
Vanilla Caramel Sauce is actually really easy to make, if you follow these instructions. I’ve been seeing a lot of “easy caramel sauces” around the web lately that involve melting brown sugar in cream and reducing it. The sugar in these recipes isn’t actually caramelized. Caramelization is the flavor in “caramel sauce,” after all. You’re only getting a cream-based brown sugar syrup with these, which lacks the nuanced flavor and hint of bitterness that makes a real caramel sauce so good. Considering the time it takes to make this is about the same as making a real one, I’m left to wonder, what’s the point?
Here’s my technique for making an easy Vanilla Caramel Sauce. For your pittance of effort, you’ll be rewarded with about a cup of insanely flavorful vanilla caramel. In my case, I had about a cup in the pan, but by the time I transferred it to a jar about a quarter of it had not-so-mysteriously disappeared into my mouth:-)

The addition of a whole vanilla bean really takes this sauce to the next level. The heavenly aroma and little black vanilla seeds add some visual appeal to the rich, brown caramel. Flavor-wise, you still get the smoky-sweet caramel notes as the silky-smooth sauce dissolves on your tongue, followed by the rich cream and butter, but the real treat comes at the end with the long, lingering flavor of vanilla.
I prefer using evaporated cane juice (a.k.a. raw sugar) for the caramel because it has more flavor than the white stuff. Since unprocessed sugar will burn if you take it to the standard 350 degrees Fahrenheit for making caramel, be sure to stop it at 330 degrees F. If you’re using regular granulated sugar to make this, be sure to take it all the way up to 350 degrees for the most flavor.
This caramel sauce is delicious on apple pie , ice cream, or pancakes , and makes an incredible dipping sauce for apples, bananas, or my Apple Pie Potstickers or Banana Fritters . You can also use it to make a delicious caramel latte. Add a pinch of sea salt as you serve it for a Salted Vanilla Caramel sauce. Store it in the fridge and reheat for a few seconds in the microwave to make it pourable again.
📖 Recipe

Units
Ingredients1x2x3x
- ⅓ cup water
- 1 cup evaporated cane sugar
- 1 vanilla bean (or 2 bourbon vanilla beans)
- ¾ cup heavy cream
- 3 tablespoons cultured unsalted butter
- ⅛ teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Add the water to a stainless steel saucepan without non-stick coating (the high temperatures involved in making caramel can damage non-stick surfaces). Then carefully add the sugar into the middle of the pot making sure you don’t get sugar crystals on the sides of the pot. Don’t stir the sugar.
- Scrape the vanilla beans from the pod into a small saucepan, then add the pod along with the cream. Heat over low heat while you make the caramel.
- Cover the sugar water with a lid and bring it to a boil over high heat.
- Remove the lid and continue letting the mixture boil until you see it start to change color. Turn down the heat to medium and then insert a candy thermometer or use a digital instant read thermometer with a range that exceeds 330F to monitor the temperature until the caramel hits 330 degrees F.
- The moment the caramel hits 330 degrees F, turn off the heat and slowly start pouring the cream into the caramelized sugar while whisking. Be very careful as the caramel will bubble up furiously and it is extremely hot! Keep adding and whisking the cream into the caramel until it is all incorporated (you can discard the vanilla pod).
- Whisk in the butter and salt and let the caramel sauce cool before pouring it into a container to store.
Nutrition Facts

Vanilla Caramel Sauce
Ingredients
- ⅓ cup water
- 1 cup evaporated cane sugar
- 1 vanilla bean (or 2 bourbon vanilla beans)
- ¾ cup heavy cream
- 3 tablespoons cultured unsalted butter
- ⅛ teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Add the water to a stainless steel saucepan without non-stick coating (the high temperatures involved in making caramel can damage non-stick surfaces). Then carefully add the sugar into the middle of the pot making sure you don’t get sugar crystals on the sides of the pot. Don’t stir the sugar.
- Scrape the vanilla beans from the pod into a small saucepan, then add the pod along with the cream. Heat over low heat while you make the caramel.
- Cover the sugar water with a lid and bring it to a boil over high heat.
- Remove the lid and continue letting the mixture boil until you see it start to change color. Turn down the heat to medium and then insert a candy thermometer or use a digital instant read thermometer with a range that exceeds 330F to monitor the temperature until the caramel hits 330 degrees F.
- The moment the caramel hits 330 degrees F, turn off the heat and slowly start pouring the cream into the caramelized sugar while whisking. Be very careful as the caramel will bubble up furiously and it is extremely hot! Keep adding and whisking the cream into the caramel until it is all incorporated (you can discard the vanilla pod).
- Whisk in the butter and salt and let the caramel sauce cool before pouring it into a container to store.