Copycat Root Beer Float Bars Recipe That Tastes Like the Original

Make the popular Trader Joe’s Root Beer Float Pieces at home! This copycat candy recipe combines vanilla sandwich cookies, popping candy, and root beer coating to produce a homemade candy that tastes just as delicious as the original.

White bowl of Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces, with one cut open on top.

🍻 Make Root Beer Float Pieces at Home

If you love surprising flavor combinations, these Root Beer Float Pieces are for you. Inspired by Trader Joe’s version, this copycat recipe blends chopped vanilla sandwich cookies with popping candy and a smooth root beer–flavored coating for a crunchy, fizzy treat.

Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces scattered on white parchment, with one cut open to show the inside.

The texture is delightfully confusing—in the best way. A cookie bite coated in creamy, root-beer flavored confection, then punctuated by the crackle of popping candy. I tested this recipe several times to get the coating, cookie-to-candy ratio, and popping effect right. The result is a homemade version that rivals the store-bought treat.

Tray holding two types of Root Beer Float Pieces - homemade and store-bought.
Homemade on left, store-bought on right

Making these at home gives you fresher texture and stronger popping action, since the popping candy hasn’t been jostled in a bag for weeks. You will need a few specialty ingredients (popping candy and flavoring), but the process is straightforward and very rewarding.

Before you start:

  1. You’ll need a few specialty items listed in the Ingredients section below. Plan ahead to order unflavored popping candy and any oil-based colorings or flavorings you prefer.
  2. Making these at home isn’t necessarily cheaper than buying them ready-made—this is more about the fun of crafting something unusual and delicious yourself.

Ready? Here’s everything you need and a step-by-step guide to make your own Root Beer Float Pieces.

More Soda Desserts

If you enjoy root-beer flavors, try repurposing leftover root beer flavoring in other desserts once you’ve made these candies.

Table of Contents

  • 🍻 Make Root Beer Float Pieces at Home
  • 🧾What You’ll Need
  • Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces Recipe
  • 📸Photo Tutorial: How to Make Root Beer Float Pieces
  • 💡 Tips & FAQs

🧾What You’ll Need

Overhead shot of ingredients needed to make Root Beer Float Pieces.

Ingredients

This recipe uses a few specialty items: white candy coating (candy melts), unflavored popping candy, root beer flavoring, and optional oil-based brown coloring. Substitutions are noted in the recipe notes.

  • Vanilla sandwich cookies: roughly chopped (about 16 cookies).
  • White candy coating: 16 oz—vanilla-flavored wafers melt smoothly for dipping.
  • Brown oil-based candy coloring: optional, for a root-beer look; use oil-based coloring only.
  • Root beer flavoring: about 1 tablespoon, or to taste. Use a flavoring formulated for confections.
  • Paramount crystals or neutral oil: to thin the coating; paramount crystals blend best, but vegetable oil can be used in a pinch.
  • Unflavored popping candy: about 0.75 oz (roughly 2 tablespoons) for the popping effect.

Equipment

  • Dipping tools or a fork: helpful for dipping pieces cleanly, but not required.
White bowl of Root Beer Float Pieces, with one cut open to show the interior.

Ready to Make These?

  1. Get the recipe card below 👇
  2. Follow the step-by-step photos in the tutorial
  3. Read the Tips & FAQs for troubleshooting and storage

🍬 More Fun Candies

Close-up of 3 pieces of Oreo Fudge.Blue rock candy in a glass bowl.Several pieces of Oreo fudge cut in cubes on a silver plate.

Leave a Review!

If you make this recipe, share your experience and photos. Feedback helps others and encourages tweaks for future batches.

Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces in a white bowl, with one cut open to show the inside.

Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces Recipe

These Root Beer Float Pieces recreate the fun flavor and popping texture of the Trader Joe’s candy at home using chopped vanilla cookies, unflavored popping candy, and a root beer–flavored coating.

See recipe notes for ingredient tips and expected yield.

Prep40 mins
Chilling Time20 mins
Total1 hr
Yields50 pieces

Ingredients

  • 16 vanilla sandwich cookies
  • 16 oz white candy coating
  • Brown oil-based candy coloring, optional
  • 1 TBSP root beer flavoring, or to taste
  • 1 oz paramount crystals (about 1/4 cup) or vegetable oil as needed
  • 0.75 oz unflavored popping candy (about 2 TBSP)

