Showing posts with label caramel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label caramel. Show all posts

12/15/17

Homemade Caramel Sauce

Another totally easy recipe to make. All it takes are the ingredients and some patience . . . and your family with think you are a GOD.
Yeah, it's that good. 
 

Homemade Caramel Sauce


½ cup water
1 ¼ cup sugar
½ tsp. kosher salt
1 cup heavy cream
1 tsp. vanilla extract

In medium-sized sauce pan, combine water, sugar and salt over medium heat. Stir to dissolve sugar. Slightly increase heat, simmer and swirl mixture until color resembles the color of honey, about 6 minutes. When sugar mixture turns medium amber, add cream and reduce heat to medium-low. Stir constantly until mixture is 225 F on digital candy thermometer, or about 3 minutes. Stir in vanilla extract and transfer to heat safe container.


Tips & Tricks:

·            The hard part of making caramel (or any sugar based candy: brittle, toffee, hard caramels) is waiting for the color to change. . . and as soon as you think you can walk away . . .

                  It. Will. Burn.

·            Ignore the crap about using a wet pastry brush to wash down sides of pan. Which is why I left that part off the instructions.  Just stir or swirl to heat the sugar droplets into mixture again.

·            I placed my first batch of sauce in a candy squirt bottle. It didn’t have a meltdown.

·            With my second batch, I used a Kerr jelly jar with a fresh lid to heat seal. It sealed with a pop when the caramel cooled down enough.

·            It will thicken as it cools.

·            Store it in the fridge for up to a month.

·            It is freaking delish on ice cream, pies, cakes, or a finger. . .  just saying.

 

11/22/13

Foodie Friday -- Heart Attacks

When my hubby and I were in Canada this last September, we ran across these monster candies they called Murtles. I'm guessing that they are basically a Mongo Turtle . . . with salted peanuts. Those things were at least six inches in diameter . . . yes, we shared.
Final version

The bottom layer was milk chocolate, with a layer of salted peanuts, a layer of caramel and then topped off with a dollop of chocolate.

So I decided to make them myself.

Here's a picture of my first batch. These measured about 3 inches in diameter.
 
And I didn't name them, my daughter did.

She loves them! How can you not love chocolate, caramel and peanuts?  Well, unless you have a peanut allergy, then these should be called Anaphylactic Shock.
 
A couple of things I would do differently for my next batch:
  1. I used a cookie scoop to measure and spread my first layer of chocolate. I would spread them out a little bit more to give them a thinner base. Once these things set, they became very hard. I used Merken's chocolate wafers, but you could use any kind of pre-tempered chocolate.
  2. I bought a huge container of salted peanuts from Sam's club for $8 and used a coffee scoop to try to get the same amount of peanuts on each chocolate layer. I still have a lot of peanuts and I hope they don't go bad. I may weigh and freeze them in one pound batches for use later.  
  3. More caramel. I skimped a little on the caramel because I wanted the peanuts to show. I used a cookie scoop for this layer too. I would just add a little more. Yes, I made my own caramel--recipe to follow. I froze the left overcaramel, but will just heat it up on the stove to melt it enough to make it liquid.
  4. I'd make the top layer of chocolate a little larger.  
Try making some of your own. It's easy.
 
Okay, I promised a caramel recipe. This recipe was originally a Land O Lakes butter caramel recipe that I made last year. Since I tend to use heavy cream, the mixture was too oily when I used the full amount of butter. It was also too bland. The original recipe didn't have salt in it, so I added Kosher salt.
 
Everyone will tell you that salt is salt, well, it isn't. I find regular iodized table salt to be too harsh for some caramel recipes, so I use the Kosher flake salt. It's milder and blends nicely.  
 
This is also a 'soft' caramel, which means it doesn't cook as long or to a higher temperature, which would firmly set the caramel to make it easy for dipping. Many people will cut this caramel up and wrap it in waxed paper to give away to friends and family.
 
Soft Caramels
2 cups sugar
1 cup dark brown sugar, packed
3/4 cup (3 sticks) butter
1 cup heavy cream
1 cup half and half
1 cup dark corn syrup
2 tsp. Kosher salt
1 tsp. vanilla

Prepare a 9 X 9 pan (line with parchment and spray with Pam), set aside.

Combine all ingredients in heavy 4-quart saucepan. Cook over medium heat until butter is melted, stirring constantly. Increase heat slightly until mixture comes to a boil. Continue cooking, stirring occasionally, until mixture reaches 244 degrees on candy thermometer, about 30 minutes.

Remove from heat. Stir in vanilla. Pour into prepared pan.

---I cooled this mixture slightly before I ladled it over my peanuts. I wanted it warm enough to flow when it hit the colder peanuts, but not so hot it melted the chocolate on the bottom.

