Homemade fondant made with marshmallows covers cakes without cracking, tearing, or elephant skin, and it actually tastes good, which is more than you can say for most store-bought versions. I have been making this LMF recipe since 2010 and it is the same fondant I used on every wedding cake and tiered cake throughout my professional career. Pair it with a layer of white chocolate ganache underneath for the smoothest possible surface before you cover.

Quick Glance: Fondant Recipe
- Recipe Name: Homemade Fondant Recipe (LMF)
- Why You'll Love It: Stretchy, smooth, and actually delicious, this marshmallow fondant covers cakes without cracking, tearing, or elephant skin and costs a fraction of store-bought.
- Time and Difficulty: 10 minutes | Beginner-friendly
- Main Ingredients: Marshmallows, powdered sugar, vegetable shortening, store-bought fondant.
- Method: Melt marshmallows, mix with powdered sugar and shortening, knead in store-bought fondant until smooth and stretchy.
- Texture and Flavor: Soft, pliable, and taffy-like with a light, sweet vanilla flavor, nothing like the rubbery, bitter fondant you get from the grocery store
- Quick Tip: Always use cheap store-brand marshmallows - name brands like Jet-Puff are too dense and dry.
Jump to:
Why This Fondant Recipe Works
Marshmallows are made of sugar and gelatin, which gives LMF its base elasticity and holds everything together. The sugar keeps it sweet and pliable, while the gelatin is what allows it to stretch without breaking. The problem with plain marshmallow fondant is that marshmallow alone does not have enough elasticity to cover a cake cleanly, which is where most homemade fondant recipes fall short.
Adding a small amount of store-bought fondant is what separates LMF from every other marshmallow fondant recipe. Store-bought fondant contains additional gums and stabilizers that give the finished batch a level of stretch and smoothness that marshmallow fondant alone simply cannot achieve. You are essentially using a cheap product to upgrade your homemade batch into something far better than either one would be on its own.
Store-brand marshmallows work better than name brands like Jet-Puff because they have a softer, airier texture that melts down smoothly and incorporates easily. Name brands tend to be denser and drier, which makes the fondant stiffer and harder to work with. This is one of those rare cases where the cheaper option genuinely produces a better result.
Vegetable shortening coats the sugar molecules and slows down moisture loss, which means your fondant stays soft and workable longer without cracking or developing elephant skin on your cake. Warmth is also essential. Heat relaxes the gelatin structure and makes the dough stretchy and forgiving. Cold fondant tightens up and tears, which is why you always knead it well and reheat before using.
My marshmallow fondant has been my secret weapon for years, and now it can be yours, too.
Fondant Ingredients
Making LMF only requires five ingredients, and most of them are easy to find at any grocery or craft store. Check the notes at the bottom of the recipe card for brand recommendations and substitutions.

- Marshmallows: Marshmallows are the base of this recipe and do most of the heavy lifting. They are made of sugar and gelatin, which gives the fondant its soft, pliable structure and natural elasticity. Store-brand marshmallows like WinCo, Hy-Top, Aldi, or Campfire work best because they are softer and melt down more smoothly than denser name-brand options like Jet-Puff.
- Powdered Sugar: Powdered sugar is what gives the fondant its body and workable texture. It absorbs into the melted marshmallow mixture and firms everything up into a dough you can knead and roll. You may not need every last bit depending on your climate, so add it gradually and stop when the dough feels smooth and slightly tacky.
- Store-Bought Fondant: This is the ingredient that makes LMF different from every other marshmallow fondant recipe. Adding Wilton or Satin Ice fondant introduces extra gums and stabilizers that dramatically improve stretch and smoothness. You are essentially using a small amount of a cheap product to upgrade your whole batch into something far better than either one would be on its own.
- Vegetable Shortening: Shortening coats the sugar molecules and slows down moisture loss, keeping the fondant soft and pliable. It also lubricates your hands and work surface during kneading so the dough does not stick or tear. Do not substitute butter here because the water content in butter can affect the texture.
- Warm Water: A small amount of warm water helps release the melted marshmallows from the bowl and loosens the mixture just enough to incorporate the powdered sugar smoothly. If you are making a dark-colored fondant, replace one tablespoon of water with one tablespoon of gel food color to get a head start on the color during mixing.
How To Make Fondant Step-By-Step
Before you start, coat your hands and work surface lightly with vegetable shortening. This prevents sticking during kneading and makes the whole process much easier to manage.

