These caramelized, candied walnuts are quite a treat. Toss them into your salad, over popcorn, or straight into your mouth. Crunch. Crunch. I love this easy method of making the candied nuts, where everything goes into the pan at once. Other methods I’ve tried left me with globs of candy on the nuts rather than a more even coating.

This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.
Easy Candied Walnuts
This candied walnuts recipe happens in 1 step and roasts the nuts at the same time so you don’t have to pre-toast them, then add them back to the pan to be coated, blah, blah. Who needs extra steps?
It seriously takes about 5 minutes on the stove and 5 minutes to cool. The finished product is delicious! My husband was sampling them right out of the pan. P.S. This recipe can easily be doubled.
Candied Walnuts Ingredients
- 1 cup walnut halves/pieces (you can also use this recipe for a skillet version of candied pecans)
- 1/4 cup white granulated sugar (not coarse sugar)
- 1 Tbsp water – helps the sugar melt without clumping together. I added this to help dissolve the sugar, but it is optional if you prefer to leave it out.
- 1 Tbsp unsalted butter – creates rich toffee-like flavor notes
- A pinch of salt – balances the sweetness
How To Make Candied Walnuts in a Skillet
- Heat a medium non-stick skillet over medium heat, add 1 cup walnuts, 1/4 cup granulated sugar, 1 Tbsp water, 1 Tbsp butter, and a pinch of salt.

- Heat over medium heat for 5 minutes, stirring frequently (with a heat proof non-plastic spatula) so your mixture doesn’t burn (especially towards the end). When the sugar mixture starts melting, stir constantly until all sugar is melted and the nuts are coated. Here are the stages you’ll see:
- Syrupy and Bubbling
- Thick and glossy
- Sticky, amber colored coating on nuts


- Transfer immediately onto a sheet of parchment paper and separate the nuts right away. Using two spatulas or forks will make this task go faster. You don’t want to give the nuts a chance to turn into a wad of inseparable delicious goodness unless you are the only person who will be enjoying the wad ;). Seriously, move quickly from the time the nuts are coated until they are separated out on the parchment paper.


- Once the coating hardens (5-7 minutes), you can transfer them to a bowl and either munch them right then and there or save ’em for a salad or something.

Tips for the Best Candied Walnuts
- If the sugar turns sandy or grainy, keep stirring, and it will re-melt.
- For a crunchier shell, cook a little longer.
- For lighter sweetness, stop at pale amber.
- Works the same for pecans.

Enjoy, {crunch} pin it to your “recipes to keep forever” board, {crunch. crunch} and let me know how you liked the candied walnuts! {Crunch. Cruuunch. Crunch}
P.S. If you haven’t already, make sure to try our honey-roasted almonds. They are amazing.
5 minute Candied Walnuts

Ingredients
- 1 cup walnut halves, you can also use this recipe for candied pecans
- 1/4 cup white granulated sugar, (not coarse sugar)
- 1 Tbsp water, *optiona
- 1 Tbsp unsalted butter
- pinch of salt
Instructions
- Heat a medium non-stick skillet over medium heat, add 1 cup walnuts, 1/4 cup granulated sugar, 1 Tbsp water, 1 Tbsp butter and a pinch of salt.
- Heat over medium heat for 5 minutes, stirring frequently so your mixture doesn't burn (especially towards the end). When the sugar mixture starts melting, stir constantly until all sugar is melted and nuts are coated. The caramelized sugar will be amber in color.
- Transfer immediately onto a sheet of parchment paper and separate the nuts right away. Using two spatulas will make this task go faster. You don’t want to give the nuts a chance to turn into a wad of inseparable delicious goodness unless you are the only person who will be enjoying the wad ;). Seriously, move quickly from the time the nuts are coated until they are separated out on the parchment paper.
- Once the coating hardens (5-7 minutes), you can transfer them to a bowl and enjoy!
Notes
Filed Under
More Homemade Candy Recipes
- Easy Fudge Recipe
- Butterscotch Sauce
- Date Snickers
- Toffee Recipe
- Cream Cheese Mints
- Sugared Cranberries



