PURE MAPLE CANDY
Pure, creamy, melt-in-your-mouth maple candy using only pure maple syrup! It's a treat almost like fudge. Add anything you want like chopped nuts. Use small maple leaf molds or other pretty shapes.
Provided by Islandgirlchef
Categories Desserts Candy Recipes Nut Candy Recipes
Time 51m
Yield 18
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- In a large heavy-bottomed saucepan, bring the maple syrup to a boil over medium-high heat stirring occasionally. Boil until syrup reaches 235 degrees F (110 degrees C) on a candy thermometer.
- Remove from heat and cool to 175 degrees F (80 degrees C) without stirring, about 10 minutes.
- Stir mixture rapidly with a wooden spoon for about 5 minutes until the color turns lighter and mixture becomes thick and creamy. Stir in chopped nuts, if desired.
- Pour into molds. Set aside to cool. Once cool, unmold candy. Store in airtight containers up to 1 month.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 113.2 calories, Carbohydrate 23.9 g, Fat 2.2 g, Fiber 0.2 g, Protein 0.5 g, SaturatedFat 0.2 g, Sodium 3.2 mg, Sugar 20.9 g
MAPLE PRALINES
This recipe rekindles memories of my grandfather and his love for making maple syrup. When I was in college, my mother would send me a package of her pralines during sugaring season. They were so popular with my friends, I barely managed to tuck away a few for myself.
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Desserts
Time 20m
Yield about 1 pound.
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- In a heavy 1-qt. saucepan, combine sugar, cream and syrup. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture boils. Reduce heat to medium-low. Cook, uncovered, until a candy thermometer reads 234° (soft-ball stage), stirring occasionally., Remove from the heat. Add butter; do not stir. Cool, without stirring, to 160°. Stir in pecans. Beat vigorously with a wooden spoon until mixture just begins to thicken but is still glossy. Quickly drop by spoonfuls onto waxed paper. Cool. Store in an airtight container.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 144 calories, Fat 7g fat (3g saturated fat), Cholesterol 11mg cholesterol, Sodium 4mg sodium, Carbohydrate 20g carbohydrate (19g sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 1g protein.
MAPLE SUGAR CANDY
Steps:
- Place maple in a small saucepan and bring up to 280 degrees F. Dip a spoon into the syrup and drizzle desired shapes onto a sheet pan sprayed with vegetable oil or lined with a silpat. Let cool completely so "candies" come off the sheet pan easily. Eat as is or use as a garnish.
MAPLE CANDY
Provided by Food Network Kitchen
Time 1h30m
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- Line the bottom and sides of a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan with parchment paper; brush the parchment with vegetable oil. Bring the maple syrup to a boil in a large saucepan over medium heat, then reduce the heat to medium low. Dip the back of a spoon in vegetable oil and run it over the top of the foam to help it subside. Increase the heat to medium and continue cooking until a candy thermometer registers 246 degrees F, 25 to 30 minutes. Pour the syrup into a heatproof bowl and let cool, 5 minutes.
- Beat the syrup with a mixer on medium-low speed until it starts to lighten in color and turn opaque, 30 seconds to 1 minute. Pour into the prepared pan and spread with an offset spatula; let cool completely, about 1 hour. Lift out of the pan and cut into pieces.
HARD MAPLE CANDY
During the war, the women at my grandmother's church would donate sugar rations throughout the year so they'd have enough to make candy as a fund-raiser each Christmas. I'm lucky enough to have inherited this tried-and-true recipe. -Dorothea Bohrer, Silver Spring, Maryland
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Desserts
Time 35m
Yield 1-3/4 pounds.
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Grease a 15x10x1-in. pan with butter; set aside. In a large heavy saucepan, combine the sugar, corn syrup and water. Cook over medium-high heat until a candy thermometer reads 300° (hard-crack stage), stirring occasionally. , Remove from the heat; stir in maple flavoring. Immediately pour into prepared pan; cool. Break into pieces. Store in an airtight container.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 46 calories, Fat 0 fat (0 saturated fat), Cholesterol 0 cholesterol, Sodium 5mg sodium, Carbohydrate 11g carbohydrate (10g sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 0 protein.
MAPLE SYRUP CANDIES
These crumbly, melt-in-your-mouth candies are made from just two ingredients.