Instructions

  • Chop the cookies. Roughly quarter the sandwich cookies and set them aside.
  • Melt the coating. Place the white candy coating in a microwave-safe bowl. Heat at 50% power for 1 minute, stir, then continue in short intervals until smooth. If your microwave has no power settings, heat in 30-second bursts and stir frequently.
  • Color the coating (optional). Stir in oil-based brown candy coloring until you reach the desired shade.
  • Add root beer flavor. Stir in root beer flavoring. The coating will thicken slightly—this is expected.
  • Thin the coating. Add paramount crystals a spoonful at a time, stirring until the coating is smooth and fluid enough to dip. Start with a little—about 1 oz (1/4 cup) often does the trick. If using vegetable oil, add up to about 3 tablespoons, a bit at a time.
  • Combine popping candy and coating. Put the popping candy in a large bowl and pour roughly 1/2 cup of the melted coating over it. Stir to coat; you may hear some popping as the coating touches the candy.
  • Add the cookies. Fold the chopped cookies into the coating-and-popping-candy mixture until the pieces are lightly coated and well-distributed. Add a little more coating if needed to help the popping candy adhere.
  • Chill the cookie chunks. Spread the coated cookie pieces onto a parchment-lined baking sheet in small clusters. Chill 10–15 minutes to set the coating.
  • Prepare for dipping. Reheat the remaining coating briefly so it is warm and fluid. Set up a second parchment-lined sheet and have dipping tools or a fork handy.
  • Dip the cookie chunks. Use a fork or dipping tool to coat each chilled cluster in the warm coating, tapping off excess before placing on parchment.
  • Chill until set. Refrigerate the dipped candies for at least 15 minutes to fully set the coating.
  • Serve and store. For best texture and flavor, serve at room temperature. Store in an airtight container; the popping candy is most lively within the first week.

Recipe Notes

Ingredient notes:

  • Color: Brown oil-based coloring is optional and purely aesthetic. Use oil-based color only—water-based color will seize candy coating.
  • Flavor: Root beer flavorings vary in strength; add a little at a time and taste as you go.
  • Thinning: Paramount crystals blend with coating fat and produce the best texture. Vegetable oil works but may yield a softer set.

Yield:

Expect about 50–60 pieces depending on how you chop and cluster the cookies.

Measuring Tips

Recipes are developed using weight measurements. A kitchen scale is recommended for the most consistent results, though volume measures are provided for convenience.

Nutrition

Calories: 39 kcal | Carbohydrates: 5 g | Protein: 0.2 g | Fat: 2 g | Sugar: 4 g

📸Photo Tutorial: How to Make Root Beer Float Pieces

Follow these photos alongside the recipe card above for a visual guide to each step.

Chopped vanilla sandwich cookies on a white cutting board.
Glass bowl of white candy coating wafers on a wooden cutting board.
  1. Chop the cookies. Quarter 16 vanilla sandwich cookies.
  2. Microwave the coating. Heat 16 oz white candy coating in short intervals, stirring often until smooth.
Bowl of melted white candy coating on a wooden cutting board.
Stirring brown coloring into a bowl of melted white candy coating.

Color and Flavor the Coating

  1. Melt the coating. Stop heating when a few small pieces remain; residual heat will finish melting them.
  2. Add coloring. Stir in oil-based candy coloring if you want a brown root-beer shade.
Root beer float flavoring added to a bowl of melted brown candy coating.
Flakes of paramount crystals on top of a bowl of brown candy coating.
  1. Add root beer flavor. Stir in flavoring; it may thicken the coating but adds authentic taste and color.
  2. Thin the coating with paramount crystals. Add crystals a little at a time until the coating is smooth and dippable. Use oil only if you prefer.
Brown candy coating added to popping candy in a large glass bowl.
Popping candy and melted candy coating stirred together in a glass bowl.

Mix Everything Together

  1. Combine popping candy and coating. Mix popping candy with about 1/2 cup melted coating until well combined; some popping may occur during mixing.
  2. Stir together. Ensure the popping candy is evenly coated before adding cookies.
Chopped cookies on top of melted coating and popping candy in a glass bowl.
Mixture of melted coating, popping candy, and chopped cookie pieces in a large glass bowl.
Tray of Root Beer Float Pieces spread out on a baking sheet.
  1. Add the cookies. Fold chopped cookies into the coated popping candy until pieces are lightly coated and well-distributed.
  2. Mix well. Avoid pockets of uncoated cookie or loose popping candy; add a touch more coating if needed.
  3. Chill. Spread clusters on parchment and chill 10–15 minutes to set before dipping.
Dipping a Root Beer Float piece in melted candy coating.
Dipped Root Beer Float Pieces on a baking sheet covered with parchment.

Dip the Candy

  1. Dip the cookie chunks. Reheat coating so it’s warm and fluid, then dip each chilled cluster, tapping off excess before placing on parchment.
  2. Chill again. Refrigerate dipped pieces until the coating is fully set.
Close-up of Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces in a white bowl, with a bite taken out of one.

💡 Tips & FAQs

What To Do With Extra Candy Coating?

Extra coating is normal. Spread it on parchment to set into shards for later use, or mix in marshmallows and nuts for clusters or bark.

  • Save shards: Pour leftover coating onto parchment, let set, then break into pieces for future projects.
  • Rocky road or bark: Mix in mini marshmallows or nuts, or swirl with vanilla coating to make bark.

Candy FAQs

My candy coating is too thick

Thick coating can come from old product, overheating, or adding water-based ingredients. Heat gently in short intervals and add paramount crystals or a neutral oil a little at a time to thin. Avoid water-based colorings or flavorings when possible.

My candy coating is streaky

Streaks (fat bloom) are harmless and usually caused by temperature fluctuations. Avoid overheating, don’t dip very cold pieces, and chill dipped candies immediately to reduce bloom and keep a shiny surface.

How long will these keep?

They remain edible for weeks, but the popping candy is most effective within the first week. For best texture and pop, enjoy within a week of making them.

Picture of Homemade Root Beer Float Pieces with text overlay for Pinterest.