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Rock candy makes for a delicious science experiment you can do in your own kitchen. Rock candy can form on a wooden stick or a string and you can add colors and flavors to customize your candy in any way you can imagine!

Ingredients

  • 2 cups (473 ml) of water
  • 4 cups (946 g) of granulated white sugar
  • Food coloring (optional)
  • Flavoring (optional)
Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Making the Sugar Solution

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  1. Get an adult to help you if you're not allowed to use the stove--boiling water can be extremely dangerous if you spill it on yourself. [1]
    • If you don't have access to a stove, you can use a microwave instead. Combine the sugar and water in a microwave-safe glass and heat it for two minutes on high. Stir the sugar water and microwave for another 2 minutes. Stir the mixture a third time and the sugar should dissolve almost entirely into the water.
    • Use purified water if possible. The sugar can attach to impurities in the tap water and create a crust that will prevent water from evaporating and prevent the crystals from growing on your string instead. [2]
    • Make sure you handle the pot or microwave-safe glass with hot pads or oven mitts so you don't burn yourself.
  2. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    Stir with a spoon after each addition until the sugar is dissolved into the water. As the water becomes more saturated with sugar, it will take longer for it to dissolve in the water. It may take as long as two minutes for the sugar to dissolve.
    • Stir the solution until the water is clear. If the solution is cloudy or you find the sugar stops dissolving, turn the heat up so the water reaches a vigorous boil. [3] Hot water has a higher saturation point than cool water, so turning up the heat should allow you to mix in the rest of the sugar.
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  3. You don't want any undissolved sugar to remain on the bottom of the pot. If undissolved sugar ends up in the jar or glass where you grow the rock candy, crystals will attach to the undissolved sugar and not to your string or stick. [4]
    • If you have undissolved sugar that didn't mix with the boiling water, you may want to pour the solution through a strainer and only retain the liquid.
    • The solution you have made is a super-saturated solution, meaning the water has absorbed more sugar than it would have absorbed at room temperature. As the solution cools, the water saturation point of the water will become lower, and it will no longer be able to hold the amount of sugar. The dissolved sugar will be unable to stay in liquid form, and will instead crystallize on the string or stick you provide. [5]
  4. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    Try to coordinate the color to the flavor--blue with blueberry, red with strawberry, purple with grape--so the flavor is clear. Make sure you stir the solution thoroughly so the flavor and color is evenly distributed. [6]
    • You only need a few drops of flavoring, but try to make the solution dark with color for the best results. [7]
    • Try mixing in drink mix, like Kool-Aid, for color and flavor.
    • Try adding a splash of fruit juice for lemon, lime, orange, or other fruity flavored candy.
    • Try different extracts like peppermint, strawberry, vanilla, or even banana.
  5. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    The glass or jar should be tall and cylindrical and made of glass--plastic may melt when you pour in the hot solution. Fill the glass almost to the top.
    • Make sure the glass is clean and contains no dust particles. Even dust can give the sugar crystals something to cling to, and you only want them to settle and grow on your string or stick. [8]
    • Cover the glass with a piece of wax or parchment paper to prevent dust from settling on the top of the solution. [9]
    • This recipe, since it uses only one large jar of glass, yields one candy. If you want to make multiple small candies or do not have a large jar, you can divide the solution into smaller jars. The yield would then be as many as your jars.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Making Rock Candy on a String

