Home-Candied Angelica
- 1 pound angelica
- 1 pound sugar granulated
- The most important thing about candying angelica is to choose stalks that are young and tender.
- In other words, angelica is only worth candying in April or May when the shoots are new and softly coloured.
- Trim the young shoots into 3 to 4 inch lengths, put them into a pan, cover with water and bring to a boil.
- Drain and scrape away tough skin and fibrous threads with a potato peeler, rather as you might prepare celery.
- Return the angelica to the pan, pour on fresh boiling water and cook until green and tender.
- If the shoots are as youthful as they should be, this will take 5 minutes or less.
- Drain the stalks and dry them.
- Put them into a bowl and sprinkle granulated sugar between layers, allowing 1 pound of sugar for every 1 pound of angelica.
- Cover and leave for 2 to 3 days.
- Slide contents of the bowl into a heavy-based pan.
- Bring very slowly to the boil and simmer until the angelica feels perfectly tender and looks clear.
- Drain, then roll or toss the shoots on greaseproof paper thickly strewn with sugar, letting the angelica take up as much sugar as will stick to it.
- Then dry off the angelica - without letting it become hard - in the oven, using the lowest possible temperature.
- I place the stalks directly on the oven shelves (with trays underneath to catch any falling sugar) and find they need about 3 hours.
- Wrap and store after cooling completely.
angelica, sugar
Taken from recipeland.com/recipe/v/home-candied-angelica-33663 (may not work)