Provided by Ken Haedrich
Categories Candy Maple Syrup Dessert Candy Thermometer Fat Free Kidney Friendly Vegan Vegetarian Pescatarian Dairy Free Wheat/Gluten-Free Peanut Free Tree Nut Free Soy Free Kosher
Yield 1 lb candy
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- Fill a large pot partially with water. Bring to a boil, and note the temperature of the boiling water with a candy thermometer. (Since water boils at different temperatures in different locations, it is important to follow this step.) Set some candy molds into a jelly-roll pan. Set aside. (If using metal or wood molds, lightly grease them.)
- Empty the large pot and place the syrup in it. Add a few drops of oil. (Boiling maple syrup will foam up; the oil keeps the foam down. Buttering the rim of the pot will also help.)
- Boil carefully over high heat, without stirring, until the temperature of the boiling syrup is 28°F/17°C above the boiling point of your water (212°F/100°C at sea level).
- Remove from the heat and let cool for 3 to 5 minutes. Do not stir or disturb the candy at this point; if the thermometer is attached to the pan, leave it there during the cooling period.
- Stir evenly until the liquid loses its gloss, starts to become opaque, and begins to thicken. (This is the tricky part; if you stir too long the thickened syrup will "set up," or harden, in the pan. If this happens, add a cup of water, and reheat slowly to dissolve the sugar, then start over. But if you don't stir long enough, the sugar may not "set up" in the molds at all.)
- Carefully pour the candy into the molds. It's helpful to have an assistant spread the syrup in the molds while you continue to pour the mixture into the other molds.
- Allow the candies to cool, remove from the molds, place on a rack to dry for a few hours, and enjoy.
14 MINUTE MAPLE CANDY
Here's a recipe a friend sent when I wanted to make homemade maple candy. Let me know what you think of it!
Provided by KitchenCraftsnMore
Categories Candy
Time 1h
Yield 1 pan of fudge
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Cook the maple syrup, cream, and butter for 9 minutes after the boiling point is reached.
- Remove from heat, add the nut meats and extract and stir for 5 minutes.
- Pour into buttered pans and when cool, cut into squares.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 5290.2, Fat 193, SaturatedFat 85.3, Cholesterol 387.3, Sodium 540.7, Carbohydrate 906.1, Fiber 12.3, Sugar 766.9, Protein 29.4
MAPLE SYRUP CANDY
Maple syrup candy is so good, and so easy I was surprised nobody had submitted a recipe for it. This is just a quick one from a store cook book, but it is very good.
Provided by Kevin Young
Categories Candy
Time 30m
Yield 16 candies
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- Cook syrup in a saucepan over medium heat until it reaches 240 degrees on a candy thermometer.
- Remove from heat and allow to cool to 200 degrees.
- Stir constantly until syrup becomes sugary.
- Pour into molds (something about the size of a caramel candy).
- When candy is cool, you can remove from molds.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 105, Fat 0.1, Sodium 3.6, Carbohydrate 27, Sugar 24
MAPLE CREAM CANDY
Make and share this Maple Cream Candy recipe from Food.com.
Provided by looneytunesfan
Categories Candy
Time 35m
Yield 1 9x9 inch pan
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Lightly oil a 9- by 9-inch square pan, or a baking sheet.
- In a small heavy-duty saucepan (about 2 quarts) mix together the maple syrup, sugar, cream, and corn syrup.
- Fit a candy thermometer to the side of the pan and heat until the temperature reaches 236 degrees, tilting the pan to submerge the bulb, if necessary, to gauge the correct temperature.
- Remove the pan from the heat and transfer the mixture into the metal bowl of a standing electric mixer.
- Submerge the thermometer in the candy mixture until it has cooled to 110 degrees, which will take a while.
- (tip: you can put the bottom of the bowl in ice water to speed up the process; but dont stir the mixture to cool it down).
- When the temperature is 110 degrees, add the vanilla and beat the mixture until it just begins to thicken and loose its gloss.
- Overmixing will make it grainy, so keep an eye on it.
- Stir in the nuts and spread the mixture into the square pan or onto the baking sheet, forming it into a 9-inch square with your (clean) hands.
- Allow to cool completely, then remove from the pan and cut into squares.
- To remove it from a square pan, run a sharp knife around the inside of the pan to loosen it, then cut it in half.
- Use a metal spatula to pry the candy loose a bit (it will be flexible).
- Invert the pan a shake it to coax the maple cream candy out.
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