These Texan BBQ flavoured candied nuts are my current nibbling obsession. Savoury enough for pre-dinner drinks. Just sweet enough to be an after dinner treat! You could even package them up and gift – assuming they don’t mysteriously “disappear” beforehand….

Texan BBQ candied nuts
Hello weekend. And hello party nuts!
I’ve been meaning to share a candied nuts recipe for ages, being my go-to way to use up half-empty nut packets. I was going to keep it classic with just cinnamon……. but then I made these BBQ spiced ones and couldn’t go back.
Smoky, savoury, sweet and a teeny bit spicy, inspired by Texan barbecue flavours, these nuts have a crisp candy coating (not sticky!) and are dangerously moreish. Put out bowls for pre-dinner drinks and you’ll have to keep topping them up because everyone keeps “just having one more!”

Ingredients in Texan BBQ candied nuts
Here’s my favourite nut combination for these party nuts, but use what you’ve got and what you like, whether roasted or raw. For even cooking, try to use nuts around the same size.

The nuts: Use any unsalted nuts, raw or roasted, but aim for similar sizes so they roast evenly (eg. don’t mix pistachios with Brazil nuts). I used cashews, almonds, and pecans – I like the combination of textures and flavours. Pecans get extra candy stuck in crevices while cashews get a glossy toffee coat – I like this contrast. And yes, different nuts = different flavours!
Raw vs roasted? Raw is ideal as they roast while candying, but I’ve used both (and mixed raw with roasted) and honestly couldn’t tell much difference. I think the candy coating provides protection so the heat that gets inside is more ambient than for naked nuts – strong enough to roast raw nuts but not so harsh that it burns already roasted nuts. Theory – but gosh, does that sound like I know what I’m talking about?!!🤣
Other nuts: I’ve done this with mixed nuts, single types (pecans = fave), and everything in between. I wasn’t a huge fan of pistachios with the spice mix, and Brazil nuts are a bit chunky for my taste. But really, go with what you love!
White sugar works better than brown (bit more sticky). Honey and maple don’t crisp up as well, they are sticky too (in the quantities we need for this recipe).
Butter – Smidge of fat to help the candy coat the nuts a little more evenly and gives it a gorgeous shine. Plus – butter flavour. We like, always! 🙂
Spices – Chipotle and smoked paprika bring smokey Texan vibes to the spice mix, then the other spices are support acts. But don’t fret if you are missing one or two! As with most recipes with a number of spices, you can switch and sub:
Smoked paprika – it’s paprika, but smoky. 🙂 Not spicy. Substitute with regular paprika (aka sweet paprika) or spicy paprika if you dare.
Chipotle powder is spicy and beautifully smoky – sub with more smoked paprika + 1/4 tsp cayenne (skip cayenne for no spicy)
Cumin and coriander – if missing one, leave it out. If missing both, you won’t get Texan Cowboy vibes. 🥲
Garlic and onion powder can be substituted with more of either.
Cayenne pepper – Extra spice kick for the brave.

How to make Texan BBQ candied nuts
The easy way to make candied nuts is to do it entirely on the stove or entirely in the oven. Long ago I used a hybrid method from Chef John of Food Wishes (hilarious and knows his stuff, I love him!) and I’ve never looked back: make the candy coating on the stove, toss with nuts, then finish in the oven.
Yes, it’s one extra step but it’s worth it because the end result is better: no burnt patches (notorious stove problem), lower maintenance, with a light even coating on each nut that’s crisp and dry, not sticky.

BBQ candy coating – Melt the butter then add the sugar, water, all the spices and salt. Give it a mix then simmer gently for 2 minutes, stirring regularly so the base doesn’t catch. Going for the full 2 minutes is key here to get a good dry crispy coating on the nuts, rather than the sticky type that gets stuck in your teeth.
Pour the candy coating straight over the nuts.

Toss well! Take a good 30 seconds and a rubber spatula to toss well and coat the nuts as evenly as you can. The candy coating should all stick to the nuts, no pool at the bottom of the bowl – because we went a little further on the stove to toffee it well.
Bake – Spread the nuts in a single layer on a foil and paper lined tray then bake for 10 minutes at 180°C/350°F (160C fan-forced).

