This old fashioned Easter egg candy is a generations-old recipe that has been in my family for a long time. It’s amazing, highly coveted by family friends, and it also includes a critical secret ingredient that you might have not seen coming. Potatoes. Believe it or not, the filling for these Easter Egg Candies is made partly of mashed potatoes.

I’ll be the first to admit that I had was severely skeptical the first time my mom showed me how to make this candy.  When she started to peel the potatoes I thought she was joking, and I also thought there was no chance I would ever eat a candy that had anything to do with potatoes. I was wrong. The potatoes mostly serve for binding together the otherwise very sweet, sugary filling for these Easter Egg Candies.  It’s untraceable in the finished product, and I encourage you to see if your guests can figure out what the “secret ingredient” actually is.

Tips for Making Old Fashioned Easter Egg Candy

To make the potatoes, peel them, dice them into even-sized cubes, and boil them until tender when pierced with a fork, then drain and allow them to cool completely before mashing.  You must make fresh mashed potatoes specifically for this recipe, don’t use leftover, seasoned mashed potatoes that may have other ingredients (milk, pepper, garlic, etc.) mixed in. Let the potatoes cool completely.  Don’t refrigerate them, just leave them at room temperature once you’ve drained them until they are completely cooled, and then mash them until no lumps remain. Add more sugar as needed.  The dough will need to chill before you can roll it into eggs and it will be too tacky when first mixed up, but it should be somewhat shapeable. If it’s too runny, add more sugar, up to 2 cups more. Dust your hands with powdered sugar when rolling the eggs — the dough won’t stick to your hands and you’ll get nice smooth easter eggs that way. My grandmother’s recipe used unsweetened chocolate for the coating, as the filling can be very sweet and the unsweetened chocolate helps temper the sweetness.  My family found the unsweetened chocolate to be much too bitter, and so I recommend using semisweet chips instead. I thin my chocolate a bit with a teaspoon of shortening, it helps the chocolate cover the eggs more neatly, but is optional (my grandmother’s recipe used paraffin wax.

Enjoy! Recipe originally published April 19, 2014.  Photos and some text updated March 19, 2018.

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