- Sift your powdered sugar into a large bowl and set it aside. Sifting prevents lumps in the finished fondant, which can show through on a cake.

- Place your vegetable shortening into the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the dough hook. You do not need to mix it yet, it will incorporate on its own once the marshmallows go in.

- Heat your marshmallows in a microwave-safe bowl in 30-second bursts, stirring between each burst, until they are completely melted and glossy. They should look like a thick, sticky white lava.
- Pour your warm water over the top to help release them from the bowl, then pour everything into the mixer bowl with the shortening.

- Immediately add the melted marshmallows to the stand mixer with the vegetable shortening and the hook attachment.
- Turn the mixer to the lowest speed and begin adding your powdered sugar one cup at a time. It will look rough and shaggy at first; that is completely normal. Keep adding sugar and mixing until the dough is pulling away from the sides of the bowl and looks smooth and slightly sticky, about 5 minutes.

- Coat your fingers in shortening and pull the fondant off the dough hook. Scrape the mixture out of the bowl and into your remaining powdered sugar.
This is also the point you would add in food coloring if you want to color your fondant.

- Microwave your store-bought fondant for 30 to 40 seconds until it is warm and very soft.
- Scoop the fondant mixture out of the stand mixer bowl onto your workbench with extra powdered sugar to prevent sticking.

- Knead everything together until the powdered sugar and store-bought fondant are fully incorporated. You may not need every last bit of powdered sugar, stop when the dough feels smooth, pliable, and slightly tacky but not sticky. If it feels too stiff, microwave the whole batch for 20 to 30 seconds to soften it back up.

- Once combined, pull the fondant like taffy, stretching it out and folding it back on itself repeatedly. When it is ready, it will stretch several inches without tearing and feel silky and elastic. If it is still tearing, it needs more heat, microwave for 30 seconds and keep pulling.
To store: Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and place in a zip-lock bag at room temperature. LMF will keep for several months. Always reheat and knead well before using again.
Before applying fondant, frost your cake with a layer of white chocolate ganache - it sets firm enough to give the fondant a perfectly smooth surface to adhere to.

