Butter Toffee Hazelnuts and Dark Chocolate
- 4 1/2 ounces butter
- 3 ounces water
- 14 ounces sugar
- 2 tablespoons light corn syrup
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 5 ounces chopped, toasted hazelnuts
- Tempered Chocolate, recipe follows
- 5 ounces dark chocolate couverture, chopped, divided
- In a small saucepan, melt the butter and water on high heat.
- Add the sugar and corn syrup.
- Wipe down the sides of the saucepan with a damp pastry brush to remove any loose sugar crystals.
- Cook the sugar mixture to 300 degrees F. Remove from the heat and set the pan over an ice bath for 5 to 10 seconds to stop the cooking.
- Remove from the ice bath.
- Add the vanilla and baking soda, stirring to incorporate.
- Quickly pour the mixture onto a silicone pad and spread thin.
- Sprinkle with chopped hazelnuts.
- Let set until completely cool, 5 to 7 minutes.
- Once the toffee is set, turn over onto a sheet of parchment.
- Spread a thin layer of fluid, tempered chocolate onto the toffee and let set.
- Once set, the chocolate should be shiny, hard, and should snap with any given resistance.
- Turn back over and break into desired pieces.
- This recipe was provided by professional chefs and has been scaled down from a bulk recipe provided by a restaurant.
- The Food Network Kitchens chefs have not tested this recipe, in the proportions indicated, and therefore, we cannot make any representation as to the results.
- Over a double boiler, melt 4 ounces chocolate to 115 degrees to 120 degrees F. Bring the bowl, with the chocolate, to a flat, clean work surface ( preferably marble or stainless steel ), wiping away any access water or steam from the bowl.
- With rubber spatula, fully incorporate the remaining 1 ounce chocolate.
- Bring down the temperature of the chocolate to 80 to 84 degrees F by either stirring constantly in a figure 8 motion, or tabling (see Cook's Note).
- Once cooled, test the chocolate by dipping a small strip of parchment paper into the melted chocolate, and then lay it down on a clean work surface.
- If tempered, the chocolate on the parchment paper should be dry, hard, shiny, and without any streaks in 3 to 5 minutes.
- If any of these occur, keep stirring (agitating) the chocolate, or table it again, until a parchment paper test shows that the chocolate is tempered.
- When tempered, bring the chocolate back to the double boiler and reheat to NO HIGHER than 89 degrees F. (Bringing the temperature back up aids in a more fluid working consistency.)
- Transfer the chocolate to a chocolate warmer or set the bowl on top of a heating pad (at medium setting) to keep in temper.
- Cook's Note: To table, pour 2/3 of the chocolate onto a marble slab, quickly spread with a thin metal spatula, scrape into a pile with a putty knife, and then spread thin again.
- Repeat until the right consistency is reached.
- Add back to the warm chocolate.
butter, water, sugar, light corn syrup, vanilla, baking soda, hazelnuts, chocolate, chocolate couverture
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/butter-toffee-hazelnuts-and-dark-chocolate-recipe.html (may not work)