Toss well (I use a rubber and metal spatula together) then bake for further 10 minutes until deep golden. There should be no toffee on the paper, it’s all stuck to the nuts – yay!
Break up and harden – Let it cool for 10 minutes on the tray then break it up with your fingers into individual nuts (easier to do when slightly warm). Then leave it to fully cool so the candy coating crisps up. Then – attack!

Store these in an airtight container in a cool dry place for a couple of weeks. If it’s very hot and humid where you are, they might get a bit sticky but this is easily fixed – just pop it in the oven for 5 minutes then let it fully cool again.
It’s Friday. I know you’ve got a hodge-podge of random nuts in your pantry, just waiting to be used. What are you waiting for?!! These nuts and a beer are calling your name!!! 😊 – Nagi x
PS Forgot to mention – they make a great gift too, because they keep for weeks. 🙂 Also excellent to add to platters, roughly chop and sprinkle on salads.

Watch how to make it
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Texan BBQ Candied Nuts
Ingredients
Nuts (Note 1):
- 1 1/2 cups pecans
- 1 1/2 cups almonds , raw unsalted (or toasted)
- 1 cup cashews , raw, unsalted (toasted ok too)
- 1 1/2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt (halve for table salt, increase by 50% for flakes)
Texan spiced candy coating (Note 2):
- 25g / 1 1/2 tbsp unsalted butter
- 1/2 cup white sugar (Note 3)
- 2 tbsp water
- 1 tsp smoked paprika
- 1 tsp chipotle (slightly spicy, can sub with 3/4 tsp extra smoked paprika)
- 1/2 tsp coriander powder
- 1/2 tsp cumin powder
- 1/2 tsp onion powder
- 1/2 tsp garlic powder
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper , optional (for more spicy!)
Optional
- Sea salt flakes , for extra salt to taste
Instructions
Abbreviated recipe:
- Simmer candied coating 2 min, toss with nuts, bake 20 min at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan), tossing halfway. Break up while warm, fully cool. Attack!
Full recipe:
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced). Line a large tray with foil then baking paper (parchment).
- Nuts – Put the nuts in a bowl.
- Candied coating – Put the butter in a small saucepan over medium heat. Once mostly melted, add all the remaining candied coating ingredients. Stir, then once it comes to a simmer, reduce stove to medium low so it's simmering gently for 2 minutes, stirring regularly so it doesn’t catch.
- Toss – Pour over the nuts, toss well – take about 30 seconds, use a rubber spatula. It should be quite thick and coat the nuts well, no runny caramel pooling at bottom of bowl.
- Bake – Spread on tray, bake for 20 minutes, tossing well at the halfway mark, until the nuts are deep golden. There should be hardly any candy coating liquid left on the tray.
- Break up – Cool undisturbed on the tray for 10 minutes then break it up while still warm (separates better). Then leave to fully cool on the tray – the candy coating will fully harden (about 30 minutes). (Note 4 if nut surface is not shiny smooth)
- Uses – Serve in bowls for snacking (brilliant bar snack), fill jars for gifting, add to platters, chop and sprinkle on salads. Adding a sprinkle of sea salt is a nice finishing touch.
Recipe Notes:
- Garlic and onion powder can be substituted with more of either.
- Chipotle powder is a spicy and beautifully smoky, sub with more smoked paprika + 1/4 tsp cayenne (skip cayenne for no spicy)
- Cumin and coriander – if missing one, leave it out. If missing both, you won’t get Texan Cowboy vibes.
- Smoked paprika – it’s paprika, but smoky. 🙂 Not spicy. Substitute with regular paprika (aka sweet paprika) or spicy paprika if you dare.
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Took Dozer to see the progress on his forever home!

It’s been almost 6 months since he’s been there. Because of his mobility limitations these days – he’s a little unsteady on his feet even on the best of days – I wanted to wait until the ground had been levelled out a bit.
He certainly relished in the attention from the tradies! This is Daniel from Harwood Roofing who are redoing the slate roof – tile by tile, by hand, the old school way. Ah, the joys of heritage homes! 🙂

Yesterday on site was a fun day. JB and I popped over to do burgers for the builders. Double cheeseburgers, complete with homemade special burger sauce!