Common Mistakes To Avoid
- Using name-brand marshmallows. Brands like Jet-Puff are denser and drier than store-brand marshmallows, which makes the finished fondant stiffer and harder to work with. Stick to WinCo, Hy-Top, Aldi, or Campfire for the best texture and the lowest cost.
- Not heating the marshmallows enough. The marshmallows need to be completely melted and glossy before they go into the mixer. If there are any unmelted lumps, they will create hard spots in your fondant that show up on the surface of your cake. Heat in short bursts and stir between each one until the mixture is fully smooth.
- Adding the powdered sugar too fast. Dumping in all the sugar at once causes it to clump and mix unevenly. Add it one cup at a time on the lowest mixer speed and let it fully incorporate before adding more.
- Skipping the store-bought fondant. This is the step most people want to leave out, but it is the one that makes LMF work. Without it, the fondant will not have enough elasticity and will be more likely to tear when covering a cake. Do not skip it.
- Using cold fondant. Cold fondant is stiff and will crack or tear as soon as you start rolling it. Always microwave and knead your fondant thoroughly before using it, even if you just made it and it has cooled down. It should feel warm and stretchy before it goes anywhere near a cake.
- Covering a warm cake. The cake and its buttercream or ganache coating need to be fully chilled and firm before you cover it with fondant. A soft surface will not support the weight of the fondant and you will get bumps, bulges, and sliding.
- Rolling the fondant too thin or too thick. Too thin and it will tear during application. Too thick and it will look heavy and be hard to get sharp edges. Aim for about ⅛ inch, which gives you enough strength to cover the cake without the fondant looking clunky.
- Using too much food coloring. Liquid food coloring adds too much moisture and can make your fondant sticky and pocked with tiny holes. Always use gel food coloring, and for deep colors like red or black, add the color during the mixing process rather than kneading it in afterward.
If you want something more sculptural, try my modeling chocolate recipe instead, which holds fine details much better for sculpting.
Fondant Recipe FAQs
I know it seems counterintuitive, but this is the step that makes LMF better than any other marshmallow fondant recipe out there. Marshmallow fondant on its own lacks the elasticity you need to cover a cake cleanly. Store-bought fondant contains gums and stabilizers that dramatically improve how the finished batch stretches and handles. By adding it to your homemade batch you are essentially upgrading a cheap, average product into something far better. Think of it like adding a small amount of high-quality chocolate to a basic sauce. It changes everything.
Nine times out of ten, tearing and cracking come down to temperature. Cold fondant is stiff and unforgiving, so always microwave it until it is warm and knead it well before you start rolling. If it is still tearing after that, it may need more shortening worked in. Cracking on the cake usually means the buttercream underneath was too soft or the fondant was rolled too thin. Aim for ⅛ inch thickness and make sure your cake is fully chilled before covering.
Wrap your fondant tightly in plastic wrap, place it in a zip-lock bag, and store it at room temperature. Do not refrigerate it. The moisture in the fridge will make it sticky and affect the texture. Stored properly, LMF will keep for several months. Before using it again, microwave it for 20 to 30 seconds and knead it well until it is warm and stretchy.
Always use gel food coloring, not liquid. Liquid coloring adds too much moisture and can make your fondant sticky or pocked with tiny holes. For light pastel colors, you can knead the color in after the fondant is made. For deep or dark colors like red or black, add the gel color during the mixing process while the marshmallows are still warm. This gives the color time to distribute evenly and prevents you from overworking the fondant trying to knead in a large amount of color later.
Yes, you can make LMF by hand, but it is a workout. Mix the melted marshmallows and shortening together in a large bowl, then add the powdered sugar gradually and knead it in with your hands. Make sure your hands are coated in vegetable shortening throughout the process. It will take about 10 to 15 minutes of kneading to get the same smooth, stretchy result you would get from a mixer.
Yes! My friend Danette developed a version called DKF (Danette's Kosher Fondant) that uses marshmallow fluff instead of regular marshmallows, making it gelatin-free and kosher. It works just as well as LMF and follows a nearly identical process.
More Cake Decorating Recipes
Ready To Master Cake Decorating?
Join Sugar Geek University and learn professional techniques through detailed cake decorating courses, tutorials, and real kitchen demonstrations by
award-winning cake decorator, Liz Marek.

