| 3. Test your thermometer. Test your
thermometer by placing it in a pan of water and bringing it to the
boiling point. It should now register 212 degrees at sea level. If it
registers 214 degrees, you can correct it by adding two degrees to those
given in the recipe; if 210 degrees, by subtracting. If it's more than a
few degrees off in either direction, you need a new thermometer.
4. Use fresh ingredients.
Sugar is the most basic ingredient in hard candy. Be sure
to use a new package of sugar each time you make your recipes to ensure that
the sugar hasn’t been contaminated by other common kitchen ingredients.
If your recipe calls for butter, be sure to use the
unsalted variety. Salted butter and margarine can adversely effect the
cooking time, texture, and taste of your efforts.
5. Go easy on the food coloring.
Colors like green and yellow look much more appetizing
when they’re applied lightly, so be sure to add food coloring gradually. You
can slowly add more until you reach the intensity you want.
6. Use the proper storage techniques.
After cooling your candies, store them in airtight jars
without wrapping them first. Never store hard candy in the same container as
desserts that lose moisture, such as fudge.
Ready to begin? Try this basic hard candy recipe—-and
have fun!
BASIC HARD CANDY RECIPE
2 cups sugar
3/4 cup water
2/3 cup light corn syrup
Flavorings and colorings to taste (just a few drops will do)
Measure 2 cups sugar, 2/3 cup light corn syrup and 3/4
cup water into a saucepan and blend together. Place over low heat and stir
until mixture boils. Cover the saucepan for 5 minutes so that any sugar
crystals that have formed on the sides ofthe pan will be washed down. Now
put in the candy thermometer and let the candy boil without stirring. Using
a pastry brush or a fork wrapped with muslin and dipped in water, wash off
any crystals that might form. After the candy reaches 280 degrees, lower
heat so as not to discolor the candy. When candy thermometer registers 300
degrees, remove pan from the heat and allow it to stand until all the
bubbles have simmered down. Then add the flavoring and coloring. There are
many to choose from but one favorite is anise along with red coloring. One
teaspoon of a flavoring extract should be used for this recipe, while only a
few drops of an oil such as peppermint, wintergreen or cinnamon are enough.
Coloring should be added gradually until the desired intensity is reached.
It is important to stir these in as gently as possible. Too much stirring
will cause the syrup to solidify into a hard sugary lump. Now the candy is
ready to be formed. It may be poured into a pan, 7 by 7 inches, and marked
into squares as it begins to harden. Or it may be poured in rounds on
skewers or sticks to form lollipops.
Vanessa Kirkland is publisher of the cherished recipe
collection, "Candymaking Secrets," by Virginia Pasley. This long-lost
collection includes 67 vintage recipes for making delicious old-fashioned
candies at home . . . without a single cooking class.
Find out more at ===>
http://www.CandyMakingSecrets.com/
Article Source :
www.womenbrands.com
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