Yes, you can melt marshmallow and chocolate in 10–20 seconds in a microwave, then stack on graham crackers and eat right away.
S’mores are a three-part snack: graham crackers, chocolate, and a marshmallow that turns stretchy and sweet when it warms up. A campfire does that job with steady heat. A microwave does it with bursts of energy that can heat unevenly. That difference is why microwave s’mores can turn out dreamy or turn into a sticky puddle.
This page walks you through a method that stays clean, keeps the crackers crisp, and gives you control over melt, puff, and chew. You’ll get timing ranges, setup tips, and fixes for the usual fails like scorched sugar and runaway marshmallow.
Microwave s’mores basics
The microwave is great at melting, not browning. You’ll get soft marshmallow and glossy chocolate, but you won’t get that toasted top you see at a fire. If you want a hint of toast, you can finish with a broiler or a kitchen torch, yet the core melt can still happen in the microwave.
What you need
- 2 graham cracker squares (or 4 small rectangles)
- 1 to 2 squares of chocolate (milk, dark, or a thin chocolate bar)
- 1 large marshmallow (or 3–4 minis)
- Microwave-safe plate
- Parchment paper (nice to have for easy lift-off)
What the microwave changes
Marshmallow is mostly sugar and air. When it heats, the air expands and the sugar softens. Chocolate melts fast, then keeps getting hotter even after it looks melted. That’s why short bursts work better than one long blast.
How to make s’mores in a microwave step by step
Can You Make Smores In Microwave? Yes, and the trick is treating it like a mini melt, not a full cook. Build in a way that keeps the crackers out of the blast until the end.
Step 1: Set up the plate
Line a microwave-safe plate with parchment. Place the marshmallow on the plate by itself. Put the chocolate on a separate corner of the plate, not under the marshmallow.
Step 2: Heat in short bursts
Start with 10 seconds on High for 1000–1200W microwaves. If your microwave is lower power, start at 12–15 seconds. Watch through the door.
- If the marshmallow just starts to swell, stop and move to the next step.
- If it doubles in size, stop right away. It will keep expanding for a moment.
- If it looks like it might spill, stop. Let it sit 10 seconds before you touch it.
Step 3: Let it rest
Give it 10–15 seconds to settle. This pause evens out heat and makes the marshmallow less likely to collapse the second you move it. Uneven heating is a real thing in microwaves, so letting food stand is a standard microwave practice. You’ll see that advice echoed in USDA guidance on cooking with microwave ovens.
Step 4: Build fast
Put one graham cracker on the counter. Add the chocolate. Slide the softened marshmallow onto the chocolate with a spoon or butter knife. Top with the second graham cracker and press gently until you feel the marshmallow grab the edges.
Step 5: Do a final 5-second touch if needed
If the chocolate still feels firm, microwave the open-faced stack (bottom cracker + chocolate + marshmallow) for 5 seconds, then cap it with the top cracker. This keeps the top cracker from turning chewy.
Timing ranges that keep sugar from scorching
Microwaves vary a lot. Plate size, turntable motion, and snack size all change the result. Use these ranges as a starting point, then adjust by 2–3 seconds at a time.
Wattage and marshmallow size
- 1200W: 8–12 seconds for 1 large marshmallow
- 1000W: 10–15 seconds for 1 large marshmallow
- 700–900W: 12–20 seconds for 1 large marshmallow
- Mini marshmallows: 6–10 seconds for a small pile
Stop early when you’re learning your microwave. A marshmallow that looks “not done” can still be plenty gooey once you press it into the crackers.
Choices that change texture and mess
The same three ingredients can eat very different based on small choices. The chart below shows what’s worth tweaking when you want a cleaner bite, a softer bite, or a bigger melt.
| Choice | What it changes | Try this |
|---|---|---|
| Chocolate thickness | Thin pieces melt fast; thick squares stay firm longer | Use a thin chocolate bar for smooth melt |
| Chocolate type | Dark melts a bit slower; milk turns runny sooner | Mix milk + dark for balance |
| Marshmallow count | More marshmallow = bigger spill risk | Start with 1 large, then scale up |
| Power level | Lower power heats gentler and reduces blowouts | Try 70% power for 15–25 seconds |
| Rest time | Short rest keeps it puffy; longer rest makes it denser | Rest 10–15 seconds, then assemble |
| Plate surface | Hotter plates keep melting after the timer ends | Use a room-temp plate |
| Assembly order | Heating with crackers can soften them | Heat marshmallow alone, stack last |
| Parchment | Prevents sticky cleanup and helps lift | Cut a small square and reuse it |
Food and microwave safety checks before you start
Most s’mores mishaps are burns, not food spoilage. Hot sugar sticks to skin. Melted chocolate can scald. A few checks keep snack time calm.