Recipe

Ingredients
Ingredients
- 32 oz powdered sugar sifted (also called icing sugar, confectionary sugar)
- 16 oz marshmallows WinCo, Hy-Top, Aldi, and Campfire brands work best
- 20 oz Wilton fondant Satin Ice fondant will also work
- 2 tablespoon warm water For dark colors, use 1 tablespoon warm water and 1 tablespoon food color gel
- 4 oz vegetable shortening Also called white vegetable fat, trex, copha
Instructions
How to make fondant
- Sift the powdered sugar and set aside in a large bowl.
- Place vegetable shortening in a stand mixer bowl.
- Heat marshmallows for 30 seconds in the microwave on high (or on stove top). Stir with spoon.
- Place marshmallows back into microwave and heat for another 30 seconds (or on stove top). Stir with spoon.
- Heat marshmallows (last time!) for 30 seconds in the microwave (or on stove top).Marshmallows should be ooey-gooey at this point and ready to be added to the mixer bowl. Pour your water on top of the marshmallows to get them to release from the sides of the bowl. Pour into bowl with vegetable shortening
- Turn stand mixer on lowest setting (setting 1 on Kitchenaid stand mixers) with dough hook attachmentBegin adding in the powdered sugar one cup at a time.
- Don't stop mixing until it's sticking to the sides of the bowl and looks smooth. Add in another cup of powdered sugar.
- Pull fondant off the dough hook attachment by putting vegetable shortening on your fingers and pulling it off the hook.
- Take the soft mixture out of the bowl and put it into the large bowl with the rest of the powdered sugar.
- Warm the Wilton fondant in the microwave for 30-40 seconds and add to the large bowl with the powdered sugar and marshmallow mix.
- Knead until powdered sugar, marshmallows and Wilton fondant is mostly incorporated. You may not use all of the powdered sugar depending on your climate and that is completely fine.
- Pull fondant like taffy until it is stretchy and smooth. If there are still rough spots or it's tearing, put everything back in the microwave for 30-40 seconds to make it really hot and pull like taffy with shortening on your hands until it pulls without breaking
- Store in a zip-lock bag at room temperature. Fondant will keep for months in a zip-lock bag. To use again, reheat and knead well until stretchy before each use. You can add color as desired but for dark colors, you should add them during the mixing process or you could get a sticky mess.
Video
Notes
- To store: Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and seal in a zip-lock bag at room temperature. Do not refrigerate. LMF keeps for several months stored this way.
- To reuse: Microwave for 20 to 30 seconds and knead well with shortening-coated hands until warm and stretchy before rolling.
- If your fondant is too stiff: Microwave the whole batch for 20 to 30 seconds and pull it like taffy with shortening on your hands until it loosens up.
- If your fondant is too sticky: Knead in a little more powdered sugar a tablespoon at a time until it reaches the right consistency.
- For dark colors like black or red: Add gel food coloring during the mixing process while the marshmallows are still warm for the most even color distribution.
- Coverage: One batch covers approximately a 10-8-6 inch tiered cake when rolled to ⅛ inch thickness.











