Cactus Fruit make some pretty delicious Prickly Pear Gum Drops. A fun recipe to make, however keep in mind your climate and other factors when making these.  You may need more pectin than called for to get them to firm up if you’re in a humid climate.

When I lived in Arizona, we practically lived on candy made from Prickly Pear.

It was everywhere.

I didn’t have to make it, because it was readily available in every store within walking distance and beyond. I loved my time in Arizona for so many reasons, and I long to move back there some day.

It probably won’t happen. But a girl can dream.

And in the mean time, I made Prickly Pear Gum Drops.

Did you see these fun Prickly Pear Gum Drops made from Cactus Fruit?

In the meantime, I can at least give myself a little taste of Arizona via some homemade Prickly Pear Gum Drops.

Prickly Pear Cactus Fruit Gum Drops

I’ll be totally honest, I was not convinced this was going to work.

We make fruit gum drops all the time, but this is prickly pear fruit (cactus fruit) which for whatever reason, is just different than regular fruit and different to work with.

But guess what? It totally worked. It’s great!

Just a note: I am in Missouri. St. Louis to be exact, and both of our local chain grocery stores carry Cactus Fruit/Prickly Pear fruit.

It seems to be slightly seasonal appearing mostly in the spring/summer months.

It’s in a really small section by itself, but you might consider asking your produce manager if they ever get it in. It was super easy to find for me, but since then some are saying they can’t find it at all.

Update June 2013: I asked our local Schnucks produce manager about the cactus fruit and he said they get what they get.

They get a very small amount and sometimes it goes really fast, and other times it lasts for a bit.

Find out when your local store gets their shipments in and that might help. 

Prickly Pear Cactus Fruit Gum Drops

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Recipe for Cactus Fruit – Prickly Pear Gum Drops

Cactus Fruit Gum Drops

Cactus Fruit | Prickly Pear Gum Drops

Nicole Cook
Fun and different candy made from Prickly Pear Cactus Fruit.
4.56 from 69 votes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Additional Time 1 day
Total Time 1 day 25 minutes
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Servings 6
Calories 356 kcal

Ingredients
  

  • ½ cups prickly pear cactus fruit peeled, pureed and de-seeded
  • 1 ½ cups applesauce use plain, no sugar added
  • 3 teaspoons powdered pectin I used Sure Jell
  • 2 ½ cups granulated sugar divided
  • Sugar for dusting each gumdrop at the end

Instructions
 

  • Spray an 8 x 8 glass baking dish with nonstick cooking spray. Then set it aside.
  • In a large saucepan, combine the pureed and de-seeded prickly pear cactus fruit with the applesauce.
  • Whisk the pectin and a 1/2 cup sugar together in a small bowl. Once mixed well, add to the cactus fruit.
  • Clip a candy thermometer onto the side of your saucepan and bring your mixture to a boil.
  • Whisk in the remaining 2 cups of sugar.
  • Bring everything to a boil and stir constantly until your mixture reaches 225°. (this took me less than 5 minutes)
  • Remove from saucepan from the heat. (and shake your arm from all that stirring!)
  • Pour the hot mixture into your 8×8 prepared glass dish.
  • When slightly cool (about an hour), sprinkle sugar on top.
  • Allow to set several hours (this is going to vary depended on your weather, humidity outside/inside. I recommend letting them dry at least 12 hours. (Seems like 12+ is the magic number so plan ahead)
  • Once the candy is mostly set, enough to cut, cut your mixture into 1-inch squares, or use a mini cookie cutter sprayed with non-stick cooking spray to make hearts, flowers, whatever – though if you plan to use anything other than just a sharp knife, you might need to let them dry even longer, though they will dry better when cut.
  • Dredge in some sugar and allow to dry another 6+ hours or overnight on a piece of parchment paper. Store covered for up to two weeks.

