Fireworks Blondies

Loading…

By Reading time

Jump to Recipe ↓

Thick, chewy blondies with colorful bursts of red, white, and blue candy in every bite earn a permanent spot at any dessert table. The top bakes up crinkly and lightly glossy, the center stays dense and buttery, and the mix-ins keep each square from feeling plain or predictable. These are the kind of bars people reach for with one hand and immediately go back for a second time.

What makes this version work is the balance of melted butter, brown sugar, and just enough flour to hold everything together without turning cakey. The extra egg yolk gives the bars that fudgy chew, while the white chocolate chips soften the sweetness and keep the sprinkles and M&Ms from being the only thing you notice. The trick is stopping as soon as the dry ingredients disappear — overmixing is what turns blondies tough instead of tender.

Below, I’ll walk through the small details that matter: how to keep the top shiny, why the pan size matters, and what to do if you want the same chewy texture with a different mix-in.

The edges set up perfectly and the center stayed chewy after cooling. The sprinkles held their color and the M&Ms gave every bite a little crunch without making the bars dry.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Like these chewy fireworks blondies? Save them to Pinterest for a pan of red, white, and blue bars with crinkly tops and candy in every bite.

Save to Pinterest

The Secret to Chewy Blondies That Stay Thick, Not Puffy

Blondies fail in a very specific way: they get overmixed, overbaked, or both. Once you stir flour too long, the batter tightens up and the bars lose that dense, fudgy bite. Once you leave them in the oven until the center looks fully done, they set into a dry cake bar instead of a chewy blondie.

This recipe avoids both problems by starting with melted butter and brown sugar, then keeping the dry mixing brief. Melted butter gives you a richer, denser crumb than creamed butter, and the extra egg yolk adds tenderness without making the bars fragile. Pull them when the top looks set and the center still has the smallest wobble; they finish setting in the pan as they cool.

What the Sprinkles, M&Ms, and White Chocolate Are Doing Here

Fireworks Blondies red white blue chewy sprinkle blondies
  • Unsalted butter — Melted butter gives the blondies their dense, chewy texture. Salted butter works in a pinch, but the bars taste cleaner and more balanced when you control the salt yourself.
  • Brown sugar — This is the backbone of the recipe. It brings moisture, chew, and that caramel-like flavor blondies need; light or dark brown sugar both work, though dark brown sugar makes the bars taste deeper and a little richer.
  • Egg plus egg yolk — The whole egg holds the batter together, and the extra yolk makes the center fudgier. Skip the yolk and the bars still bake, but they lean drier and more cookie-like.
  • Red, white, and blue M&Ms — These give you the candy crunch and the bright color bursts that survive baking. Regular chocolate candies can work, but they won’t give the same patriotic look or the same pop of color.
  • Star sprinkles — Use jimmies or sprinkles labeled bake-safe if you want the colors to stay sharp. Very soft, cheap sprinkles can bleed and streak the batter, which dulls the look of the finished bars.
  • White chocolate chips — These soften the sweetness and add creamy pockets that play well with the candy coating. If you want to swap them, chopped vanilla baking chips or even chopped white chocolate bars are the closest match.

Building the Batter So the Top Gets Crinkly

Whisk the butter and sugar until smooth

Start with melted butter and brown sugar, then whisk until the mixture looks thick, glossy, and free of dry pockets. This step matters because the sugar needs to dissolve enough to help create that shiny top. If it still looks grainy, keep whisking for another minute before adding the eggs.

Add the eggs and vanilla until glossy

Once the egg and extra yolk go in, the batter should turn smooth and a little satiny. That glossy look is what you want before the flour enters. If the mixture looks curdled, it usually just needs a few more brisk whisks to come back together.

Fold in the dry ingredients with a light hand

Add the flour, baking powder, and salt, then stir only until no dry streaks remain. This is where people ruin blondies by treating the batter like cake batter and beating it smooth. Stop as soon as the flour disappears, then fold in the candies, sprinkles, and white chocolate chips so the batter stays thick.

Bake until the center still has a tiny wobble

Spread the batter evenly into the pan and scatter extra sprinkles on top for a brighter finish. Bake until the edges are set and the center jiggles just slightly when you nudge the pan, usually around 22 to 25 minutes. If the middle looks fully firm in the oven, it will be overbaked by the time it cools.

