Latte Fudge
- 3 cups sugar
- 1 12 cups half-and-half or 1 12 cups light cream
- 2 tablespoons espresso powder (cut back unless you like strong coffee flavor) or 3 tablespoons instant coffee crystals (cut back unless you like strong coffee flavor)
- 3 tablespoons light corn syrup
- 14 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 2 tablespoons butter (no substitute)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1 cup toasted chopped hazelnuts (filberts)
- 2 ounces semisweet chocolate, melted (optional)
- coffee beans (optional)
- Line an 8x8x2-inch baking pan with foil, extending foil over edges of pan.
- Butter the foil; set pan aside.
- Butter sides of a heavy 3-quart saucepan (I wipe the sides with the butter wrapper).
- In the saucepan, combine sugar, half-and-half or light cream, espresso powder or instant coffee crystals, corn syrup and cinnamon.
- Cook and stir over medium-high heat until mixture boils.
- Clip a candy thermometer to side of pan.
- Reduce heat to medium-low; continue to boil at a moderate, steady rate, stirring occasionally (don't over do it or it will become grainy), until thermometer registers 234 degrees F, soft-ball stage (25 - 35 minutes).
- Adjust heat as necessary to maintain a steady boil, but don't try to rush it.
- Remove pan from heat.
- Add butter and vanilla.
- Beat mixture vigorously with a clean wooden spoon until fudge just begins to thicken; stir in nuts.
- Continue beating until fudge just starts to lose its gloss (about 10 minutes total).
- Immediately spread fudge evenly in the prepared pan.
- Score into 1-1/2-inch squares while warm.
- When fudge is firm, use the excess foil to lift it out of pan.
- Cut fudge into squares.
- If desired, drizzle pieces with melted chocolate and top with coffee beans.
sugar, light cream, espresso powder, light corn syrup, ground cinnamon, butter, vanilla, hazelnuts, chocolate, coffee beans
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/latte-fudge-492107 (may not work)