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  1. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    The paperclip will act as a weight and keep your string hanging straight down so it doesn't touch the sides. The string should be about 2/3 as long as the glass is deep--it should not be long enough that the weight will touch the bottom of the glass. This will give your crystals plenty of space to grow. [10] Touching or hanging too close to the bottom or sides of the glass could make your crystals smaller or misshapen.
    • Use a string made from natural fiber, like twine or cotton. Fishing twine or nylon string are too smooth and it will be difficult for the sugar crystals to find crevices to cling to and grow. [11]
    • You can also use a washer or screw to weight the string, or even another piece of rock candy, which may help your crystals grow faster. [12]
    • The pencil should be long enough that it can rest on the top of the glass without falling in. You can also use a butter knife, skewer, or popsicle stick instead. A butter knife or popsicle stick may be more stable, as they can lay flat on top of the glass and won't roll.
  2. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    Lay the string out straight, since it will become stiff as it dries. As the water evaporates, you will see a few crystals form on the string. These are seed crystals and they will help larger crystals grow around these points. [13]
    • You must make sure the string is completely dry before you proceed to the next step and be very careful not to knock off any of the seed crystals when you place the string in the solution. [14]
    • You can skip this step or try to speed it along by wetting the string and rolling it in granulated sugar (just make sure the string is completely dry before you put it in the glass and the sugar isn't falling off), but making seed crystals will make your rock candy grow faster and increase your chances of success in growing crystals. [15]
  3. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    The string should hang straight down and never come in contact with the bottom or sides of the glass. Cover the solution with a paper towel. You don't want to seal the glass with something that will keep the air out, like plastic wrap, as evaporation is an essential part of this process.
    • As the water evaporates, the remaining solution becomes more saturated with sugar, and the water must force the sugar out. The sugar molecules will collect on the string, forming your rock candy crystals. [16]
    • Tape the pencil to the jar to keep it from rolling or moving while your crystals form.
  4. For the biggest crystals, look for a cool, dark space, where the water will evaporate slowly, giving the crystals lots of time to grow. [17]
    • If you want to grow crystals quickly, but don't care if they get big, put the glass in a sunny spot so that the water evaporates quickly. [18]
    • Vibrations can negatively affect your crystal growth. Keep your glass off the ground (and away form the vibrations of people walking on the floor) and away from sources of music or noise, like a stereo or television. [19]
  5. Don't touch or tap the glass, or you may disturb the crystal growth and even cause some to fall off the string. After a week you should see big, smooth crystals on the string. [20]
  6. Snip the paperclip off with scissors.
    • If the rock candy is stuck to the glass, run some hot water on the bottom of the glass. This should loosen the sugar enough so that you can pull your candy out without damaging it. [21]
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Making Rock Candy on a Stick

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  1. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    The granulated sugar will become seed crystals, which give the dissolved sugar something to cling to and a point at which to start crystallizing. [22] The seed crystals make it easier for the rock candy to grow and may speed up the process by giving crystallizing sugar an easy target for attachment.
    • Allow the skewers to dry completely before proceeding to the next step. If the sugar isn't firmly stuck to the wood, it may fall off in the glass and the crystallization will occur on the sugar on the bottom of the glass and not on your skewer. [23]
  2. Hold the skewer in the middle of the glass so that it is not touching the sides and the tip does not touch the bottom of the glass. If the skewer touches the glass, it may impede the crystal growth, or your stick of rock candy may get stuck to the bottom or sides. [24]
    • Try to keep the tip of the skewer about 1 inch (2.5 cm) from the bottom of the glass. [25]
  3. Watermark wikiHow to Make Rock Candy
    The skewer should be pinched in the middle of the clothespin, as close to the spring as possible. [26] You can use an extra large clothes pin if the glass has a wide mouth.
    • Your skewer should be held securely by the clothespin and still be in the very center of the glass.
    • Cover the glass with a paper towel. You can tear a little hole for the skewer to poke through the towel.
  4. Music, television, or lots of activity can cause vibrations that may disturb your crystals or cause them to fall off the stick. For the best growth, store the glass in a cool or room-temperature spot away from noise and lots of foot traffic. [27]
  5. Resist the urge to touch or tap the glass, as this could knock your crystals off the stick. [28] When you are happy with the amount of crystals (or they just don't seem to be growing any bigger), carefully remove the skewer and rest it on wax paper to dry..
    • If there is a crust on top of the surface of the water, use a butter knife to gently break through the crystals, avoiding the crystals near your skewer. [29]
    • If the rock candy is stuck to the glass, run some hot water on the bottom of the glass. This should loosen the sugar enough so that you can pull your candy out safely without damaging it. [30]
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    For flavoring, can I add soda?
    Community Answer
    If you want to flavor your rock candy with soda, make sure it is flat before adding it, as carbonation could change the texture of the candy.
  • Question
    Could I use a foam cup for the rock candy instead of glass?
    Community Answer
    No, you don't want to use a foam cup, a plastic cup, or any other kind of cup except glass. Glass jars or cups have very few porous spots. Generally speaking, glass is completely smooth, therefore it gives no opportunity for crystals to accidentally grow on it instead of your string. Foam cups are extremely porous. Using a foam cup would result in chaos, with crystals forming all around your cup or you will just get an ugly dried-out lump of sugar that doesn't crystallize.
  • Question
    When making rock candy, how long does it take for crystals to form?
    Community Answer
    It will take a day or so but it depends on how big you want the rock candy to be. The larger you want it to become, the longer you will need to wait. To form the biggest rock candy, wait a week. After a week, it will come to the end of its growth.
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      Tips

