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Gourmet Caramels
Some of our favorite caramels. From bottom: Mrs. Call’s Caramels, Cowgirl Chocolates’ Hot Habañero Caramels, Gifford’s Caramels. Photography by Michael Steele.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

KAREN HOCHMAN is Editorial Director of THE NIBBLE.

 

 

July 2007

Product Reviews / Main Nibbles / Candy

Crazy For Caramels

Gourmet Caramel Candy From Top Artisans

 

CAPSULE REPORT: We’d like to nominate old-fashioned caramels as the new hot candy. From the classic perfection of Mrs. Call’s to the heat of Cowgirl Chocolates’ Buckin’ Hot Habañero Caramels to the modern flavor infusions of Cocoa Designs, we love every one of these six winners. A thoughtful house gift instead of wine or flowers, caramels don’t melt in the summer heat. But, they taste great with a cappuccino or a hot chocolate on the coldest winter day.

Caramel is simply sugar, melted into a syrup and cooked until the sugar crystals turn into a dark amber liquid. In this form, it can be used to coat nuts (pralines) and popcorn, thickened into a sauce and a myriad of other delights. Whisk in some butter, remove from the heat and whisk in cream, and you have a delicious caramel sauce. Cook those ingredients to what is known as the “firm ball” stage (245°F, 118°C), and you get buttery, chewy caramel candy,* that can be enjoyed by the piece or combined with chocolate bars and other confections. Keep cooking the caramel to the “hard-crack” stage (290°F, 143°C) and you’ll get crunchy toffee.† Pour the caramel into a pan, scored it into rectangles, and cut and wrap each piece individually to prevent sticking. Then, try not to eat them all at once.

*Candy makers use the term “short” to describe a caramel that is too soft (perhaps too moist), and “long” for a caramel that on the chewy side.

†Most toffee is made with butter but not cream; however, a creamier style of toffee, known as cream toffee, adds cream or sweetened condensed milk for a richer toffee.

Quality caramels are made with sugar and brown sugar, butter and heavy cream, and flavorings (vanilla, salt and other flavorings—chocolate, maple, coffee, and as you’ll see below, other imaginative choices). In modern candy-making, two other key ingredients are added to the caramel recipe for longer shelf life: corn syrup to present crystallization and lecithin as an emulsifier (a stabilizer, so the ingredients don’t separate). Some caramel makers still wrap their caramels in waxed paper, although others have updated to clear cellophane, a prettier solution that enables customers to see the product.

The History Of Caramel

The word caramel was first recorded in the English language in 1725; it comes from the Spanish caramelo. The original Spanish word did not refer to the chewy caramel candy we know today, but more likely, to caramelized sugar. The source of caramelo is unknown, but some scholars believe it is related to the late Latin calamellus, a diminutive form of calamus, reed or cane—an implied reference to sugar cane.

We know that soft caramel candy is an American invention—we just don’t know exactly when it was invented. By about 1650, Americans were boiling water and sugar in deep kettles in their fireplaces to make hard candies. Someone, at some point, added butter and milk to the pot and invented the caramel. By the mid-1800s, there were nearly 400 American candy manufacturers producing hard candies as well as caramels—recipes for caramels abound in cookbooks of the era. Milton Hershey’s first business was the Lancaster Caramel Company: He learned to make chocolate when seeking a coating for his caramels.†
†Source: Madehow.com, Volume 6: Caramel.

While the British invented toffee, the “soft toffee,” or caramel, invented by Americans crossed the pond in the 1880s, soon enough creating a universal demand in England. Unfortunately, mass-producers cut corners, substituting coconut oil for the butter and cream until, as one writer of the time reported, “competition stepped in with the usual result—the prices lowered, the quality suffered, until anything cut into the shape were called caramels....The very name has almost become a synonym for rubbish.”‡
‡Skuse’s Complete Confectioner, [W.J.Bush & Co.:London] 189? (p. 60-61).

More than one hundred and twenty-five years later, one might say that most Americans have never tasted a real caramel—only “rubbish” from the supermarket, the newsstand, and mass-merchandise stores. We’re happy to be able to turn back the hands of time, by introducing you to products that taste as good as—or better than—the ones made by artisans of generations past.

