Food & Drink

Honey Caramels

Author Alice Medrich shares her recipe for honey caramels:

022AM © 2007 by Leigh Beisch w credit

Honey collectors will enjoy trying regional or varietal honeys in this recipe, with or without the walnuts. The year my brother’s family moved to Alabama, they brought a taste of their new home, Alabama wildflower honey, back to Berkeley for Thanksgiving. I made caramels with it and carried them back to Birmingham for Christmas a few weeks later. For the more delicate honeys, increase the honey to ⅓ cup and reduce the corn syrup to ⅔ cup.

Pure DessertPure Dessert
by Alice Medrich

When you are working with great ingredients, you want to keep it simple. You don’t want to blur flavor by overcomplicating. This is why Pure Dessert, from the beloved Alice Medrich, offers the simplest of recipes, using the fewest ingredients in the most interesting ways. There are no glazes, fillings, or frostings—just dessert at its purest, most elemental, and most flavorful.

Loaded with advice and novel suggestions, with great recipes and eye-catching, full-color photographs that show off these simple, straightforward desserts, this cookbook is an education and a revelation.

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Honey Caramels

Print Recipe
Serves: Makes eighty 1-inch caramels

Ingredients

  • EQUIPMENT
  • A 9-inch square baking pan
  • Candy thermometer
  • INGREDIENTS
  • 2 cups (8 ounces) broken or coarsely chopped walnut pieces (optional, but shown in photo)
  • ¾ cup light corn syrup
  • ¼ cup honey
  • 2 cups sugar
  • ⅜ teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into chunks and softened
  • 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Instructions

1

Line the bottom and sides of the baking pan with aluminum foil and grease the foil. If using the walnuts, spread them in the prepared pan. Set aside.

2

Combine the corn syrup, honey, sugar, and salt in a heavy 3-quart saucepan. Cook over medium heat, stirring with a silicone spatula or wooden spoon, until the mixture simmers around the edges. Wash the sugar and syrup from the sides of the pan with a wet pastry brush. Cover and cook for 3 minutes. (Meanwhile, rinse the spatula or spoon for use again later.) Uncover the pan and wash down the sides once more. Attach the candy thermometer to the saucepan, without letting it touch the bottom of the pan, and cook, uncovered, without stirring until the mixture reaches 305°F.

3

Meanwhile, heat the cream in a small saucepan until tiny bubbles form around the edges of the pan. Turn off the heat and cover the pan to keep the cream hot.

4

When the sugar mixture is at 305°F, turn off the heat and stir in the butter chunks. Gradually stir in the hot cream; it will bubble up and steam dramatically. Turn the burner back on and adjust it so that the mixture boils energetically but not violently. Stir until smooth. Continue to cook, stirring occasionally, to about 245°F. Then cook, stirring constantly, to 248°F for soft chewy caramels or 250°F for firmer chewy caramels.

5

Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the vanilla. Pour the caramel into the lined pan. Let set for 4 to 5 hours, or overnight, until firm.

6

Lift the pan liner from the pan and invert the sheet of caramel onto a sheet of parchment paper. Peel off the liner and turn the caramel right side up. Cut the caramels with an oiled knife into 1-inch squares, skinny bars (as shown in the photograph), or any desired shape. Wrap each caramel individually in wax paper or cellophane.