I needed a candied walnut recipe for use in a salad, and this looks great! Can I add some vanilla paste and/or cinnamon to them as well?
Hi EM! I think that would be fine. Let us know how they turn out.
Instead of using sugar, can I replace it with maple syrup?
Hi MT, I haven’t tested that but I’m not sure if it would caramelize on the walnuts the same way or it might take much longer since maple syrup is liquid.
Made this for the first time, it turned out really well! I think I left it a bit too long on the burner, the colour looked great but it tasted a bit burnt. Will ease back a bit next time. Rave reviews from my family..
Glad to hear that you enjoyed it! Yes, always watch out for the cooking time to make sure it doesn’t get burnt.
Excellent! Thank you, Natasha. I am making pear, blue cheese and walnut salad and this fit the bill perfectly. I followed your two-spatula tip when spreading on the parchment paper on the cookie sheet… wad avoided! 🙂
Is there any reason other than flavor that I couldn’t use oil rather than butter for my vegan family members? Would the amount used change since butter contains some water?
Hi Vicki! I haven’t tested it that way so I’m not sure if the sugar will melt properly and incorporate with the oil. I searched the comments and no one has tried that yet.
Based on my online research, it says it’s possible, but it would require a test to verify. Let us know if you try it.
This works great with vegan butter as a traditional butter substitute (I just made the vegan version).
Simple, easy, and fast! Turned out great!!
I use real maple syrup and cook with the walnuts, peanuts, pecans or any nut you like. Plus, I add cinnamon
That’s so great, Bob! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
Just made a double batch of these. My first attempt at candied walnuts! They are amazing!
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us, Kellie!
Followed recipe precisely and sugar clumped and nuts swimming in butter.
Hi Rachel! What kind of sugar did you use? This can happen if the heat is too high or if the sugar is having a hard time melting down, like using large granule sugar.
I also followed the recipe but the sugar clumped on me too. Either way who can resist a candied walnut. Will try again.
Meant use this walnut recipe when making my pear, blue cheese and walut salad,👍👍
I’m not sure if I already left a comment on these delicious, delectable and oh so easy candied walnuts. ;).
But that sums it all up! Another winner Natasha
Thank you so much, Lil!
I added a little bit of vanilla and rum extract to the butter and sugar first in the pan, then the raw walnut halves. Cook and stirred over medium heat for about 10 minutes or so, until the sugar mixture turned into a golden brown thick syrup. Turned off heat and stirred for another minute before transferring to parchment lined baking sheet pan. Very good candied walnuts.
Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
I make these sometime twice a week. Hands down the best snack and topping for yogurt, salad, charcuterie, and more. Thank you, for sharing your quick and easy recipe.
How long are these candied walnuts good for?
Hi Kelly! They can be stored at room temperature in an air-tight container for up to a week. Or you can refrigerate/freeze for longer storage. If you refrigerate, the humidity can make them stick together so watch for that.
Excellent and so easy!! This has become my favorite salad addition (and maybe just by themselves…. or on some ice cream …. )
Love this recipe. I found it easier to separate the walnuts with 2 forks instead of spatulas. I always make a double recipe because I love them in a salad with dried cranberries, feta cheese and balsamic dressing. Thank you
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Paula!
I have now made these walnuts a few times . They are super easy to make and super delicious. Sometimes I. add salt during cooking.
The sugar didn’t cling to the nut. I followed the recipe exactly.
These were so good. Word of advice, definitely dont make these when your hungry. I was stirring, mixing, snatching three out of the pan, and repeat lol. My sugar didnt melt all the way, but it stuck to the walnuts and turned intonation more brownish color, I could have stirred them longer but I was hungry and my salad needed them lol will definitely make again, got about 6 bags of walnuts given to me so definitely needed to find a way to use them. This works great!
For some reason, I did not have success with this recipe, and not sure why. I make candied pecans (using another recipe) with no trouble. Any thoughts on what may have gone wrong?
Hello, can you provide more details as to what happened when you tried the recipe?