Sugar spells are everywhere these days. People know you can “sweeten someone up,” and if you poke around online for five minutes, you’ll find love spells that ask you to write a name on a paper and put it in a jar with sugar, honey, syrup, or a piece of candy. It’s not just popular — it’s practically its own genre.
But the real history of sugar in hoodoo is a little deeper, and as always, a little weirder.
Traditionally, sugar was used to sweeten someone toward you — whether for love, kindness, better treatment, or even to grease a boss’s attitude at work. You’ll find older spells that use sugar to make a judge lenient or to keep someone from being angry. What’s rarely mentioned outside the tradition is that the type of sugar used could be significant. Yes, really.
In older hoodoo practice, sweeteners were sometimes matched to the race or skin tone of the person being targeted.
Molasses - thick and dark, was typically used if the person was Black.
White sugar - for a white person.
Honey - for someone “high yellow” or mixed-race, and often for Asians as well.
Corn syrup - gets surprisingly traditional use, particularly in mid-century spells and recipes — partly because it was cheap and widely available, but also because it’s neutral, abundant, and sticky as sin.
Maple or Pancake syrup - less common than molasses in older spells but duplicates the use.
Now, is this an ironclad rule? No. But you’ll find it in enough oral tradition and older spellbooks to consider it a genuine part of the practice.
Some old spells will also specifically ask for multiple sweeteners — three kinds, five kinds, etc. (Typically an odd number.) The idea is that the combined sweetness makes the spell stronger. You might see this in honey jar spells or baked offerings. One old ritual for making a person call or write involved filling a coconute with three different sweeteners.
There’s a lot of emphasis in modern hoodoo on honey — probably because honey is what people see in mass-market spell books and Instagram-friendly setups. Honey jars are tidy, photogenic, and easy to explain. But historically, white sugar spells were the most common — if only because white sugar was cheap, shelf-stable, and in almost every kitchen from the 19th century onward. Spells where you sprinkle sugar on someone’s doorstep, in their shoe, or on a letter before mailing? That’s white sugar. And the classic name-paper folded into a sugar bowl or teacup? Same.
Now, what about the modern stuff?
Personally, I don’t blink twice at artificial sweeteners. If you want to use Splenda or Stevia, be my guest. Hoodoo isn’t food magic — you’re not baking for the faeries. You’re working with intent, symbolism, and results. If you believe it’ll work, and it fits the symbolic bill, it will likely do just fine. The same goes for corn syrup: if it was good enough for your grandmother’s pecan pie, it’s good enough for your conjure. Just don’t forget what the sugar is doing in the first place. It draws. It tempts. It sweetens the disposition and smooths out conflict. That’s why it’s used in love work, peacekeeping spells, boss-fixing spells, reconciliation — any time you want someone to come around to your side of things.
Want a co-worker to stop being cold? Sprinkle sugar at your desk while you think of them warming up. Need your partner to open up emotionally? Add sugar to their food and speak kindly over it. There’s no one right ritual. But the point is always the same: you’re laying out sweetness like bait. The sweeter the lure, the easier the catch.
One trick I particularly like: sweetening a room by cleaning it with a sugar wash. Just mix a bit of sugar or syrup into warm mop water, and use it to clean your floors or your front steps. You can even add Peace Water or floral cologne to keep the energy light; some versions of this also mix your urine into the water, or ammonia can substitute. It’s an old-style trick, but it makes a difference. This was especially done to draw customers to business or lovers to a house.
And here’s a final tip: when in doubt, write the person’s name on a piece of brown paper and place it in a small jar of syrup. Shake it daily while saying what you want. No need to complicate it. Sugar wants to work.
So don’t overthink your sweeteners. Use what you have — or use what fits. If you’re drawing someone in, anything that tastes sweet and sticks to your fingers is good enough for the job.
