Fireworks Blondies

Category:Desserts & Baking

Fireworks blondies bake up thick, chewy, and packed with little pockets of color in every bite. The edges set into a buttery, caramelized crust while the center stays soft and dense, which is exactly what you want from a good blondie. The red, white, and blue M&Ms and star sprinkles don’t just decorate the top; they melt into the batter just enough to give each square a playful, праздничный look without turning the whole pan muddy.

This version works because the batter stays simple and tight. Melted butter gives the bars that dense chew, brown sugar brings the deep caramel note, and the extra egg yolk keeps the crumb rich instead of cakey. The trick is stopping the mixing as soon as the flour disappears. Overmix it and the blondies bake up tough instead of fudgy.

Below you’ll find the small details that matter here: how long to bake for a soft center, why the blondies need to cool all the way before cutting, and how to swap the mix-ins if you want a different color scheme without losing that chewy finish.

The centers stayed chewy and the sprinkles kept their color instead of bleeding everywhere. I pulled them at 24 minutes and they set up perfectly once cooled.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Like these fireworks blondies? Save them to Pinterest for a chewy, colorful dessert with star sprinkles and M&Ms baked into every square.

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The Trick to Keeping Blondies Chewy Instead of Cake-Like

Blondies go wrong when too much air gets worked into the batter or when they stay in the oven too long. This recipe leans the other way: melted butter, a single whole egg plus an extra yolk, and just enough flour to hold everything together. That combination keeps the crumb dense and rich instead of puffy.

The pan size matters too. An 8×8 pan gives you that thicker, bakery-style square with a soft center. Spread the batter all the way to the corners so the edges bake evenly; if the middle looks a little underdone when you pull the pan, that’s good. Blondies finish setting as they cool, and cutting them early is the fastest way to get a messy, gummy center.

What Each Mix-In Is Actually Doing Here

Fireworks Blondies colorful chewy
  • Brown sugar — This is the backbone of the blondie. It gives you the caramel flavor and the chewy texture that white sugar can’t match.
  • Egg plus egg yolk — The extra yolk adds richness and helps the bars stay soft in the center. If you skip it, the blondies bake up leaner and more cake-like.
  • Vanilla extract — Blondies need vanilla the way chocolate chip cookies do. It rounds out the butter and brown sugar so the bars taste full instead of one-note.
  • Red, white, and blue M&Ms — These hold their shape and give you those obvious bursts of color in the crumb. Regular chocolate chips work in a pinch, but you lose the candy crunch and the patriotic look.
  • Star sprinkles — Use jimmies or crunchy sprinkles that can handle baking. Soft, dye-heavy sprinkles will bleed into the batter and disappear.
  • White chocolate chips — They add sweet creamy pockets that balance the brown sugar. If you want a less sweet bar, cut these back a little rather than adding more salt.

Building the Batter Without Losing the Texture

Whisking the Butter and Sugar

Start with the melted butter and brown sugar and whisk until the mixture looks smooth and glossy, with no dry sugar left clinging to the sides of the bowl. That step dissolves part of the sugar and helps create the shiny, crackly top blondies are known for. If the butter is piping hot, let it cool for a minute first so it doesn’t scramble the egg when you add it.

Bringing in the Eggs and Vanilla

Whisk in the egg, yolk, and vanilla until the batter looks thicker and a little lighter in color. It should look emulsified, not greasy. If the mixture looks separated at this point, keep whisking for another 15 to 20 seconds before adding the dry ingredients.

Folding in the Flour and Candy

Add the flour, baking powder, and salt and stir only until the last streaks disappear. Then fold in the M&Ms, sprinkles, and white chocolate chips with a spatula. Overmixing after the flour goes in is the easiest way to toughen blondies, and heavy-handed stirring can also smash the sprinkles and tint the batter.

Baking to the Right Center

Scrape the batter into the prepared pan, press it into the corners, and scatter extra sprinkles over the top. Bake until the edges are set and the center still has the tiniest wobble when you nudge the pan. If the top is getting dark before the middle is done, your oven is running hot; pull the pan and let carryover heat finish the job.