Our Favorite Caramels

Béquet Caramels:
Versatile Vanilla

This artisan producer in Montana offers versatility: vanilla caramels in Soft, Chewy, Anise, Celtic Sea Salt, Salt Chocolate, Chipotle and Maple. Or, there are subtly-flavored Chocolate and Espresso. Our favorites are the Anise, Celtic Sea Salt, Salt Chocolate and Chipotle. The latter is milder than Cowgirl Chocolates’ Hot Habañero (for people who want a nice pinch, but not a kick). You can actually taste the chipotle (smoked jalapeño), which provides a very nice counterpoint to the sugar and butter (it won “Outstanding Confection” at the 2007 Summer Fancy Food Show). The “Soft” caramel is nicely soft (though Gifford’s are softer), and “Chewy” is appropriately so.

 

Bequet Caramels
A bevy of Béquet caramels: An assorted bag has six different flavors.
Habanero Caramels - Cowgirl Chocolates
Yee-hah—hot habañero caramels from Cowgirl Chocolate spice things up.

Cowgirl Chocolates:
Hot Habañero Caramels

A creamy caramel with a hot habañero kick is just what the doctor ordered, at least for some folks. We loved these Buckin’ Hot Habañero Caramels, made in Idaho. They’re tender enough to be enjoyed with a cup of tea or a glass of milk, and spicy enough to have with a beer. Read our full review of Cowgirl Chocolates’ spicy candies, a NIBBLE Top Pick Of The Week.

Gifford’s Caramels:
A Softer Chew

Since 1938, Gifford‘s has been pleasing the D.C. crowd with ice cream and candy. The caramels are much softer chews and a real find for people who have steered clear of caramels for fear of fillings, braces and such. In Caramel Apple, Chocolate, Coffee Toffee, Vanilla and Vanilla Nut (with pecan pieces), the Vanilla and Chocolate are available in the summer; the other flavors return in the fall. Coffee Toffee has the best coffee flavor of the coffee caramels we tried.

  • 1-1/8 Pound Gift Box
    $24.99
    Other Sizes Available
  • Giffords.com
Gifford's Caramels
Gifford’s caramels are tender.
Mrs. Call's Caramels
Mrs. Call’s caramels are creamy and full-
flavored.

Mrs. Call’s Caramels:
Classic Perfection


Perhaps the most classic of the caramels, these cream caramels from Utah have all the old-fashioned flavor and chewiness one could ask for. All four flavors we had were outstanding—Vanilla Cream, Licorice, Mocha (very chocolaty) and Pecan (Vanilla Cream with chopped pecans). The Vanilla Cream are perhaps our favorite vanilla caramels; and the Licorice must not be overlooked. The company also makes yummy pretzel rods, dipped in caramel and coated with white chocolate.

Cocoa Designs Caramels:
Innovative Flavors

All natural and handmade in San Francisco with organic cream  and Normandy-style butter, these classic-style caramels are pretty special. Cocoa Designs excels at flavoring, and you won’t find a flavor assortment like this anywhere else: Azteque (chocolate, cinnamon and chili), Café (coffee), Lait (milk chocolate), Earl Grey Tea, Jasmine Tea and Thai Tea. The tea flavors are seasoned with grey sea salt. It you can only choose one, try the Thai Tea. But, get together with friends and buy them all.

 

Cocoa Designs Caramels
Cocoa Designs’ caramels are infused with wonderfully-different flavors.

Pierre Marcolini Caramels
We have a passion for Pierre Marcolini’s Passion Fruit Caramels (shown above with the seeds).

Pierre Marcolini Caramels:
Delicate Bites


The great Belgian chocolatier Pierre Marcolini’s caramels are ethereal. An assorted box includes Chocolate, Passion Fruit, Pineapple/Ginger, Vanilla and Verveine (lemon verbena). Smart traders will convince others that the ones with the seeds (the Passion Fruit) are not as valuable as the rest, and grab them all for themselves.

 

Prices and flavor availability are verified at publication but are subject to change. Shipping is additional.

 

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