Cool before cutting

Let the blondies cool completely in the pan before lifting them out and slicing. They firm up a lot as they cool, and cutting too early smears the soft center. A sharp knife gives the cleanest squares, especially when the candies are packed close together.

How to Adapt These Blondies Without Losing the Chewy Center

Gluten-Free Swap That Still Bakes Chewy

Use a good 1:1 gluten-free baking flour blend in place of the all-purpose flour. The bars will still hold together and stay tender, though the texture may be slightly more delicate at the edges. Don’t use almond flour alone here; it won’t give the same structure.

Dairy-Free Version

Swap the butter for a plant-based butter that behaves like sticks of butter, not a soft tub spread. The flavor stays close, but the bars may spread a touch more if the substitute has extra moisture, so line the pan well and don’t underbake them.

Different Mix-Ins, Same Base

You can swap the M&Ms and sprinkles for chopped chocolate, crushed pretzels, or mini marshmallows, but the look and crunch will change. Keep the total amount of mix-ins close to the original so the batter still bakes into thick squares instead of falling apart.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days. The bars get a little firmer in the fridge, which actually works well for clean slices.
  • Freezer: These freeze well. Wrap individual squares tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw at room temperature before serving.
  • Reheating: Warm a square for 10 to 15 seconds in the microwave if you want the white chocolate soft again. Don’t overheat them or the edges turn dry fast.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use margarine instead of butter?+

You can, but the texture won’t be as rich or chewy. Butter gives these blondies their dense crumb and better flavor, while margarine can make the bars softer and a little flatter. If you do swap it, use a stick-style margarine with a similar fat content.

How do I know when blondies are done baking?+

Look for golden edges and a center that still has the slightest wobble. The middle should not look wet, but it shouldn’t look fully firm either. Blondies finish setting as they cool, so pulling them a touch early is what keeps them chewy instead of dry.

Can I make these blondies ahead of time?+

Yes. They actually slice cleaner after a full cool-down, and the texture stays good for a couple of days at room temperature. If you want the prettiest squares, bake them the day before and cut them once they’ve fully set.

How do I keep the sprinkles from bleeding into the batter?+

Use bake-safe sprinkles and fold them in at the very end. If the batter sits around after the sprinkles go in, the colors can streak, especially with softer nonpareils. Jimmies and star sprinkles usually hold their shape and color better in the oven.

Fireworks Blondies

Fireworks blondies are thick, chewy, golden bars baked with red, white, and blue star sprinkles and M&Ms baked throughout for colorful bursts in every square. The tops bake up golden and set while the center keeps a slight jiggle for that signature chewy blondie texture.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 16 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 330

Ingredients
  

Wet ingredients
  • 0.5 cup unsalted butter Melted
  • 1 cup brown sugar Packed
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
Dry ingredients
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 0.5 tsp baking powder Note: use 1/2 tsp
  • 0.25 tsp salt
Mix-ins
  • 0.5 cup red, white, and blue M&Ms
  • 0.333 cup red and blue star sprinkles Plus extra for topping
  • 0.25 cup white chocolate chips

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and preheat
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line an 8x8 baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang for easy lifting.
Make the batter
  1. Whisk the melted butter and brown sugar together until smooth.
  2. Whisk in the large egg, egg yolk, and vanilla extract until the mixture looks glossy.
  3. Stir in the all-purpose flour, baking powder, and salt until just combined, and stop mixing as soon as no dry streaks remain.
Fold in mix-ins
  1. Fold in the red, white, and blue M&Ms, the red and blue star sprinkles, and the white chocolate chips until evenly distributed.
  2. Spread the batter evenly into the prepared pan and scatter extra red and blue star sprinkles on top.
Bake and cool
  1. Bake at 350°F for 22–25 minutes, until the top is golden and set but the center still has a very slight jiggle.
  2. Cool completely in the pan before cutting into squares so the blondies firm up as they cool.

Notes

For the chewiest texture, avoid overmixing after the flour goes in and pull the blondies when the center still jiggles slightly. Store covered at room temperature for up to 3 days or refrigerate for up to 5 days; freeze baked bars for up to 2 months. For a simple swap, use gluten-free 1:1 all-purpose flour in place of regular flour for a gluten-free version (texture may be slightly softer).

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating