Blog, Recipe Box, Sweet Stuff Recipes

Spicy Cocoa-Infused Honey Recipe

Amber Shehan August 1, 2014

Infused honey can be a truly delicious treat! My long-time readers know that I used to vend herb-infused honeys both online and at local markets. Some days, I miss making huge batches of infused honey and visiting places where I could sell them, but I just couldn’t hack it. I have this blog, a full-time…

Cocoa in Honey, Image by Modern Scribe Photography

Infused honey can be a truly delicious treat! My long-time readers know that I used to vend herb-infused honeys both online and at local markets.

Some days, I miss making huge batches of infused honey and visiting places where I could sell them, but I just couldn’t hack it. I have this blog, a full-time job, a family, chickens, puppy, and kitty who are all the most snuggly awesome things in the world, as well as a garden and a whole mess of hobbies. There are only so many hours in the day!

I do still make infused honey, just not in quantities to sell. My windows and cabinets are still full of sticky goodness stuffed with herbs from yard and market.  Preserving herbs in honey is a fun and easy way to save a harvest bounty.

One of the most popular products that I sold as Pixie’s Pocket Honey was the Dark Cocoa Honey.  When I was working the market, I had a regular customer who told me that she kept her jar of cocoa honey stashed in a drawer next to her armchair so that she could eat it by the spoonful while she watched movies in the evenings.

The cocoa honey was great on its own, but I decided to take it up a notch and created this Spicy Cocoa Honey – enjoy!


Spicy Cocoa Honey Recipe

To infuse cocoa into honey, you will need to warm the honey up…not TOO hot, but warm enough for the chocolate to melt and mix well.  I suggest that you use a double boiler, or any similar indirect heating method.

Ingredients & Supplies

  • Double-boiler, or other indirect heating method
  • 12 oz of honey (preferably raw and local – find your local beekeepers)
  • A number of small, individual jars – sanitized.  I save round horseradish jars, baby food jars, or 4oz canning jars for this purpose, myself.
  • Cocoa Nibs (buy from Amazon)
  • Cocoa Powder (buy from Amazon)
  • Bar of Dark Chocolate (At least 70% dark chocolate, and get the best quality you can stand to afford. Totally worth it! )
  • Ground cinnamon (1/4 tsp)
  • Ground ginger (1/8 tsp)
  • Ground cayenne (just a few dashes)
  • Stirring device. I prefer chopsticks to spoons, as they “take out” less honey and also feels like a wand. Win/win.
Cocoa in Honey, Image by Modern Scribe Photography
Cocoa in Honey, Image by Modern Scribe Photography

Make it!

First, bring the double boiler to a simmer, reduce the heat to low, and add the honey to the top pot. Allow it to warm, stirring gently every now and again.

While that is warming, wash and sanitize your jars by letting them soak in boiling water. Remove, dry, and set aside to let them cool off.

Add two tablespoons of dark cocoa powder, a bit at a time.  Stirring with something thin like a chopstick helps to reduce throwing the cocoa in the air and getting it everywhere.

Grate or finely chop two squares of your dark chocolate bar.

Add the chocolate to the warm honey and stir.

Add the ground cinnamon, ginger and a dash or two of cayenne. Stir it well.

Taste! You have to cool a bit first, as you can’t get the full range of flavors while it is warm. Cool off a taste by drizzling some warm honey onto a glass plate. Let it sit a moment, and then give it a try!

Adjust the flavor as you prefer. Want more chocolate? Add some!  Want more spice? Go for it!

If your jars are cool and dry, throw some cocoa nibs in the bottom.  I use enough to cover the bottom of any jar, about a tablespoon for a 4oz jar, for example.

Transfer your honey into something easy to pour from. I use a pyrex measuring cup.  Pour the warm honey over the cocoa nibs, cap the jar and set aside.  That’s it!


That’s it!  Allow the honey to cool completely before opening and using it.

As far as storing it goes – I’ve never had a jar go bad…but then again, I’ve never had a jar sit idle for longer than 6 months, tops.

Eat by the spoonful, or drizzle on ice cream. Frost a cake with it. Add to tea or hot milk for quick cocoa.  Add to cocoa or coffee if you are a serious chocolate addict!


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Amber Shehan

Hi! I'm Amber Pixie, and this is my site. Enjoy the recipes, information, posts, and please feel free to message me if you have questions!

5 Comments

  1. Andrea on September 30, 2014 at 1:36 pm

    Oh my…this sounds decadent. The addition of cayenne is brilliant! I can’t wait to make this.

    • Amber Shehan on October 1, 2014 at 1:27 pm

      Make it, eat it, and ENJOY! Then consider all of the other things you could add to it…mwa ha ha…

  2. Ann on October 1, 2014 at 6:40 pm

    I am sputtering over how good this sounds. I think I have found my Christmas gifts for this year. Thank you

  3. Janine on May 29, 2016 at 4:43 pm

    Thank you! When I licked off my chopstick, it took everything I had in me to put caps on the jars and not devour all of the scrummy bliss.

    • Amber Shehan on May 31, 2016 at 11:16 am

      Oh, YAY! 🙂 Enjoy it, it’s sooooo good. I need to make some more myself. 😀

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