Beata says
This totally works and it wasn’t as hard as I expected! I did use Kraft jet puffed mini marshmallows bc I already had them at home. Not sure where I could find Winco brand marshmallows so I can’t compare the two. Idk if it’s the type of marshmallows I used but I did find the fondant to be a little dry. After mixing the marshmallow fondant with the premade (Wilton) fondant I found that it would tear easily when I tried to stretch it so I just kept dipping my fingers into shortening and working it in until I was able to stretch the mix like “taffy”. It honestly turned out even better than I expected (this was my first time working with fondant as well as making it!) And flavor wise this really is actually pretty tasty...I mean I’m not going to make a batch just to snack on but it’s the tastiest fondant I’ve ever tried.
Tevia says
First time using fondant or making fondant for that matter... this recipe was SO easy and I was so proud of myself for venturing out of my comfort zone!
You make everything look so easy but you also show how to do things step by step which I love! Thanks for this recipe! I’m a new fan of your shows! LOVE Sugar Geek!
Dominique says
I found this recipe last night and it’s definitely the best fondant recipe ever! Thank you for sharing!
Suzi Pintarelli says
Can I color the fondant after it’s been made (making a scrabble cake and need many colors)
Sugar Geek Show says
absolutely!
Joy says
Hi,
I have a KitchenAid, but no dough hook. Is that okay?
Elizabeth Marek says
I wouldn't recommend using a paddle attachment because it can burn out your motor
Emily says
Hi,
Love this recipe but it's been many years since I made a worthy cake. But now very excitedly planning my daughter's first birthday cake and wondering if could I use this recipe to make fondant animals and maybe a palm tree or two? (I've always used sugarpaste to make leaves in the past but she will undoubtedly try and eat them so thought fondant might be better!)
Thanks
Lisa A Costa says
I do not ever bake cakes nor do I decorate them, but I had a child meet a huge milestone in her life, and decided she needed a cake. No bakery could accommodate me, so I set out to make this cake that I had in my mind. I dont have a stand mixer vutnhad my hands and a pizza cutter.I used your recipe for the fondant and it turned out beautifully. I am so pleased, and I know she will be shocked that I made it myself. Thank you for your help!!
Anika says
Probably dumb question but can this marshmallow fondant be used to make fondant accents as well or is it mainly to cover cakes? Wasn’t sure if it would dry hard like store bought fondant (specifically making things like mermaid tails, unicorn horns, ears and little dinosaurs...etc).
Elizabeth Marek says
If you want to sculpt with it you will need to add tylose powder or cmc to make it harden
CAROL says
PLEASE HELP, THIS IS THE ONLY FONDANT I USE, I LIVE IN THE SOUTH AND IT'S HOT, SO I USE A ALL SHORTENING BASE BUTTERCREAM (SWEETEX), PLEASE TELL ME WHAT I DID WRONG, I FOLLOWED YOU INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO FONDANT A CAKE USING THE UP-SIDE DOWN METHOD, I DID USE ACRYLIC CAKE DISC THAT I WATCHED YOU USE IN ONE OF YOUR TUTORIALS I USED THE (.25) AND I WAS PROUD OF MY SELF, I PLACED THE CAKE IN A BOX COVERED,IN A COOL ROOM FOR THE DELEIVERY THE NEXT MORNING, OVER NITE THE CAKE STARTED SAGGING AND LENDING TO ONE SIDE, I PANICKED STRAIGHTEN THE CAKE UP AND PLACED IN BACK IN THE FRIDGE, UNTIL IT WAS FIRM. THIS WEEK I HAVE ANOTHER CAKE, YOU HAVE REALLY CHANGED THE MINDS OF PEOPLE WHO HATE FONDANT, BECAUSE NOW THEY LOVE THIS FONDANT, THIS CELEBRATION WILL BE ON A BOAT RIDE, TRAVELING A LITTLE OVER ONE HOUR TO GET TO THE BOAT. SHOULD I NOT BE USING ALL SHORTENING???? SHOULD I NOT LEAVE THE FONDANT CAKE OUT OVERNITE?? PLEASE RESPOND!!!!!, THANK YOU, YOU MAY HAVE GOTTEN THIS 3 TIMES, MY COMPUTER KEEPS ACTING CRAZY.
THANK YOU AGAIN!!!!, YOU ARE TRUELY A BLESSING TO THE SMALL HOME BAKERS!!!
Emily Jung says
Hi! Make sure to always refrigerate your cakes, even when they have fondant on them. This will keep them safe while traveling. Check out my how to make your first cake blog post for more information!
CAROL says
I Desperately Need Help!!!!!, I Only Use Your Fondant, I Use All Shortening Buttercream because i live in the south and it works, I don't do very many fondant cakes but follow your channel and Must Say That i have learned a whole lot, Thank You So Much!!!!!, Last week i covered a cake using your upside down method did everything from start to finish & everything was perfect and beautiful, I left the cake covered in a box on my table in a cool room over nite to make the delivery the next morning, it started shagging to , I know this has nothing to do with your fondant, It has to do with me, What Did I do Wrong, Please Help Me, I Have A Order Coming Up for the week, the customer will pick it up on Saturday morning, she will be traveling at least 1 hour and half to the boat and the party will be celebrated on the boat, please help!!!!, Should i not be using all shortening buttercream??, I use sweet-ex, Please Help!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sugar Geek Show says
Hi! Thanks for all your support 🙂 Make sure to always chill your cakes in the fridge after applying fondant to prevent them from sagging. If you're nervous about the frosting, Italian buttercream is a very stable frosting. You can always replace half the butter with shortening and it should work just fine under fondant.
Claire Wynne says
Hi , I would love to make your marshmallow fondant , however I live in the uk and we don’t have shortening, do you know what I could use as a substitute... would so love to try this as my daughter doesn’t like regular bought fondant but I’m sure she would love this.
Thank you 😊
Elizabeth Marek says
TREX is virtually the same thing in this case
Joy says
This is the third time I’m using this recipe and it always comes out great
Becks E says
It just doesn't get better than this... Tastes amazing wirks beautifully..
Nancy says
First time using fondant and it went perfect! One question, if I made my cake today but am not serving it for a couple days. How should i cover and store the cake?
Elizabeth Marek says
In the fridge
Christina says
Hey Liz! If I'm not able to get the store bought fondant, is it ok to make it without? Also, would that alter the amount of ingredients. Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom and technique!
Elizabeth Marek says
This recipe won't work without the storebought fondant