Make your own pop ups

  • 18.05.2026
  • incQbait

    Making Your Own Pop-Ups

    So you want to make your own bait? Good. Once you start rolling your own, you stop relying on 'the label' and start understanding what actually catches carp. This isn’t about “magic bait.” It’s knowing and understanding how it all works,  get that right and you’re already ahead of most anglers.

     Flavours & Liquids

    Keep flavours subtle to begin with. A pop-up doesn’t need to smell overpowering to get picked up — especially on pressured waters.

    Starting Point

    ·  3–5ml of flavour per egg

    If you want to mix  flavour, a simple ratio would be:

    · 3ml Strawberry

    · 1ml Butter Cream

    Oils

    Hemp oil is a great. always my go to oil, you dont need loads, and, its a great carrier of flavour even in colder waters

    Use around 5ml per egg mix.

    Preservatives

    Optional, but useful for shelf-life.

    A simple starting preservative would be MPG (Monopropylene Glycol). There are better preservatives, if looking for something different is for you, but this is one of the most common.

    · 10–15ml per egg mix

     Colours & Dyes

    A simple way to start is matching colours to flavours, basically colour by association:

    · Pineapple/Banana → Yellow

    · Strawberry/Cranberry → Red

    · Fishmeal/Krill → Orange/Brown

    · Creams → White/Pink

    Remember though, carp don’t think like anglers. They dont know what a banana or its colour should be, so once confident, experiment with:

    · washed-out colours

    · muted tones

    · dark hookbaits

    · mismatched flavour/colour combos

    Often, curiosity triggers the pickup before flavour does.

    Dye Types

    Insolvent dyes are usually cleaner and more stable:

    · better colour retention

    · less bleeding

    · no washout during boiling

     The Mix

    If you’re new, start with a proven commercial pop-up mix before building your own from scratch.

    Popular options include:

    · standard buoyancy

    · ultra-buoyant

    · pre-dyed mixes

    A good mix removes a lot of beginner frustration.

     Equipment

    You don’t need a laboratory setup.

    Useful Gear

    · Rolling table (optional)

    · Sausage gun/extruder

    · Mixing bowls

    · Fork

    · Measuring jug

    · 5ml syringes

    · Small saucepan

    · Sieve or slotted spoon

    · Drying tray or towel

     

    Basic Pop-Up Recipe

    Base Mix

    · 120g pop-up mix

    · Dye as required

    Liquid Phase

    · 1 large egg

    · Up to 5ml flavour

    · 5ml hemp oil

    · 10–12ml preservative (optional)

     

    Mixing

    1. Mix dye into the dry mix.

    2. Add egg, flavours, oil and preservative together.

    3. Slowly combine dry and liquid ingredients.

    4. Knead until smooth and workable.

    You want the dough:

    · smooth

    · non-sticky

    · flexible

    · slightly springy

    Think firm Play-Doh consistency.

     

    Rolling

    Extrude one sausage at a time. Pop-up dough dries quickly, so small batches are easier to manage and roll cleanly.

    Focus on consistency, not speed.

     Boiling

    Use a gentle rolling boil — not aggressive bubbling.

    Approximate Boil Times

    · 12mm: 45–60 seconds

    · 14mm: 60–90 seconds

    After 20–25 seconds, gently stir to keep them moving evenly.

     Drying

    After boiling:

    · remove with a sieve/spoon

    · place on a towel or drying rack

    · allow airflow

    Dry for:

    · minimum 48 hours

    · longer in damp or cold conditions

    If still soft:

    · re-boil for 60–90 seconds

    · dry again

     Storage

    Once fully dry:

    · store airtight

    · keep cool

    · avoid direct sunlight

     


    Final Thought

    Your first batch probably won’t be perfect — that’s normal. Every bait maker has rolled something 'interesting' . The goal is understanding how ingredients behave. Once that clicks, you stop copying bait and start designing it yourself. This want to stop copying will set you apart - if you want that edge to your fishing, do it your way, do your research. Just because you heard one bait did well on a water for one person, that same thing may not work for you, and chances are you wont be able to get your hands on the exact ingredient they used, be outside the box!  Dont copy. Just make your bait, go fishing — and let the carp decide.