No bread for Dozer these days, bit risky for him (accidentally inhaling crumbs into his lungs). But we made mini burger patties for him instead. ❤️

3 1/2 months until we are in our forever home! Can’t wait. ❤️

Always love to see how Dozer is doing!
Thanks Cathy!! He’s doing so well, he’s a bit creaky some days on cold winter days but he’s so happy and huggable and I just love him to bits! – N x
I’m a bit creaky on cold winter days too! I always like to check in on your boy. Sparky the Beardie is now 15 and still going strong – not a cuddler like your boy but he has a hilarious sense of humour!
Nagi, during the two minute simmer, is there a temperature I am looking to reach and then maintain for 2 min. as I like using my instant thermometer just to be certain I’m on target. I have made similar nuts before and they were sticky which you point out has to do with the initial coating process.
Hi Den! I don’t take a temp because it’s finished in the oven which takes it well into the non-sticky territory 🙂 I have had plenty of sticky nut problems too and doing the 2 minute simmer followed by oven time is a good insurance policy for non-sticky nuts. Originally I was only doing a 1 minute simmer and sometimes there was a teeny bit of stickiness. 2 minutes – none at all! And I just checked a container of nuts I made over a week ago and they are still clatteringly perfectly 🙂 – N x
Dozer and you in your forever home.Bless.Love his booties.
Safety first! (And that I get so much amusement out of it is an added bonus 😂) – N x
So excited for you and your imminent move to that beautiful home with Dozer as your constant companion. You deserve every wonderful day you spend there. Congratulations🎊
Yum!!! I used rapadura and was delicious 😋
Wow! it worked?? I wasn’t sure if it would be sticky 🙂 Thanks for letting me know! – N x
I just want to know who got to finish those beers. :-))
who do you think 🤔 – N x
I’m just making these right now and it smells amazing. Can’t wait to try. Thanks Nagi 🙏
HOPE YOU LOVED THEM MARTA!!! – N x
Aloha love spice but not smoked. Do you think I could use Cajun?
Love ya work 👌 your recipes rock
YES! Cajun + candied nuts is brilliant. Just check the salt level in your cajun spice mix, if it’s salted then cut down on the salt in the recipe 🙂 You can always add salt at the end if you’re unsure, can always add salt but impossible to remove salt! – N x
I make something similar, except I whisk egg whites until frothy not stiff, mix in spices and sugar and toss together and bake again. When cool they are crisp and glossy, and a little fewer calories due to not using butter
Yes! I do the egg whites methods too when I have leftover whites, I find that this method gives a glossier candy finish whereas my egg whites ones are rustic and rough. Love both. Egg white method coming next! – N x
I do the exact same thing but with brown sugar, vanilla and cinnamon. We love them.
That’s how I make mine. I was thinking of making these the same qay substituting the new spices.
They’re so easy to snack on! I also add a tsp of chilli flakes as we like a little extra zing. Enjoy ☺️
As a self confessed nut-aholic, this is right my alley 😅. Definitely trying them this weekend.
Love all your recipes Nagi, they are my go to! I’ve made upwards of 30 from your website and hereby certify you a gem!
30 recipes?! That’s amazing Mrs M — I’m honoured to be your go-to! Hope the nuts live up to nut-aholic standards 😅 – N x
Thank you for this yummy treatos recipe. They will make great side gifts for my sourdough clients. I don’t know how u do it… recipe books, meals for community, moving house and now house renovations?! I organised one marketplace with a couple of vendors and I am poofed!
Haha Monica, trust me – I have many poofed days too! 😂 Love the idea of gifting these with your sourdough, that’s such a thoughtful touch. – N x
Well – as the designated neighbourhood platter queen this is the missing link for my next platters! Any more platter magic coming? What a fantastic recipe! Thank you, Nagi!
Platters! Brilliant idea. Popping it on a list for serving options!! – N x
Yee-Hah!! Sounds/looks delicious!
The perfect response 😂
Beautiful Nagi, Keep up the good work we are all here for you and Dozer. xx
Aww thanks Halina, what a lovely message to read on a sunny Sunday morning! – N x
Love that your new home is coming along! Love to find out how practical it is to use metal and rubber spatulas together! Love Dozer’s patties and seeing him! Love the spices you have used here! . . , seems lots of love 🙂 !
Happy weekend Eha! – N x
Can not wait to make this but can you please tell me why the Pintrest button has gone off your website, I like pinning all of your recepis in a Nagi folder 🙂 Thank you and have a good weekend x
Oh gosh sorry Rakel, let me look into that! 🙂 N x
Love this! 💕
Thanks Ann! Hope you get a chance to try them! – N x