The Most Common Types of Molasses and How to Use Them (2024)

Christine Gallary

Christine GallaryFood Editor-at-Large

Christine graduated from Le Cordon Bleu in Paris, France, and she has worked at Cook's Illustrated and CHOW.com. She lives in San Francisco and loves teaching cooking classes. Follow her latest culinary escapades on Instagram.

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updated Aug 5, 2022

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The Most Common Types of Molasses and How to Use Them (1)

When it’s time for fall and winter baking, dark, sticky molasses gets pulled out from the back of my cabinet. There’s no replacement for the sweet, almost smoky flavors it adds to cookies and cakes, like chewy molasses cookies and dark molasses gingerbread cake, plus it plays oh-so-nicely with winter spices like cinnamon, ginger, and nutmeg. Molasses comes in different forms and each has its taste, use, and way of making it.

Molasses labeling can be a bit confusing, so here’s a guide to the three most common varieties.

How Molasses Is Made

The most common forms of molasses are made from either sugar cane or sugar beet juice which is boiled down to a syrup. Sugar crystals are extracted from the syrup, and the remaining dark liquid is molasses. Molasses can also be made from sorghum, pomegranate, carob, and dates.

Usulphured vs. Sulphured Molasses

Sulphured molasses is molasses that has been treated with sulphur dioxide as a preservative. However, since the sulphuring process can leave the molasses with a strong pronounced chemical flavor and is less sweet, most commercial molasses is unsulphured.

Light Molasses

  • Other names: Barbados, first, mild, sweet
  • How it’s made: Light molasses is made from the first boiling of the cane or beet juice.
  • How it tastes: It is the lightest in color, sweetest, and mildest in flavor.
  • How to use it: This is the most commonly sold molasses, mostly used in baking. Light molasses helps to make cookies softer and bread crustier, and it can also be used in marinades and sauces.

Dark Molasses

  • Other names: full, robust, second
  • How it’s made: Dark molasses comes from the second boiling of the cane or beet juice.
  • How it tastes: Thicker, less sweet, darker, and stronger in flavor than light molasses.
  • How to use it: It can generally be used in place of light molasses and is what gives gingerbread cookies their distinct color and flavor.

Blackstrap Molasses

  • How it’s made: Blackstrap is made from the third and final boiling of the molasses. It is considered the healthiest of all molasses since it retains the most vitamins and minerals.
  • How it tastes: It is the thickest and darkest in color, and also the least sweet with a pronounced bitter flavor.
  • How to use it: Since it is bitter, only use blackstrap molasses if a recipe specifically calls for it. Do not substitute it in recipes that call for light or dark molasses. Blackstrap molasses is great in savory dishes liked baked beans and pulled pork.

Recipes with Molasses

The Most Common Types of Molasses and How to Use Them (2024)
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