Use microwave-safe gear
Skip metal. Skip plates with metallic trim. Use glass or microwave-safe ceramic. Container choice can change heat behavior, and it’s the same deal for a sweet snack.
Keep the door seals in good shape
If the door is bent, the latch is loose, or the seal is damaged, get it checked or replace the unit. The FDA explains how microwave ovens are built and regulated on its microwave ovens page, including why the door and interlocks matter.
Know what microwave energy does
Microwave energy does not make food radioactive. It stops when the oven stops. The EPA’s overview of non-ionizing radiation in microwave ovens lays that out in plain language.
Ways to get a toasted top without wrecking the center
If you miss the toasted flavor, you can add it after the microwave melt. You’re chasing browning, so you need dry heat. Keep it brief so the sugar doesn’t burn.
Broiler finish
Place the microwaved marshmallow on a sheet pan and broil for 10–30 seconds. Stay in front of the oven. It can go from pale to black fast.
Torch finish
A small kitchen torch browns the outside in seconds. Rotate the marshmallow so it colors evenly, then build the s’more.
Skillet press
Heat a dry skillet on medium. Build the s’more, then press it in the skillet for 10–15 seconds per side. The crackers toast a bit and the chocolate warms further.
Fixes for common microwave s’mores problems
If your first try goes sideways, you’re not alone. Microwave heating can spike fast, and sugar is unforgiving. Use this table to match the symptom to a fix.
| What went wrong | Why it happened | What to do next time |
|---|---|---|
| Marshmallow exploded | Too much time or too high power | Cut time by 3–5 seconds or use 70% power |
| Marshmallow turned hard | Overheated sugar set as it cooled | Stop when it just swells; rest, then press |
| Chocolate stayed in a lump | Piece too thick or heat focused away from it | Use thinner chocolate or do a 5-second open-face touch |
| Chocolate turned grainy | Overheated past its smooth melt stage | Heat in 5-second bursts and stir if melted in a bowl |
| Crackers got chewy | Crackers heated with steam from marshmallow | Heat marshmallow alone; stack at the end |
| Sticky plate cleanup | Sugar cooled on the plate surface | Use parchment; soak plate in hot water right after |
| Burn smell in microwave | Sugar dripped and charred | Wipe the cavity once cool; next time stop earlier |
Make-ahead and crowd tips
Microwave s’mores shine for one or two servings. For a group, the goal is steady output, not trying to heat ten marshmallows at once.
Set up an assembly line
Lay out crackers and chocolate on a tray. Heat marshmallows one at a time, then slide them onto waiting stacks. People can press their own tops, which cuts sticky fingers for the cook.
Batch marshmallows the clean way
If you want to heat a few at once, space them far apart on parchment and use 50–60% power. Heat in 10-second bursts, checking after each burst. Lower power buys you control.
Try a mug s’more for a forkable version
Break one graham cracker into a mug, add chocolate pieces, then top with mini marshmallows. Microwave 15–25 seconds, then stir. This turns into a warm dessert cup with less spill risk.
A simple checklist you can screenshot
- Use a plain microwave-safe plate and parchment.
- Heat marshmallow alone in 10-second bursts.
- Stop when it starts to swell, not when it looks “done.”
- Rest 10–15 seconds.
- Assemble fast: cracker + chocolate + marshmallow + cracker.
- If chocolate is firm, do a 5-second open-face touch.
- Let it cool 20–30 seconds before the first bite.
If you keep burning sugar or you see sparks, pause and reset. The NFPA’s microwave oven safety tips cover what to do if something catches fire in a microwave: keep the door closed and shut the unit off.
References & Sources
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Cooking with Microwave Ovens.”Guidance on microwave-safe containers, standing time, and general microwave cooking practices.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Microwave Ovens.”Consumer-facing overview of microwave oven regulation, door interlocks, and radiation leakage limits.
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).“Non-Ionizing Radiation Used in Microwave Ovens.”Explains that microwave energy is non-ionizing and does not make food radioactive.
- National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).“Microwave Oven Safety.”Practical tips on safe microwave use and what to do if a microwave fire starts.