Candy-making with Butter - Challenge Dairy (2024)

General Guidelines

There are three main types of candies that contain butter: toffee, caramels, and fudge. The following guidelines apply to all:

  1. 1

    Avoid making candy on a humid day. The candy will absorb the moisture from the air when cooling and not set properly. If it is only slightly humid, cooking the candy a degree or two higher than directed may counteract this.

  2. 2

    Use a heavy saucepan (anodized aluminum, cast aluminum or cast iron). Butter the sides to keep sugar crystals from forming. If the recipe calls for melting the butter first, coat the sides of the pan before adding sugar. The saucepan should be an appropriate size for the recipe and match the size of the burner or be slightly undersized to minimize heat fluctuations in the candy.

  3. 3

    Use a candy thermometer that you have tested for accuracy in boiling water: It should read 212°F — if the thermometer reads higher or lower, add or subtract the difference from the recipe temperature.

  4. 4

    Do not attempt to rush the candy making process. Keep the temperature under the pan constant – set the burner temperature at medium and leave it — temperature fluctuations can lead to problems with sugar crystallization and fat separation in Toffee.

  5. 5

    After the sugar has dissolved and the mixture comes to a boil, cover the pan for 2 minutes to allow the steam to wash the sides. (This is to prevent crystals from forming on the sides of the pan.) Then uncover and stir the mixture as little as possible during the final cooking stages.

  6. 6

    Let the finished candy cool at room temperature. Do not try to hurry the process by putting the candy in the refrigerator or freezer.

Tips for Making Toffee

Toffee’s (English toffee or butter toffee) primary ingredient is butter. The most common difficulty in making toffee is butter separation. Here are some things you can do to prevent separation:

  1. 1

    Use salted butter. Salt seems to stabilize the mixture. If you use unsalted butter, add ¼ teaspoon of salt per stick of butter in the recipe.

  2. 2

    Melt the butter over medium heat and keep the temperature under the pot constant so the candy mixture is heated gradually.

  3. 3

    Remember to stir slowly and gently during the final stages of cooking.

What to do if separation occurs:

  1. 1

    Keep stirring and the candy may come back together on its own.

  2. 2

    Add hot water (a tablespoon at a time) — do not add more than a total ¼ cup (4 tablespoons) to recipe calling for 1 cup (2 sticks) of butter. Add water slowly and carefully as the water can cause the hot candy mixture to splatter. Stir and heat candy to the finished temperature.

Tips for Making Caramels

Caramels are the butter candy most sensitive to humidity. Most caramel recipes require a long cook time, typically 2-2½ hours, because of the amount of liquid that must be evaporated. Our recipes use sweetened condensed milk to reduce the cooking time to only 30-45 minutes.

Tips for Making Fudge

Graininess is the most common problem that occurs when making traditional fudge, but preparing traditional fudge is not difficult if you understand what needs to happen to create “melt-on-your-tongue” smooth candy. In making fudge, large uneven crystals of granulated sugar are dissolved and heated, then re-crystallized. The goal is to make sure the crystals that form are extremely small. Smaller crystals result in a smoother, creamier consistency in the finished fudge. Coarse grainy fudge results when large crystals are allowed to form.

  1. 1

    Butter is added in the final stages to add flavor and smoothness and inhibit large crystal formation. Use unsalted butter so you can add a small amount of salt (¼ teaspoon per stick of butter) to the sugar/liquid mixture. Salt tends to stabilize the mixture and keep it from foaming as much.

  2. 2

    The secret to perfect fudge is to stir as little as possible from the time the sugar is completely dissolved through cooking and cooling stages. Stirring and jarring of the sugar mixture, particularly during the cooling phase, can trigger sugar crystal formulation and result in coarse, grainy candy. Do not try to hasten the cooling process; sudden temperature changes can also lead to larger crystal formation.

Candy-making with Butter - Challenge Dairy (2024)

FAQs

Is butter an interfering agent in candy making? ›

It contains long chains of glucose molecules that tend to keep the sucrose molecules in the taffy syrup from crystallizing. In this taffy recipe, the butter also acts as an "interfering agent"—the milk proteins in the butter interfere with crystal formation as well.

What is the difference between challenge butter and regular butter? ›

Challenge European Style Butter is Grade AA and is 83% butterfat versus 80% for regular butter. It is made by churning cream slower and longer in the age-old tradition of fine European butter. It has a creamier taste and a silkier texture.