Nutrition

Calories: 356kcalCarbohydrates: 92gProtein: 0.2gFat: 0.3gSaturated Fat: 0.01gPolyunsaturated Fat: 0.01gMonounsaturated Fat: 0.003gSodium: 8mgPotassium: 65mgFiber: 1gSugar: 89gVitamin A: 51IUVitamin C: 1mgCalcium: 15mgIron: 0.3mg
Keyword easy candy recipes
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57 Comments

      1. Nicole I tried this recipe but had 2 cups of juice and just adjusted the recipe. Yet it never firmed up. Any advice or recipe for 2 cups of juice? Ty 🙂

        1. Hi Jackie, I’m so sorry this didn’t firm up for you. I haven’t tried it with 2 cups of juice, and I know canning is a bit of a science, so I wonder if it’s the exact measurements that matter. I’m wondering if using a bit more pectin would at all help.

    1. Jocelyn, I’m pretty sure you can use any fruit with the recipe, however don’t think you can’t necessarily find it.
      I was actually surprised to find in my local grocery store. It’s a really odd looking fruit and we were looking for the star fruit which they also had. So don’t assume they won’t have it, and it might not be there all the time, but you might find it at some point. 🙂

  1. Oh my goodness I need these in my life. I love prickly pear and miss having access to it.

  2. I was so excited to find a recipe I could use for the impulse buy prickly pears. I followed the recipe to the “T.” Now 4 hours later I have “gumdrops” that set up on top, but are still semi-liquid when I try to take them out of the Pyrex. What went wrong? Other gumdrop recipes I’ve seen use pectin an gelatin or just gelatin. Was that supposed to be in this recipe as well????

  3. I was so excited to find a recipe I could use for the impulse buy prickly pears. I followed the recipe to the “T.” Now 4 hours later I have “gumdrops” that set up on top, but are still semi-liquid when I try to take them out of the Pyrex. What went wrong? Other gumdrop recipes I’ve seen use pectin an gelatin or just gelatin. Was that supposed to be in this recipe as well????

    1. No. I made the recipe exactly as is. Your humidity level (both inside and outside) can affect how quickly it dries. For me, I was making those in February so the air was very “winter” dry. It only took a little over 2 hours for them to dry. Having made other types of gum drop candies, I have waited up to 6+ hours. When I made those I did let them dry overnight, because I was going to bed. There was supposed to be a + that was inadvertently left out of the recipe after the two… indicating 2+ hours. In other words, depending on climate it can take anywhere from 2 hours to whatever. Let them set at least overnight (6 hours or so) and then attempt to cut them again. Mine were VERY sticky when I cut them, which you want because the sugar adheres well. Then you allow them to dry again, 6+ hours after adding the sugar. I hope this helps. We loved ours so much and I hope you can enjoy them too.

  4. These sound PERFECT. I live out in Tucson AZ and we’re in the middle of a particularly robust prickly pear fruit harvest season right now– they’re everywhere, deep burgundy and fully ripe. I’ve tried a few other recipes but never found one I was fully happy with, but this sounds absolutely great. One question– have you ever made this in silicon rubber molds? I have some flower and heart ones about half an inch deep that’d be really lovely; do you think they’d work okay? And thank you for the recipe!

  5. These sound PERFECT. I live out in Tucson AZ and we’re in the middle of a particularly robust prickly pear fruit harvest season right now– they’re everywhere, deep burgundy and fully ripe. I’ve tried a few other recipes but never found one I was fully happy with, but this sounds absolutely great. One question– have you ever made this in silicon rubber molds? I have some flower and heart ones about half an inch deep that’d be really lovely; do you think they’d work okay? And thank you for the recipe!

    1. Hi Suzanne, I hope I can help with this. I have not used a silicone mold. Do I think it would work? I have no idea, but I am not convinced it would with this recipe. It’s extremely sticky until it dries out and I am wondering if it wouldn’t get stuck in crevices etc. With that said, I can’t say for sure it wouldn’t work, so if you decide to try it, do let us know how it goes. The drying time is the hardest part of the whole thing, because you just want to eat them so badly. Your drier air should help, as those of us in high humidity conditions have it rough (can take days to dry out enough). Please let me know how you like them if you decide to make them.

      1. Thanks so much for the reply! Sadly, right now all is NOT dry in Tucson– we’re in the middle of Monsoon Season. Since at one point you lived in AZ you probably know what this means; for everybody else, it means that this is the time of year that we get rain! It usually rains at least 3 out of 5 days, mostly brief thunderstorms but not always– I woke up to steady rain this morning. So I may be doing some of my drying in a warm oven… oh well. Without the rain, we wouldn’t survive; that’s the desert for you. Also, I think I’ll stick to the regular molding method rather than use the molds.

