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I've noticed that commercial gummies do not melt, even when they are left in the sun, while home made gummies melt even at room temperatures sometimes.

What is the secret ingredient? Sugar?

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  • This is worth a look: haribo.com/enUS/consumer-information/gummies/ingredients.html
    – Jolenealaska
    Jul 25, 2014 at 19:31
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    Commercial gummies also get a coating of wax (beeswax and/or carnauba wax) to prevent them from sticking together. Perhaps that has something to do with it?
    – Marti
    Jul 25, 2014 at 19:44
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    Gelatin is solid even at high-temps if you get it concentrated enough. My guess is it's the lack of water.
    – john3103
    Jul 25, 2014 at 20:58
  • @john3103 I'm not sure that concentrated gelatin tastes quite as pleasant, though. :) I'm remembering the bottom of the Jello dish when I was younger. Jun 14, 2017 at 7:31
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    I'm pretty sure that sugar can't be a secret ingredient of any kind of candy! Jun 6, 2018 at 16:39

8 Answers 8

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I've been making a lot of room temp gelatins lately; not gummybears, something else with a bit lower gelatin concentration. The secret ingredient seems to be time. The first day, things are pretty jiggly, but even when hermetically sealed, things get tougher and tougher over a course of about three to four days. I expect it's some colloid maturation process involving random chains finding their best fit over time. Don't quote me on that, but the same sort of thing commonly happens on a faster timescale with gluten maturation in bread dough. A few hours in the fridge can speed up firming, but I'm not sure you end up with the same final gel structure that way.

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I just checked the ingredients on one of the Vitafusion bottles I have and I believe the secret ingredient to "non-melting-gummies" is WAX. They use either beeswax or carnauba wax. Other than that they are pretty much like homemade gummies with the exception of using glucose and sucrose syrups which I don't believe would make a difference in whether they melted or not. So, I would make up a melted beeswax and dip each gummy in that. Unfortunately, you would not be able to polish them up in the big drums that they use so that might be an issue. Maybe color the wax with a natural food coloring.

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You have to dry the gummies for 3 days. Start with so much gelatin that it's just slightly difficult to eye dropper into the mold, then back down from that. Let them harden overnight in fridge, spray coconut oil on hands and on back of gummies in the mold, then rub them with your hands as each one is removed, making sure they are coated with the oil, but very thinly. Dry them like that, individually set apart on parchment paper. Where I make mine, it's always 85F. At that temp, the 1 gram (1ml) gummy molds won't droop (much). Just blow on them with a little fan. Cold dry air from an airconditioner is slower, just use the room temp air.

Larger gummies will droop out of shape using this method, so dry them in the fridge. Takes 3 times longer, but gummies fully exposed in fridge can lose 2-3% moisture per day. In room with fan, as much as 10% moisture per day.

After drying the gummies until they are slightly firmer than Haribo, recoat with oil using your hands.

They'll spoil easily unless you add Potassium Sorbate. Get that at a beer brew supply shop, along with corn sugar which can be used 50/50 with regular sugar to help prevent crystalization.

Check web for amount of Potassium Sorbate to use, but it's very small. And considered so safe, it's ok to use on "organic" candies.

With proper sorbate, and sugar content above 55% by weight, you can stick them in a mason jar with some moldy (fully furry) gummy bears next to them, and they won't spoil even after a full week. Not sure beyond that, I ate the little guy to see if he picked up moldy taste. Nope.

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I've been experimenting with gelatin alternatives to make vegan gummy bears, and in my research I've noticed the temp influenced changes for different ingredients:

gelatin (melting point): 95F / 35C

agar agar (starts to lose firmness): 149F / 65C

agar agar (melting point): 185F / 85C

konjac (melting point): 217F / 103C

I have also read that too much water in the mix can cause it to "bleed". You can get reduced water in the heating method, which means your final "goop" that you pour into molds should be high in viscosity to reduce this bleeding effect on a hot day. But then usually that means the sugar concentration will be much higher, so some people use maltodextrin (a glucose) as a portion of your sugar content as it is less sweet than sugar.

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    Agar is also quite interesting with its huge melting point hysteresis... Jun 14, 2017 at 12:11
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If you want firmer Gummies cook to a higher temp and add modified cornstarch or cleargel after cooking alsobe sure to bloom your gelatin. I am a former Candy maker with 20 years experience. You can find cleargel on amazon or if you have a local gourmet store they may carry it.

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I don't know what the secret ingredient is, but I can guess, based on ingredient lists I've seen. My guess is corn syrup that has been heated to make it thicken, perhaps combined with gelatin or something to make it return to its shape after pressing on it. I could be wrong.

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The "secret" component of commercial gummies is gelatin and if we take a look here especially the Production section where it says commercial gelatin is comprised of animal products such as animal bones, bovine hides, and pig skin. And from our knowledge of basic chemistry we know that bones, skin, and hides don't readily melt in room temperature or when they are kept under the sun. At the same time there are gelatin that are made for vegetarians and instead of animal parts they use a plant called Konjac which doesn't readily melt either.

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    Did I say anything incorrect ?
    – John Reese
    Jul 28, 2014 at 5:38
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    I'm not the downvoter, but I haven't seen any home recipe which makes "gummies" with anything else than gelatin or maybe a vegetarian substitute like agar. So presumably, it's not the gelatin by itself which makes the difference. But I admit that the question doesn't really provide enough information for a good answer and maybe the OP has some very unusual recipe which doesn't have gelatin (I wonder what it could use instead).
    – rumtscho
    Jul 30, 2014 at 13:40
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    >And from our knowledge of basic chemistry we know that bones, skin, and hides don't readily melt in room temperature or when they are kept under the sun. This is specious reasoning. Jun 6, 2018 at 18:57
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I've been making gummies for a few years now. My biggest hurdle was drying them fast enough to package. My recipe uses gelatin, pectin, sugar, corn syrup, citric acid and flavor. In my experience the gelatin, which is a large amount compared to other ingredients, can't be heated over 212°F, or it will lose it's gelling capabilities. My gummies are completely shelf stable, and do not mold or melt under any conditions.

That being said I ran into an issue with them being sticky, thus looking very unattractive once pulled apart from each other. Anyways, having read that Haribo uses starch to mold their candies, I tried using it as a coating at different stages of production, molding and drying and have found the best way to have unsticky gummies, no matter what.

I found that more than a light dusting in the molds before pouring, was not beneficial, and unnecessary as it made them look "lumpy" in appearance. I tried dusting them after drying demolded in front of a fan for a few days, and found that not enough starch would "stick" rendering the starch completely useless and the gummies still stuck together due to moisture in the air.

What I found was there is a small window of time in which the starch, lightly dusted and immediately brushed off well, will leave enough of a coating on them that they will not stick together or look powdery. And I found that to be somewhere between 20-24 hrs after they are poured into silicone molds, and ready to be pulled out. I dust them completely, brush all excess starch off immediately, and allow to dry more under a fan for another 24 hrs. At that time I can place them into Mylar or plastic baggies, and they become even less dusty looking the longer they stay sealed, however never sticking together and completely shelf stable even 6 months later. I did venture once to try a citric acid and sugar coating, and failed miserably.

I hope this helps. I don't know why it works, but maybe a commenter or a different answer might explain why.

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