Can you use challenge butter for baking? ›

You can choose either unsalted or salted butter for these caramel stuffed chocolate chip cookies, but I highly recommend using a quality butter like Challenge Butter. Challenge butter is made the old-fashioned way, with the freshest milk from family-owned dairies.

Why does butter separate when making fudge? ›

Fudge is basically an emulsion between sugar, butter and milk. If the butter gets too hot, it can separate, causing the fudge to become oily on top. This is easy to prevent by monitoring the temperature with a candy thermometer, but separated fudge can also be fixed.

Why does butter separate when making candy? ›

Common Causes. One of the most common triggers is when the candy has undergone an abrupt temperature shift, either becoming too cold or too hot in a very short period of time.

What are the four main interfering agents in candy making? ›

Other interfering agents such as heavy cream, milk and evaporated milk (milk proteins), egg whites, cocoa and chocolate solids: coat the crystals and slow their growth, and also add flavor and interest.

What's the deal with Challenge Butter? ›

Challenge Butter has been a quality staple in kitchens since 1911. It's churned daily from two natural ingredients: the freshest 100% real pasteurized sweet cream and salt. That's it. Nothing artificial or synthetic.

Can you leave Challenge Butter out overnight? ›

The USDA recommends leaving butter out at room temperature for only a day or two. But if it's stored in all of the proper conditions listed above, it can stay fresh for up to two weeks. So don't leave out more than you think you'll be able to get through in that small period of time.

Why can't you freeze Challenge Butter? ›

Challenge packages suggest butter may be kept frozen for up to 4 months, but very fresh butter has been frozen successfully for up to 12 months at 20°-30°F. Although freezing will prolong shelf life, gradual flavor and texture changes will occur over time.

Why do they call it Challenge Butter? ›

The legend behind the Challenge name.

Murphy felt that this was exactly what he and the dairymen he represented were trying to accomplish. They were challenging the other dairy organizations with a product that was known for its quality.

What grade is Challenge Butter? ›

It's pure grade AA butter that's ideal for spreading.

Is Land O' Lakes real butter or margarine? ›

Stick margarine made with 80% vegetable oil, i.e. Land O Lakes® Margarine, can be substituted for butter in most baking applications, except pastry recipes and candy made from boiled syrup. Margarine will produce a softer dough than one made with butter, and it will not have the same flavor as recipe made with butter.

Why is my 3 ingredient fudge not setting? ›

Why won't my 3 ingredient fudge set? This often happens when the condensed milk and chocolate chip mixture isn't hot enough to start. Everything must be completely melted before it is transferred to the pan to cool.

What is the secret to good fudge? ›

Valuable tips for successful fudge
  • Don't stir during cooking. Fudge can be cooked on the stove or in the microwave. ...
  • Avoid crystallization. During cooking, sugar crystals can stick to the sides of the pan. ...
  • Let cool before beating. After being cooked, the sugar must crystallize again to create fudge. ...
  • Beat the mixture.

Why is my brown sugar not dissolving in butter? ›

The temperature of your butter is critical when creaming butter and sugar. Too cold, and your sugar won't properly dissolve into your butter. Too hot, and your cakes will end up flat and greasy. The magical temperature of softened butter is actually around 65℉, slightly cooler than the ambient temperature of your home.

What role does butter play in candy? ›

Butter is added in the final stages to add flavor and smoothness and inhibit large crystal formation. Use unsalted butter so you can add a small amount of salt (¼ teaspoon per stick of butter) to the sugar/liquid mixture.

What happens when you mix sugar and butter? ›

Creaming simply means mixing your butter and sugar(s) together until well blended, leaving you with a fluffy light yellow mix. Just do not over mix! Butter and sugars are over-mixed when the butter begins to separate. The reason we 'cream' butter and sugar(s) together is to create little air pockets in our dough.

What is used to interfere with crystallization in candy? ›

Interfering agents (e.g., cream of tartar, lemon juice, corn syrup, molasses, or vinegar) are added to sugar syrup mixtures to prevent the formation of large crystals.

What is the use of butter in confectionery? ›

In pastry making, butter plays a fundamental role because it makes the pastry ""waterproof"". At the same time, it adds crustiness and crumble to shortcrust and all dry pastries (small cakes for eating on the move, for example) and brings softness and creaminess to risen doughs.

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