      • This recipe may take longer than expected so patience may be needed.
      • If you do not see any crystals growing on the string after a day or so, remove the pencil and string, boil the water again, and try to mix in more sugar. If more sugar does mix in, you did not add enough when you were mixing in the sugar at the beginning. You can start again with the now fully-saturated solution.
      • When making rock candy in the microwave, make sure you watch it. If it starts boiling, your syrup is most likely burned.
      Show More Tips

      Tips from our Readers

      The advice in this section is based on the lived experiences of wikiHow readers like you. If you have a helpful tip you’d like to share on wikiHow, please submit it in the field below.
      • For smaller batches, shot glasses, toothpicks, chopsticks, bamboo skewers halved, and clothes pins. The smaller batches grew crystals faster in our experiment. Great for younger participants.
      • Do ombré rock crystal candy by preparing the mixture as shown, let it grow halfway, then prepare another mixture with a different color
      • If you want tiny granules, take the candy off the string or stick, and bash it inside a bag with a rolling pin.
      • You can add flavorings so the rock candy does not just taste like caramel.
      • Make sure you wash the string before you use it and dry it with a towel.
      • For the holidays, use peppermint flavor and red and green coloring.
      • Kids love rock candy when you use pink lemonade flavoring!
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      Warnings

      • Do not mess with the jar or put your fingers in it. This disrupts the forming process of the crystalline structure. It may not prevent it from working, but it will hinder the progress of the crystal growth.
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      Things You'll Need

      Sugar Solution

      • Pot or saucepan
      • Wooden spoon

      Rock Candy on a String

      • Popsicle stick, wooden skewer, butter knife or pencil
      • String
      • Paper clip or washer
      • Tall, narrow jar or glass (not plastic)

      Rock Candy on a Stick

      • Skewer or popsicle stick
      • Clothes pin
      • Tall, narrow jar or glass (not plastic)

      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      To make rock candy, first wet a wooden skewer and roll it in granulated sugar. Set the skewer aside to dry. Then, bring 1 cup (240 mL) of water to a boil over medium heat. Gradually stir in 2 cups of granulated sugar until all of the sugar dissolves, then remove the pan from the heat. Add 1 tablespoon (15 mL) of food coloring, as well as ½ teaspoon (2 ½ mL) of candy oil, also know as flavoring oil. Let the mixture cool for 10 minutes, then pour it into a clean jar. Now, pinch a clothespin over the end of the sugar-coated skewer, and insert the skewer into the jar so the clothespin is resting across the top. Cover the top of the jar loosely with plastic wrap, and set it aside for 3 to 5 days. Once the rock candy has reached the size you want, remove it from the jar and place it in a new, empty jar to dry. If you want to learn more, like how to attach your rock candy to a stick, keep reading the article!

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      • Katherine Fentzlaff

        Apr 26, 2016

        "The caution suggested for making rock candy on a stick was important. I helped my six year old granddaughter make ..." more
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