GOLDEN SYRUP


It is no mean task when it comes to baking cakes, puddings, pies or cookies when you are living in India. I am not talking just about the weather that can get treacherously hot (a doom for short bread cookies or rolling a pastry) but I am talking about the key ingredients that are required to bake these goodies. It will take herculean efforts to hunt simple stuff such as good quality white butter and there is no such thing as whipping cream or sour cream. It is tough to get hold of mascarpone cheese and cream cheese. Dulce de leche, puff pastry is one hell of a wishful thinking! While a few vendors stock the imported brands for few of the above mentioned stuff but they are capable of making a huge dent on your pocket. They cost a bomb!! The mantra is simple – make your own stuffwhere ever you possibly can.

Now, you can imagine my plight when I began my hunt for procuring  the golden syrup! It was tough nearly impossible to find golden syrup. Four years back I found Lyle’s Golden Syrup at a supermarket at NOIDA (near Delhi) but that was the only time they stocked it. I had picked one bottle and on my later visit I was told they had stopped importing it. I learnt of a few stores that stocked it but these were too far off from my place of residence. I had a few recipes that called for golden syrup and its non-availability became the prime reason why they never saw the light of the day again.


A quick search on the internet led me on to the basic info on the golden syrup. “Golden syrup is a pale treaclethick, amber-colored form of inverted sugar syrup, made in the process of refining sugar cane or sugar beet juice into sugar, or by treatment of a sugar solution with acidIt has an appearance similar to honey”- Wikipedia. After learning that it was a simple sugar syrup treated with acid (in this recipe a natural one – lemon juice and vinegar), I believed it could be easily made at home. Then, began the hunt for a recipe and after browsing through a few, I zeroed in on this one. 

Last year, when I felt like making the Banana& Strawberry Flapjacks, I decided to make  the Golden Syrup and I am more than satisfied with this recipe. And guess what?!? The home-made one costed me one third the price I had bought the Lyle’s! The success of this golden syrup has boosted my morale and I am keen to make more such stuff that I possibly can, at home.

800 g of white granulated sugar
290 g of water
2 lemons (to yield 6 tablespoons of lemon juice)
2 tablespoons of white vinegar
1/4 teaspoon of baking soda
2 tbsp water

Mix the baking soda in 2 tablespoon of water and set it aside.
Wash the lemons, cut in halves and squeeze the juice.
Measure 6 tbsp needed for the recipe and keep aside.
Cut the squeezed lemons in quarters and set aside.
In a pot, add sugar and water and boil on high heat. Stir until the sugar dissolves completely.


Reduce the heat to a simmer and add lemon juice & quarters and vinegar. Stir occasionally.
Insert a candy thermometer and continue to boil until the solution reaches 108 C. (I didn’t  have a candy thermometer and relied on my instinct and the appearance of the syrup
This process took approximately 30 minutes (+/-).
You will notice the sugar solution gradually changing the colour and turning golden.
Turn off the heat and stir in the baking soda solution.
The addition of baking soda solution will lead the syrup to bubble. The bubbles will remain on the surface of the solution.
Once the solution cools, it will disappear (as per the recipe they should have disappeared but mine did notsee notes).
Let the solution cool in the pot.
Strain before storing in the jar. (Preferably glass)

Note: Indian lemons are smaller in size and very potent (read sour); I used four lemons.

Note: On addition of baking soda solution initially there were bubbles and later they turned to froth which I had to spoon out from over the surface. I would recommend that you let the syrup cool well before pouring it out in bottle/jar. 

Note: It is advised to use the golden syrup within a month or two. Also, keep it refrigerated. 

Note: Don’t forget that the syrup will further thicken on cooling so keep an eye on the consistency.  

Yield: 600 ml but I am afraid I forgot to weigh the syrup L



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19 thoughts on “GOLDEN SYRUP

  1. Oh yes, some of the ingredients are really expensive over here, therefore I try to go for the local ones, unless and until I don’t have a choice.

    Likewise, I have never made golden syrup before, because none of us at home like anything sweet yet a homemade version is definitely better than getting it in the stores. That said, the syrup is made to perfection and it will be perfect for my drinks.

    1. It really is incredible how different the shopping experiences can be in different parts of the world. I realised this when we were living in Nigeria for a year. Everything there was imported since there was not much of indigenous stuff.

  2. Golden syrup has become part of my daily pantry, I totally loved it in baking or simply drizzle over the pancakes or fruit salad. I am all inspired to make my own after seeing this. Trust me Taruna, yours looks better than the store bought ones. Love the bottle too ! 🙂

  3. Sometimes is very hard to find products that are used in other parts of the world. The good thing is that this makes us investigate and come up with a great recipe as in this case!

  4. wow!! you make ur own it’s really nice idea and not expensive also….u make so perfectly. thanks for your tips. also.

  5. Very useful post, and it looks divine. Usually, I get this syrup from stores mostly, but it’s really easy to make. Thanks for sharing this recipe with us. Best wishes and Regards.

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