11 Comments

  1. Great stuff! Though there was one error in your write up. In the America’s Test Kitchen video, she says to line the pan with parchment paper, not wax paper. I imagine the molten hot caramel would melt the wax right off the paper and rather taint your hard work.

  2. It seems like when we use our Thermopen on candy it takes too long to read the temp? It is very quick when we use it for meats and breads etc. but candy seems to take too long to check. Any thoughts or are we doing something wrong?

    1. Consider that when temping sugar, the temp is changing rapidly. Your Thermapen is never going to settle on a temperature to let you know it’s ready. It’s going to reflect the constant temperature changes taking place. When making our caramel, the Thermapen got to temp in less than 3 seconds and then slowly rose degree by degree as the sugar continued to cook.

  3. I use the “Old Fashion” recipe from the Hershey Cocoa can for making fudge. Making fudge from this recipe has always been hit or miss for me until I bought my Super Fast ThermaPen. The most critical element in making old fashioned fudge is cooking to the exact temperature called for in the recipe. Every batch of fudge I have made when using my Super Fast Thermapen has come out creamy perfect every single time!

  4. I’m wondering how the finished caramels in this recipe might differ from those that have all the ingredients cooked together over a low heat until 248F? Is there a deeper caramel flavor? Longer shelf life? The recipe I use is from King Arthur Flour, but it is almost identical to the one published by Land O’Lakes butter. Both of those combine all the ingredients and then cook until 248F. Only a few recipes call for the two-step process outlined here. Thanks for any advice you can offer.

    1. Hi Jan – This recipe allows the cream, butter and vanilla to meld together producing rich, creamy vanilla flavors. We’re not sure how it measures up to cooking it all together, but we’re willing to give it a try. Whatever nets us more caramel is worth it! Thanks

  5. I’m wondering how the finished caramels in this recipe might differ from those that have all the ingredients cooked together over a low heat until 248F? Is there a deeper caramel flavor? Longer shelf life? The recipe I use is from King Arthur Flour, but it is almost identical to the one published by Land O’Lakes butter. Both of those combine all the ingredients and then cook until 248F. Only a few recipes call for the two-step process outlined here. Thanks for any advice you can offer.

  6. Fourth time making these, first two with the Themapen, then had to order a Chef Alarm which made watching the temps much easier on the last two batches. Each time they have turned out fantastic, resulting in rave reviews.

    I have been using a cookie sheet which makes thin caramels which I then roll like a Tootsie Roll. I suppose if you wanted cubes you’d use a 9×9 brownie pan? I’ll need to experiment with pan size on my next batch.

    On the last two batches, one turned out light in color, the next one darker. I’m not quite sure what I did differently between them, if anything. Any ideas on what influences color?

    For variation, sprinkle with sea salt. I also rolled some of them in crushed walnuts.

  7. Hi,

    Is this recipe available in grams or ounces? Since I have been following recipes that give measurements by weight, I have noticed they turn out better because of the precision.

    Thank you!

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