This article was reviewed by Chef Jeff Woodward. Jeff Woodward is a Private Chef and the Owner of The Rogue Chef based in Branson, Missouri. With over 20 years of experience in the restaurant industry, he has cooked for esteemed clients including The Harlem Globetrotters, Peyton Manning, Mark Wahlberg, and Justin Timberlake. Chef Jeff won the Branson Tri-Lakes News Reader's Choice Award 2023 for Best Catering. He has been the Featured Chef Demonstrator for 2 years in a row for The Women's Show in Springfield, MO. The Rogue Chef has been the Hollister Chamber of Commerce Spotlight Chef, an award published in Tri-Lakes News. Chef Jeff's food has been featured on KY3 Television. He publishes a recipe weekly in the Branson Globe newspaper and monthly in Lost on the Lake Magazine. He published a feature article for Chef Talks in Discover Home and Style Magazine. He has an associate’s degree from Southwestern Illinois College and a Culinary Arts degree with a Certification in Baking from Ozark Technical College.
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Right at this moment, thousands of people around the world are warming themselves at a fire. They are sitting at beach bonfires, tossing pine cones onto a campfire in the woods, or shielding a little fire in their driveway from the wind. And every single one of these people would be happier if they were holding a marshmallow on a stick.
Steps
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Build a fire. Ideally, start this an hour in advance so you have time to get perfect roasting coals. There are three successful ingredients to a good campfire (plus a safe fire pit and a way to light it, of course):[1]
- A pile of dry tinder, such as paper, grass, dryer lint, or char cloth. If you didn't bring any and the weather is wet, collect pine cones or take shavings from inside a split log.
- Small twigs to use as kindling. Build it gradually outward and upward from small to large, leaving plenty of space for air.
- Dry branches about the size of your forearm, added gradually once the fire catches.
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Choose your roasting sticks. These should be about as long as an adult's arm, sturdy, and pointed. Try one of these:
- Metal stakes or kebab sticks. These can get too hot to touch, so choose ones that are extra-long or have a wooden handle
- Hardwood sticks, sap-free and whittled to a blunt point.
- Storebought marshmallow roasters
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Poke a marshmallow onto the stick. Make sure the stick goes all the way through the marshmallow to prevent slipping. If the marshmallow can slide easily along the stick, you'll have to be careful not to tip the stick down into the fire.
- You can stack on several marshmallows at once, but it's easier to get a good toasted surface with just one at a time.
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Roast your marshmallow over hot coals. Once your fire has been burning for a while, some of the wood will burn out and turn it glowing coals. A spot right above these coals is the perfect area to roast marshmallows. The heat from this makeshift oven will caramelize that sugar perfectly, and there are no gouts of fire to ruin the majestic white goo.
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Turn gradually. Rotate the stick as you go so the heat toasts the marshmallow evenly on all sides. You'll see the outer surface turn brown as it cooks. You can either keep up a steady rotation until the marshmallow is light brown all over, or cook one side until it's done, then rotate and start again on another side.
- Sometimes, the marshmallow will sag down and fail to turn when you rotate the stick. Stab it or prop it up with a second stick to fix this.
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Expect charcoal if you put the marshmallow directly in the fire. Sticking a marshmallow into the flame will cause it to catch fire. You can blow it out, but you'll end up with a bitter, black layer of charcoal. Unless you love to set your toaster to 11, try to avoid this.
- Never shake the stick or jerk it back violently when the marshmallow catches fire. Silly though it sounds, a flaming molten marshmallow can cause a painful burn.[2]
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Take care when holding marshmallows above a flame. Unlike the coals, which just radiate heat, the flames also send a stream of hot gases traveling upward.[3] This second type of heat (called convection) will burn your marshmallow much faster. So even if the flame is well below your marshmallow, you can still end up turning half of it black or even setting it on fire. Usually it's worth the extra minute or two to cook it over coals instead.
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Eat the marshmallow. Some people like to pull off the crisp brown layer and eat it first, then devour the hot goo inside. If your marshmallow accidentally burned black, you can pull off this layer and throw it in the fire instead. And of course, some of your friends have already finished scarfing the entire jumbo marshmallow in one bite while you were reading this.
- Careful — the marshmallow will be very hot. Wait at least 30-60 seconds after pulling it out of the fire.
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Roast marshmallows under the broiler. European nobles probably kept a fireplace in every room just so they could eat marshmallows on a whim. In these dark days of the central heating unit, you may need to rely on your oven's broiler setting instead. Lay the marshmallows in a single layer on a foil-lined baking sheet. Place on the middle rack under the broiler and watch it like a hawk. Once they brown – within a minute or two — rotate them with a spatula and toast the other side.
