 Thanks, Jessica!
We love using the square cash app and even use it for dividing groceries! Sharing this post with my friends so they can use it too! The nuts are a delicious gift idea.
You and me both, Eloise! Thanks for the feedback!