Candy Dish Blog

The Official Candy Blog of the National Confectioners Association

Now and then you learn something or come to a realization that changes everything. It shakes the ground you thought was firm and makes water run uphill. It alters your entire frame of mind and perception of reality. This happened to me when I first saw Chow’s article on tricked-out caramel apples. I now have a new palette of colors with which to paint my life.

Words defy me. Life will never be the same. Definitely go check this out. It will blow your mind. So will the photos – almost good enough to make you lick the screen.

Caramel Apples from Chow

Caramel ApplesThe absolute meaning of caramel has not yet been defined by the scientific or regulatory community. Caramel, unlike chocolate, which has a very specific standard of identity, can mean very different things to different people.

The exact nature of the product varies based on the copious applications that employ its delightful characteristics; caramel ice cream topping must be able to flow while cold, while caramel candies should remain firm at room temperature. Some caramel functions best in caramel corn as a hardened shell around a popcorn center, just like I had as a kid at the circus. However, the caramel in your mocha caramel frappuccino is most functional when it mixes well with coffee.

Despite these diverse objectives and characteristics there is a unifying factor in all caramel-based snacks: the chemical caramelization process that make them all possible.

In addition to Maillard browning, the reaction between reducing sugars, such as those in corn syrup, and proteins, which produces color and flavor compounds, another reaction plays a role in the formation of caramel flavor molecules. Caramelization is the breakdown of sugar molecules at high temperatures into an immeasurable number of flavor and color chemical products. Sucrose’s sensational flavor explosion happens only upon reaching 340 degrees Fahrenheit; however this exact process of this phenomenon is, like the definition of caramel, complex and poorly understood.

More research on how sugar busts up into these delicious bits and pieces is still needed. Would you like to try your hand at it? Do your part for science. Make this recipe for homemade caramel apples, being sure to carefully watch the transformation that ensues.

Laura’s Caramel Apples

  • 1 cup butter
  • 2 1/4 cups brown sugar
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1 cup light corn syrup
  • 1 15-ounce can sweetened condensed milk
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla

Melt the butter in a heavy saucepan. Stir in sugar and salt and then the corn syrup, mixing well. Mix in the sweetened condensed milk, stirring constantly. Keep stirring this mixture and heat to 248 degree F. Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla. Let the mixture cool until thick and stir for a uniform thickness.

Alternatively, you can melt a whole mess of caramel squares until they are thick enoughto stir easily.

Whichever method you use, wash your apples and stick popsicle sticks in them, and then dip them in the yummy caramel. Place the apples on a sheet of parchment paper to harden.

Caramel Apples by QuintanaRoo.

Caramel ApplesWe almost let the month go by without mentioning it. How could I let this happen? My three-month review at NCA is today and I have to fess up to the fact that I have not spoken about caramel very much. Oh Susan, please have pity on a poor candy-loving soul like me.

So – caramel. Right. It’s one of my favorite candy flavors, along with butterscotch. When I was a kid my brother and I would take caramel squares from our mother’s baking cabinet and eat them straight out of the wrapper. Thinking about it now, I don’t recall my mother ever using them as an ingredient, although she must have. Why else would she keep buying them? Maybe because we kept eating them.

One of my favorites is caramel apples. Whether traditional or tricked out (a must-see!), this is a classic use of a time-honored sweet. The deep sweetness of the caramel blends beautifully with the crisp slight sweetness of the apple. The apple actually performs a functional duty as well, acting as a wet scraper to get the sticky caramel off your incisors.

How do you typically use it? Do you have a special recipe with caramel you can share?

Caramel Apples by MissBeckles.