
Walk through old Beijing hutongs on a frosty winter day, and you’ll hear the faint yell of street vendors selling tanghulu—bright red hawthorn strung on bamboo sticks, wrapped in glass-clear brittle sugar glaze that shatters with one crunch. For generations of Chinese people, tanghulu is not merely a sweet treat; it is the taste of childhood, the warmth of winter market stalls, and a little string of bittersweet memories tied to festivals, after-school errands, and family strolls.
The tart hawthorn balances thick caramelized rock sugar perfectly: crisp crack of the sugar shell gives way to soft, sour fruit flesh, a timeless flavor contrast that has stood for hundreds of years. This foolproof homemade tanghulu recipe recreates that vintage street-stall magic at home, with zero complicated tools and fail-proof sugar syrup tips to avoid sticky, chewy coating.

Ingredients (Yields 6–8 Traditional Hawthorn Tanghulu)
Main Fruit (Classic Nostalgic Choice: Hawthorn Berries)
- 300g fresh hawthorn fruits (traditional core; swap for strawberry, grape, cherry for modern variations)
- Optional: red bean paste, glutinous rice paper, white sesame seeds (old street stall fillings)
Sugar Glaze (No Corn Syrup, Authentic Rock Sugar Formula)
- 200g white granulated sugar / rock sugar (rock sugar delivers richer caramel aroma)
- 100g pure water (2:1 sugar-water ratio, critical for hard crack stage)
- ½ tsp lemon juice (prevents sugar crystallization, subtle bright flavor)
Tools
- Bamboo skewers
- Small heavy-bottom saucepan (no oil residue)
- Parchment paper / silicone mat
- Bowl of ice cold water
- Paper kitchen towels