      2. Just a thought on drying them out, if you have a “no frost” refrigerator this dries out anything, I dry herbs in mine, I just leave them in the bottom of the fridge on a polystyrene tray and they dry out faster than hung up in the kitchen, works a treat, no reason why it shouldn’t dry out the sweets I’m thinking?

  6. My family & I are now juicing the near 100 lbs. of Prickly Pears that we picked over the weekend. I found this recipe & am anxious to try it! We make loads of jelly every year & share as Christmas gifts 😉 Anyways, I was wondering if I can use the juice for this recipe or if I need to set aside some to peel & puree separately to use? Also, have you used the fruit after it’s been frozen for this recipe? If so, how does it turn out? If it turns out well, I’m thinking of adding it to our Prickly Pear gift basket we make for our family at Christmas time! Thank you!

    1. Hi Valerie, I’m glad you’d like to try it. I really can’t answer the questions about freezing the fruit and then using it, because I have never done that. We get the fruit so rarely up here and they get such a small amount at a time, that I just grab what I can and make something with it each time.
      The candy might last that long if frozen though, again I don’t know. It’s a sticky candy so I’m not sure how any of that would work.
      Also about the juice, what you read here in the directions is what I have tried and had work. I haven’t done a lot of experimenting since this worked I was happy with the results. If you decide to try any of the things you’ve mentioned, please do come back here and let us know the results. Just be sure to give the candy plenty of time to dry after you make it. Good luck! Hope you enjoy it!

    1. Did they firm up for you? I left mine overnight which wound up being about 10 hours I think, and then of course cut them. THey were still slightly sticky when I put the sugar on them and allowed them to dry. The candy’s take about 2 days to really complete and be less sticky, I think.

  7. New fan of your page from “nearly next-door” in Washington, Missouri. We just got back from Arizona and have already run out of the stash of prickly pear candy we brought back. Excited at the prospect that local stores may sometimes carry prickly pears! I imagine Jay International in Kirkwood might carry it too. Looking forward to when I can actually try this recipe. 🙂

    1. Well hello there neighbor. You’re pretty darn close actually. I will be out in your neck of the woods tomorrow night actually at Otis Campbell’s with my friends band. Love your area so much. Also a little jealous of your recent trip to AZ. Formerly home for us. Schnucks has Prickly Pears about 3-4 times a year for a few weeks at a time, so hopefully you will find some! I hadn’t thought about JI possibly having them. I might need to check that out. I’m so glad you stopped by and found me!

  8. Schnucks ordered them for me – just picked up 9 pounds tonight!

    On this recipe, is it pure powdered pectin, or pectin like a pack of Sure-jel? Also, when do you add the pectin/sugar mixture?

    Thank you!

    1. Hi Ruth, I’m so glad Schnucks was willing to order them for you. I haven’t seen them in a bit (recipe is older) but have been craving them.
      I have updated the recipe with the answers to your question. Yes, Sure-Jell and pectin/sugar gets poured into cactus mixture as soon as its heated and stirred.
      Enjoy!

  9. Hi Nicole,
    Hope you can help. Didn’t use a thermometer so boiled everything a little longer than 5 minutes. Doubled recipe and used one glass pan that was larger than 8 X 8 and a smaller metal pan for the rest. It’s been about 18 hours and neither is gelled enough to cut. I have them covered with a paper towel. Should I keep waiting, or will I need to return it to a pot and bring it to another boil? Hope to hear from you.

    Thanks for the recipe. Got some fancy papers, and tubs to put them in when finished–a gift from AZ to send to my granddaughter when she starts college in Philadelphia, PA soon.

  10. Hi Nicole,
    Hope you can help. Didn’t use a thermometer so boiled everything a little longer than 5 minutes. Doubled recipe and used one glass pan that was larger than 8 X 8 and a smaller metal pan for the rest. It’s been about 18 hours and neither is gelled enough to cut. I have them covered with a paper towel. Should I keep waiting, or will I need to return it to a pot and bring it to another boil? Hope to hear from you.

    Thanks for the recipe. Got some fancy papers, and tubs to put them in when finished–a gift from AZ to send to my granddaughter when she starts college in Philadelphia, PA soon.

    1. Hi Thea,
      I am so sorry that I missed your comment. By now, I am sure the whole thing is either a win or a loss. I am not sure I would have been much help. When I create my recipes, I try to offer the exact instructions of what I did so that the recipe turns out perfect for others. Using a thermometer I believe is an important part of making any kind of candy, so you don’t under or over boil, which changes the results many times. I also wouldn’t have recommended doubling the recipe for the simple reason that the drying process was a specific size and you may have wound up with more in a pan that was originally intended. I am curious how your results were at the end? Again, I am so sorry that I didn’t see this comment until now.

  11. Hi! Thanks so much for this recipe. I have some gumdrops cooling right now. Because of my altitude (8000 ft), it took quite awhile (45 min) to get to 225 degrees, but we stuck it out!

    Did the gumdrops in your pictures really turn out that color with only 1/2 cup of prickly pear juice? My juice is that color, but after mixing it with the applesauce, it turned out a rich amber. I wondered if maybe I should put in more juice next time.

    Thanks!

  12. Hi! Thanks so much for this recipe. I have some gumdrops cooling right now. Because of my altitude (8000 ft), it took quite awhile (45 min) to get to 225 degrees, but we stuck it out!

    Did the gumdrops in your pictures really turn out that color with only 1/2 cup of prickly pear juice? My juice is that color, but after mixing it with the applesauce, it turned out a rich amber. I wondered if maybe I should put in more juice next time.

    Thanks!

  13. Just a thought on drying them out, if you have a “no frost” refrigerator this dries out anything, I dry herbs in mine, I just leave them in the bottom of the fridge on a polystyrene tray and they dry out faster than hung up in the kitchen, works a treat, no reason why it shouldn’t dry out the sweets I’m thinking?

  14. I planted prickly pear cactus a couple of years ago and this year they produced tons of fruit! Prickly pear cactus (opuntia humifusa) is native to Missouri and grows well here in very sunny dry spots. In the winter it just sort of lays down and looks a bit dehydrated but perks right back up in the spring. I am going to make some of these candies to take to our local Wild Ones native landscaping chapter’s November gathering and potluck
    http://stlwildones.org/calendar/wild-ones-meeting-annual-potluck-and-seed-exchange-2016-11/

  15. I planted prickly pear cactus a couple of years ago and this year they produced tons of fruit! Prickly pear cactus (opuntia humifusa) is native to Missouri and grows well here in very sunny dry spots. In the winter it just sort of lays down and looks a bit dehydrated but perks right back up in the spring. I am going to make some of these candies to take to our local Wild Ones native landscaping chapter’s November gathering and potluck
    http://stlwildones.org/calendar/wild-ones-meeting-annual-potluck-and-seed-exchange-2016-11/

  16. How do these taste? I was very excited to find this but for some reason reading the apple sauce on the ingredient list kinda made myself turn over in my future grave.
    Does it taste like apples or taste like the cactus fruit?
    Thanks!

  17. I”m making this recipe for party favors, but prickly pear is out of season. I found some prickly pear puree on line, but it was sweetened with sugar. When I made the recipe, I omitted 1 cup of sugar to compensate for the already sweetened puree. They taste divine and look very pretty, but are not gummy like gum drops and after leaving them out to dry for 2+ days figure they won’t get any more solid. Any suggestions? And will the end product be impacted if I double the recipe?

  18. I”m making this recipe for party favors, but prickly pear is out of season. I found some prickly pear puree on line, but it was sweetened with sugar. When I made the recipe, I omitted 1 cup of sugar to compensate for the already sweetened puree. They taste divine and look very pretty, but are not gummy like gum drops and after leaving them out to dry for 2+ days figure they won’t get any more solid. Any suggestions? And will the end product be impacted if I double the recipe?

    1. I suppose you could try, but I’d definitely assume the texture, drying time and other components would change quite a bit. If you do decide to try it, please let us know how they turn out. Good luck!

