Pale lime green fudge with a sugar-rim finish is the kind of dessert that gets attention before the first bite. This frozen margarita fudge comes out dense, creamy, and bright with lime, with just enough tequila flavor to read like the cocktail version of a candy bar. The texture stays smooth instead of grainy, and the little burst of salt on top keeps the sweetness in check.
What makes this version work is the balance of fat, sugar, and acid. Sweetened condensed milk and white chocolate give the fudge its structure, while the lime juice and tequila add the margarita personality without turning the mixture watery. The trick is keeping the microwave bursts short and stirring often so the white chocolate melts evenly before the acid has a chance to seize it.
Below, I’ll walk through the one step that matters most for a clean, creamy set, plus a few practical swaps if you want to keep the margarita idea but adjust the alcohol or make the presentation a little more festive.
The texture was spot on after the full freeze time — creamy like fudge, not icy at all — and the lime-sugar topping gave it that margarita rim taste without being too sweet.
Save this frozen margarita fudge for the nights when you want a chilled dessert with a lime-sugar rim and a clean, creamy slice.
The Ingredient That Can Make This Fudge Grainy or Perfect
The biggest risk here is adding acid too early or heating the mixture too hard. Lime juice changes the way white chocolate behaves, and if you blast the bowl for too long without stirring, the chocolate can turn pasty or oily before it ever becomes smooth. Short microwave bursts give the fat time to melt evenly, which keeps the fudge glossy and sliceable after it freezes.
The other thing that matters is the powdered sugar mixed with lime zest on top. It does more than decorate the pan; it gives you that margarita-rim impression and adds a little dry finish so the surface doesn’t taste flat against the creamy center. A pinch of salt inside the fudge keeps the lime from reading sharp instead of bright.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Fudge
- Sweetened condensed milk — This is the body of the fudge. It brings sweetness and enough milk solids to help the mixture set after freezing, and there isn’t a substitute that behaves exactly the same way. If you use evaporated milk instead, the mixture won’t thicken into fudge.
- White chocolate — White chocolate gives the fudge its creamy, firm slice and helps carry the lime flavor. Use a bar or chopped baking chocolate rather than candy melts, since real white chocolate melts smoother and sets with a better texture.
- Tequila — This gives the fudge its margarita edge. A silver tequila works best because it’s clean and doesn’t fight the lime; more than 1/4 cup can make the mixture too loose, so keep the measure tight.
- Fresh lime juice — Fresh juice is worth using here because bottled juice can taste dull and metallic next to white chocolate. The acid is part of the flavor, but it also means you need to stir carefully and avoid overheating.
- Butter — Butter adds extra richness and helps the mixture stay smooth as it freezes. If you don’t have it, the fudge will still set, but the finish won’t taste quite as round.
- Powdered sugar and lime zest — This topping gives the candy its rimmed look and a dry, sugary finish. Zest the lime before juicing it, and keep the mixture loose enough to sprinkle evenly over the surface.
- Salt — A small pinch is enough to sharpen the citrus and keep the fudge from tasting like plain white chocolate. If you’re nervous about it, start light and taste the mixture before you spread it into the pan.
Building the Fudge Base Without Breaking It
Melting the White Chocolate Slowly
Combine the condensed milk, chopped white chocolate, tequila, lime juice, and butter in a microwave-safe bowl, then heat in 30-second bursts. Stir after every interval, even if the bowl still looks partly solid, because the residual heat finishes the melting. The mixture should turn smooth, thick, and glossy; if it starts looking grainy or oily, stop microwaving and stir until the heat evens out.
Getting the Lime and Salt Distributed Evenly
Stir in the powdered sugar and salt once the base is fully melted and smooth. At this point, the mixture should be thick but pourable, almost like a soft frosting. If you add the sugar while the bowl is still too hot, it can clump; if you wait until the base cools too much, it starts setting before you get it into the pan.
Finishing the Pan and Freezing It Firm
Line an 8×8-inch pan with parchment so you can lift the fudge out cleanly later, then spread the mixture into the corners in an even layer. Sprinkle the lime-sugar mixture over the top while the surface is still soft enough to catch it. Freeze for at least 3 hours until the slab feels firm all the way through; if you cut it early, the center smears instead of giving you neat squares.
Three Ways to Adjust the Margarita Fudge
Make It Alcohol-Free
Replace the tequila with an equal amount of extra lime juice only if you want a sharper citrus flavor, but the mixture may set a little softer. For a better alcohol-free version, use 2 tablespoons lime juice and 2 tablespoons sweetened cream or milk to keep the liquid level balanced without losing the creamy texture.
Swap In Lemon for a Brighter Twist
Lemon works if you want a softer, less tart finish, but it tastes more like citrus fudge than a margarita. Keep the tequila and use lemon zest in the topping for a cleaner, more candylike flavor that still reads festive.
Make the Rim More Salty
If you like a true margarita edge, add a tiny pinch of fine salt to the lime-sugar topping and another pinch to the fudge itself. That keeps the sweetness in check and gives every bite a more cocktail-like finish without turning the candy savory.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: This fudge is best kept in the freezer, not the fridge. In the refrigerator it softens too much and the texture turns sticky.
- Freezer: Store the pieces in an airtight container with parchment between layers for up to 2 months. The sugar topping may soften slightly over time, but the flavor holds well.
- Reheating: No reheating needed. Let a piece sit at room temperature for 5 to 10 minutes before serving so it loses the hard chill and tastes creamier without getting mushy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Frozen Margarita Fudge
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Line an 8x8-inch baking pan with parchment paper, leaving a little overhang for easy lifting later.
- Combine sweetened condensed milk, white chocolate, tequila, fresh lime juice, and butter in a microwave-safe bowl.
- Microwave for 30 seconds, then stir; repeat microwave in 30-second intervals until smooth and fully melted.
- Stir in powdered sugar and salt until the mixture looks glossy and evenly blended.
- Pour the fudge mixture into the prepared pan and spread evenly to the corners.
- Sprinkle the lime-sugar mixture (powdered sugar mixed with lime zest) evenly over the top for a crystallized rim.
- Freeze for at least 3 hours until firm and sliceable.
- Lift the fudge out using the parchment overhang, then cut into 16 pieces.
- Store in an airtight container in the freezer to keep the texture firm and cleanly sliceable.