Different Sprinkle Colors for Other Holidays

Swap the red, white, and blue sprinkles and M&Ms for colors that match the occasion. The texture stays the same, but the look changes completely, which makes this an easy base recipe for birthdays, school parties, or any holiday table.

Gluten-Free Blondies

Use a good 1:1 gluten-free flour blend in place of the all-purpose flour. The bars will still be chewy, but they may need an extra minute or two in the oven because many gluten-free blends hold more moisture.

Dairy-Free Version

Use a plant-based butter that melts cleanly and keep the rest of the method the same. Skip the white chocolate chips unless you have a dairy-free version on hand, because standard white chocolate won’t fit this swap.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days. The blondies stay chewy, though the sprinkles soften a little over time.
  • Freezer: They freeze well. Wrap individual squares tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw at room temperature.
  • Reheating: Warm a square for 10 to 12 seconds in the microwave if you want the white chocolate soft again. Heat longer than that and the edges turn dry fast.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use regular chocolate chips instead of M&Ms?+

Yes. The blondies will still bake up chewy and rich, but you’ll lose the colorful candy look and a little of the crisp candy shell texture. If you want the same effect, use a mix of chips and a handful of chopped candy pieces.

How do I know when blondies are done baking?+

The top should look set and lightly golden, and the center should still have a slight wobble when you tap the pan. If a toothpick comes out with a few moist crumbs, that’s the sweet spot. A clean toothpick usually means they’ve gone a little too far.

Can I make these blondies ahead of time?+

Yes, and they actually slice cleaner after a full cool-down. Bake them a day ahead, keep them covered at room temperature, and cut them just before serving. The texture stays chewy instead of drying out.

How do I keep the sprinkles from bleeding into the batter?+

Use sturdier baking sprinkles, not the soft kind that melt easily. Fold them in at the very end and stop mixing as soon as they’re distributed. A little color streaking is normal, but the batter shouldn’t turn pink or blue.

Can I double this recipe for a 9×13 pan?+

Yes. Double everything and bake in a lined 9×13 pan, checking a few minutes early because the edges can set faster in a larger pan. You want the center just barely soft so the squares stay thick and chewy.

Fireworks Blondies

Fireworks blondies are thick, chewy, golden squares baked with red, white, and blue star sprinkles and M&Ms for bold 4th of July color in every bite. This easy blondie recipe bakes until set on top with a faint jiggle in the center for that signature chewy texture.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 16 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 310

Ingredients
  

Wet base
  • 0.5 cup unsalted butter Melted.
  • 1 cup brown sugar Packed.
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
Dry ingredients
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 0.5 tsp baking powder
  • 0.25 tsp salt
Mix-ins
  • 0.5 cup red, white, and blue M&Ms
  • 0.33 cup red and blue star sprinkles Plus extra for topping.
  • 0.25 cup white chocolate chips

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep the pan and oven
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line an 8x8 baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang for easy lifting later.
Make the blondie batter
  1. Whisk melted butter and brown sugar together until smooth.
  2. Add the large egg, egg yolk, and vanilla extract, then whisk until glossy.
  3. Stir in all-purpose flour, baking powder, and salt until just combined—do not overmix.
  4. Fold in the red, white, and blue M&Ms, red and blue star sprinkles, and white chocolate chips.
Bake
  1. Spread the batter evenly into the prepared pan and scatter extra red and blue star sprinkles on top.
  2. Bake for 22–25 minutes at 350°F until the top is golden and set but the center still has a very slight jiggle.
  3. Cool the blondies completely in the pan before cutting into squares, since they firm up as they cool.

Notes

For the chewiest centers, pull the blondies when the middle still jiggles slightly—residual heat will finish the bake. Store airtight at room temperature up to 3 days or in the fridge up to 5 days; freeze baked squares up to 2 months. For a gluten-free swap, use a 1:1 gluten-free all-purpose flour blend (baking powder and amounts stay the same).

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