  19. I had not thought of trying a J store for nopal & tuna! I’ll give it a try.
    I live in S St Louis, and J stores are everywhere. However, last week I stopped at El Torito (Cherokee & California) and they had bins of tuna, both red & green, as well as nopal pads. I plan to also try Carnicería Latinoamericana, since they have a branch on Grand, much closer than Cherokee.
    My Dad used to talk about prickly pears and how cattle people would remove the thorns with fires so cattle could eat them safely; naturally my first impulse now is to flame them. The produce department does not clean them as well as Schnucks’s supplier; there were thorns loose in the produce bag when I got it home. The grocer provides tongs. Use them.

  20. I planted prickly pear cactus a couple of years ago and this year they produced tons of fruit! Prickly pear cactus (opuntia humifusa) is native to Missouri and grows well here in very sunny dry spots. In the winter it just sort of lays down and looks a bit dehydrated but perks right back up in the spring. I am going to make some of these candies to take to our local Wild Ones native landscaping chapter’s November gathering and potluck
    http://stlwildones.org/calendar/wild-ones-meeting-annual-potluck-and-seed-exchange-2016-11/

  21. I”m making this recipe for party favors, but prickly pear is out of season. I found some prickly pear puree on line, but it was sweetened with sugar. When I made the recipe, I omitted 1 cup of sugar to compensate for the already sweetened puree. They taste divine and look very pretty, but are not gummy like gum drops and after leaving them out to dry for 2+ days figure they won’t get any more solid. Any suggestions? And will the end product be impacted if I double the recipe?

  22. I was so excited to find a recipe I could use for the impulse buy prickly pears. I followed the recipe to the “T.” Now 4 hours later I have “gumdrops” that set up on top, but are still semi-liquid when I try to take them out of the Pyrex. What went wrong? Other gumdrop recipes I’ve seen use pectin an gelatin or just gelatin. Was that supposed to be in this recipe as well????

  23. These sound PERFECT. I live out in Tucson AZ and we’re in the middle of a particularly robust prickly pear fruit harvest season right now– they’re everywhere, deep burgundy and fully ripe. I’ve tried a few other recipes but never found one I was fully happy with, but this sounds absolutely great. One question– have you ever made this in silicon rubber molds? I have some flower and heart ones about half an inch deep that’d be really lovely; do you think they’d work okay? And thank you for the recipe!

  24. I tried this, love the favor but after 8 hrs mine are still sticky. I can’t wait for them to set up!

  25. Hi Nicole,
    Hope you can help. Didn’t use a thermometer so boiled everything a little longer than 5 minutes. Doubled recipe and used one glass pan that was larger than 8 X 8 and a smaller metal pan for the rest. It’s been about 18 hours and neither is gelled enough to cut. I have them covered with a paper towel. Should I keep waiting, or will I need to return it to a pot and bring it to another boil? Hope to hear from you.

    Thanks for the recipe. Got some fancy papers, and tubs to put them in when finished–a gift from AZ to send to my granddaughter when she starts college in Philadelphia, PA soon.

  26. Hi! Thanks so much for this recipe. I have some gumdrops cooling right now. Because of my altitude (8000 ft), it took quite awhile (45 min) to get to 225 degrees, but we stuck it out!

    Did the gumdrops in your pictures really turn out that color with only 1/2 cup of prickly pear juice? My juice is that color, but after mixing it with the applesauce, it turned out a rich amber. I wondered if maybe I should put in more juice next time.

    Thanks!

  27. Just a thought on drying them out, if you have a “no frost” refrigerator this dries out anything, I dry herbs in mine, I just leave them in the bottom of the fridge on a polystyrene tray and they dry out faster than hung up in the kitchen, works a treat, no reason why it shouldn’t dry out the sweets I’m thinking?

  28. I hope you still check this post. I have a lot of prickly pear concentrate juice. Can I use that for this recipe. It does not have any pureed fruit in it. Just juice.
    I would love to make these and add it to my Christmas baskets!

    Kindest Regards

    Letha, from Texas

  29. I love prickly pear candy. I bought it all the time, then I couldn’t find it any more.
    It had a purple label. the candy was really soft, it was like jello.I hope to find where to get them.

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