- Move the sheet to the upper rack if the marshmallows aren't browning.
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Toast on a gas stove instead. This method gives you the fun of holding a marshmallow roasting stick, but there are downsides. It will be difficult to get an even toast, and if you overcook them the goo can make a mess dripping on your stovetop. Hold the marshmallows at the edge of the flame to avoid dripping onto the pilot light or other mechanisms.
- You can use a fork to toast them, but it may blacken if it gets too hot. And remember the fork will be scalding hot before you stick it in your mouth.
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Make S'mores. This American classic is a kid's favorite, and super easy to make:
- Break off a square of graham cracker about the size of your marshmallow. (Substitute another crisp, sweet biscuit if graham crackers are not available near you.)
- Cover with a square of chocolate.
- Drop the fresh-toasted marshmallow onto the chocolate.
- Press down with a second piece of graham cracker, squishing the hot marshmallow down. This will partially melt the chocolate and make a delicious, gooey mess.
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Make a banana boat. Here's another quirky way to enjoy your marshmallows:
- Slice a long slit through the skin of a banana.
- Scoop out a trench from the banana along this slit.
- Fill the trench with mini marshmallows and mini chocolate chips.
- Wrap in foil and place on campfire coals, on a grill, or a baking sheet in a 300ºF (150ºC) oven.
- Cook for 5–15 minutes, checking frequently. The longer you wait, the more brown and caramelized the banana will get.
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Drop your marshmallows onto hot cocoa or dessert. If you thought normal marshmallows were decadent in cocoa, you may need to sit down for the toasted variety. These also work great on ice cream or milkshakes, especially vanilla or chocolate.
Community Q&A
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QuestionCan I eat them if they are not completely roasted?Community AnswerOf course. Some people like their marshmallows almost burnt, some like them barely toasted. You can eat them however you like them.
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QuestionIs it supposed to have a taste of gas if I roast with a gas stove? And is it safe to eat if it has the taste?Community AnswerNo, the marshmallows should not taste like gas.
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QuestionCan I eat them without roasting them at all?Community AnswerYes, of course! I personally find marshmallows to be tastier when toasted, but it all depends on your preference.
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Tips
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If you burn your marshmallow the first few times, don't throw the marshmallow away. It's still good, just scrape or 'push' off the outside. Keep trying. It's not the end of your perfect marshmallow toasting career.Thanks
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If you balk at shoving a soon-to-be gooey marshmallow onto a stick that was on the ground for a long time, pass the end of the stick through the fire for a few seconds. This should remove most debris and many germs from the stick. Just wipe off any ash, and stick on the marshmallow.Thanks
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Using a "green", or live, branch will keep the fire from lighting your roasting stick before you are done. You can usually find these on the ground — breaking them off trees is discouraged in most public parks and campgrounds.Thanks
Warnings
- Always supervise children around fires.Thanks
- Leaving a flammable stick hanging over the edge of the fire to roast unattended may start a fire.Thanks
- Keep your fire banked and under control, and bury it before leaving or going to sleep.Thanks
- Some campsites forbid stick collection. Bring your own firewood and roasting sticks.Thanks
Things You'll Need
- Heat source
- Sticks for marshmallows
- Bag(s) of large or mini marshmallows
References
About This Article
All you need to enjoy roasted marshmallows is a fire, roasting sticks, and marshmallows of course! Start the fire earlier in the day so that hot coals are ready for when you want to roast marshmallows. Get roasting sticks such as metal stakes or kebab sticks. Poke one marshmallow onto the pointed end of each stick. You can add more than one marshmallow to each stick, however, it’s easier to roast the marshmallow perfectly if there is only one. Hold the end of the roasting stick and position the marshmallow over hot coals where the fire has burnt out. Gradually rotate the marshmallow over the coals as it turns a light brown color. Once the marshmallow is as caramelized as you like it, take it away from the firepit and wait for 30 - 60 seconds before you eat it. For more ideas on roasting marshmallows, like how to roast marshmallows under the broiler, read on.
Reader Success Stories
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"We live in France and have invited some French friends and their three small children for Bonfire Night, with a bonfire, sparklers, chili and pumpkin pie. The marshmallows will be the icing on the cake, so to speak. Good to know how to do it properly. Without this article I'd probably have stuck them directly in the flames!"..." more