Let the caramel set. Either wrap it, dip it or freeze it until needed. . . . yes, you can just scoop and eat, too!

Enjoy!

Later, Peeps!

 

1/13/12

FOODIE FRIDAY -- Caramel

True confessions here . . . I haven't been cooking much 'real' food recently. Oh, I cooked bunches over the holidays, but once the kidlet started swim practice again I've fallen off the cooking wagon.  Yes, it is a problem having swim practice at 6:30. She needs to eat between 5-5:30 PM, but the hubby doesn't come home until 5:45-6 PM, and we sure as shootin' aren't going to be eating dinner at 8 PM!

Next week, I'll be experimenting with crockpot recipes. That way the kidlet and I can eat early, but dinner will still be ready and hot for the hubby when he gets home.

Until then, I'll leave you with one last candy recipe. I made this yesterday. I wanted a good buttery caramel that could be dipped in chocolate or molded over pecans for turtles. It's good, but I've already jotted some notes on it to make it a little more 'mine' the next time I make it. I'll give you the unadulterated recipe, but I'll post my comments below it, in color, with how I want to change it up.

Caramel

2 cups sugar
1 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 cup butter
1 cup milk
1 cup cream
1 cup light corn syrup
1 tsp. vanilla

Butter 9 X9-in. pan; set aside. Combine all ingredients except vanilla in heavy 4-quart saucepan. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally until butter is melted and mixture comes to a boil (15-20 minutes)

Continue cooking until candy thermometer reaches 244 degrees F. or small amount of mixture dropped into ice water forms a firm ball (25-35 minutes). Patience is a virtue here!

 Remove from heat; stir in vanilla. pour into prepared pan. Cool completely (up to 8 hours). Cut into 1.5 x 1-inch pieces; wrap candies in plastic food wrap. Store refrigerated.

Some changes I made while other comments are suggestions for next time:
--Used 2 cup cream instead of milk, with the added milk fat need to decrease butter by 2-4 Tbls.
--used 1/2 cup dark corn syrup (ran out of light corn syrup), need to use all dark or add a touch of molasses to enrich flavor
--used vanilla paste instead of extract, needs a touch more
--needs a little salt, maybe 1/2 tsp
--cut into squares to dip into chocolate.

Enjoy!

12/10/10

Still Making Candy . . .

Every year the hubster tells me not to get carried away with making candy.

--and every year I go nuts.  I enjoy making candy.  It's right up there with inventing fantasy stories.  I made six flavors of candy (40 candies of each flavor) yesterday: Black Forest, Strawberry Margarita, Limoncello, Amaretto, Chambord, and Kahlua (the unexpected one).  So, in theory, I should have only had four flavors to do today, but I ended up with SIX, possibly SEVEN! 

How did this happen?

Well,  I did make ten new flavors this year, BUT that doesn't mean I didn't have some flavors that I made last year and froze.  And yes, making and freezing candy fillings works.  I've done it for years.  Sometimes you end up with more filling than you expected.  Sometimes it's because the mold you are using is smaller than the other molds. 

I calculated the Limoncello and Chambord perfectly.  Oh, I could make a few more candies, but why?  I'm already making enough candy for 35 gifts with 5 extra candies/flavor in case of accidents (I did have some problems with the Black Forest mold).  I'll probably freeze the little bit of left over so I can taste it next year to remember the flavor. 

Anyhoo, I ended up with six flavors today:  Lime Gimlet, Whiskey Toffee, Frangelico, Peppermint Schnapps, Grand Marnier and caramel.  The Caramel was unexpected.  I wanted to try my hand at making a HARD caramel.  The recipe wasn't all that and I ended up with a soft caramel--too soft to make turtles.  So, I'll use it in a filled candy.

If I could hazard a guess, it will taste FANTASTIC! 

And then there is my peanut butter cups.  Yes, they do taste almost like Reeses, though creamier.

Enough talking about making candy.  I need to make some coffee, take some Aleve, pick a movie for the DVD player, and get my chocolate melted.

Later, Peeps!

Cyndi wanted my peanut butter filling recipe.  I think it's smoother than Reeses, but still very good.  It makes a huge amount, so you might want to halve the recipe or you can freeze the remainder.

18 oz. jar Jif peanut butter
1 stick melted butter
1 lb. powdered sugar

Mix peanut butter and butter together. Add powdered sugar and mix together by hand.
If it's too dry, add more melted butter.  If it's too moist add more powdered sugar.

That's it, folks.  I have a peanut butter cup mold. I place a paper cup in the mold and coat the bottom with melted chocolate.  I make a ball of peanut butter filling and press down, leaving space around the edges.  Add melted chocolate around the edge of the peanut butter filling and over the top.  Tap the mold against the counter to release air bubbles.  Place in freezer to harden.