These Paleo Gummies couldn’t be easier to make! The three flavors, Pomegranate, Apple Cinnamon, and Cranberry Orange, are flavored with fruit juice and made with gut-healing gelatin for a superfood boost. You can use any flavor of fruit juice you’d like to customize these to your tastes, too! This post is sponsored by Vital Proteins.

I can’t deal with any chit chat today because LOOK guys, I made homemade and healthy gummy bears!!!
I love making healthier versions of my favorite candies (see my Twix Bars and Peanut Butter Cups), but until now, I haven’t ventured into fruity candies. That’s a shame because fruity candies are some of my favorites.

Luckily, these homemade paleo gummies are way easier to make than I ever imagined. So many flavors of gummy candy are in my future, and I have a bag of citric acid on order from Amazon to figure out to make some sour candies too.
But first, let’s stick with the classic fruit gummies! These are so easy to make, I could barely believe it. For the basic fruit gummy, you really just need two things: fruit juice and gelatin. If you want them a little flavor boost, maybe you’ll add some sweetener or extracts, too, but first let’s talk about the basics. Because they’re so simple, you need the best quality of both ingredients.

I used all 100% pure juices with no sugar added or anything, and I used Vital Proteins Grass-Fed Beef Gelatin. I adore Vital Proteins products because I know they are the highest quality! The gelatin comes from pasture-raised, grass-fed beef, and it is SO good for you. Gelatin is a total superfood – it’s very healing for our immune systems and gut health, and it’s 100% pure collagen, which is wonderful for making our hair, skin, and nails look shiny and beautiful.
To make the gummies, the juice is heated until almost boiling along with the sweetener – I used honey for the pomegranate and cranberry orange gummies, and maple syrup for the apple cinnamon gummy. As soon as the juice is steaming hot, the heat is turned to the lowest setting and any extracts are stirred in. Out of the flavors I made, only the apple cinnamon uses an extract – cinnamon extract for that spicy cinnamon flavor.

Then, whisk in the gelatin one tablespoon at a time, letting it dissolve, before dividing the liquid into the molds. I made these into cute little gummy bears, obviously, using this gummy bear mold. It came with a dropper, which made things super quick and easy.
You can use whatever kind of candy mold you’d like, but I’d recommend silicone so they pop out easily. If you don’t care about cute shapes, you can also just pour them into a loaf pan or 8×8″ pan and cut them into gummy cubes once set.

These cute paleo gummies couldn’t be easier – just three to four ingredients, and they’re a candy with health benefits! They’re super delicious, too – the fruit flavor is super pure, and they’re infinitely customizable to suit your tastes. My favorite was the tart pomegranate, but the spice of the apple cinnamon was also irresistible, and the cranberry orange combo is a holiday classic.
The recipe for each flavor makes 200 gummy bears, for a total of 600 gummies. That’s based on the size of my gummy bear mold – your yield might vary a bit. You can keep them all for yourself, or wrap them up in cute jars and give them to your favorite people. Enjoy!

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Remember to #bakerita if you try the recipe!

Paleo Gummies (Three Flavors: Apple Cinnamon, Pomegranate + Cranberry Orange)
Ingredients
Apple Cinnamon
- 1 cup pure apple juice
- 1 tablespoon cinnamon extract*
- 2 tablespoons maple syrup
- 4 tablespoons Vital Proteins Grass-Fed Gelatin
Pomegranate
- 1 cup pure pomegranate juice
- 2 tablespoons honey
- 4 tablespoons Vital Proteins Grass-Fed Gelatin
Cranberry Orange
- ¾ cup + 2 tablespoons pure orange juice
- 2 tablespoons pure cranberry juice
- 2 tablespoons honey
- 4 tablespoons Vital Proteins Grass-Fed Gelatin
Instructions
- In a small saucepan, combine the juice and the maple syrup or honey and heat over medium heat until steaming hot (just before boiling).
- Lower the heat to the lowest setting and if using, stir in the cinnamon extract. Whisk in the gelatin one tablespoon at a time, making sure each tablespoon is fully dissolved in the liquid before adding the next.
- Once the gelatin is fully dissolved, remove from the heat and use a dropper to put in your gummy molds.
- Put in the refrigerator to firm up completely - if your molds are small like my gummy bears, it should only take about 10 to 15 minutes for them to firm up enough to pop out.
- If you don’t have enough molds to use all the gummy mixture at once, you can pour the extra into a small pan and cut them into squares, OR you can gently reheat/melt the mixture over low heat when your molds are empty and ready to be used again (I did the second option).
- Store the gummies in a sealed container in the refrigerator. Repeat for other flavors!

Hi, I just found this recipe and it’s very good for someone cutting down on sugar (like me). However, is there a way to get them less rubbery? I’ve left them at room temperature and it helps, but I’m concerned about spoilage. I haven’t tried Stevia yet, but I don’t think that will help with the texture. Tks.
Hi Cheryl, you could use less gelatin to help them be a little bit softer. Enjoy!
Hi do you have to keep these in the fridge or once they’ve cooled in the fridge can you keep them out?
They’ll keep fresh the longest in the fridge, but you can keep them at cool room temp. Enjoy!
Hi. What would you describe the consistency of these gummies as? For example, Jello jigglers, Knox blocks, store bought fruit snacks?
Hi Lori, I’ve never had a knox block but I’d say they’re sort of like a firmer, chewier jello – not quite as chewy as a fruit snack, but a little chewier than regular jello.
Beautiful and delicious!
So glad you’re enjoying them!
This looks very tasty.
I will try it soon. :)
Hope you love them! Thanks Lisa.
I want to make these for my daughter’s preschool class with all of the colors of the rainbow. But curious if I could freeze these and have them defrost later so I can make ahead.
For quicker filling of molds; transfer mixture into squeeze bottle.
Brilliant tip – thanks for sharing!
Oh my god why didn’t I think of this
These look amazing! One question: what is the texture like? I tried making gummies from someone else’s recipe and it was more gritty and jello-like as compared to the traditional gummy CHEW. Do these have the latter texture that resembles store bought candies’ chewiness?? So excited to try!
Hi Kimberly, I wouldn’t say they’re quite as chewy as a store bought gummy, I’d imagine you’d have to cook down some sugar as part of the mix to replicate that texture. They are chewy though and finish off with a fruity, melt-in-your-mouth texture. Not exactly the same, but still very delicious! And not gritty at all, as long as you let the gelatin fully dissolve! Enjoy :)
I just love gummies
Will try it for sure
Hope you love them, Riya!
Agar Agar is not a 1:1 substitute for gelatin. Additionally, it has very different properties and mouth feel. The positive is that agar agar stays firm at room temperature. You can also use fruits like pineapple in agar agar that you cannot use in gelatin, You need to research conversion for gelatin to agar agar POWDER (not leaves or flakes). There is plenty of information available.
Hi Vicky, thanks for your comment! I am aware that agar does not have the same properties as gelatin does and this recipe wasn’t intended to be made with agar since as you mentioned, it uses different amounts and has different properties!