Chocolate Covered Almonds
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 cup water
- 3 1/2 cups whole unblanched almonds
- Bittersweet chocolate, tempered
- Milk Chocolate, tempered
- Cocoa Powder
- Place the granulated sugar and water in a large copper pot or 4-quart heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium-high heat and bring the mixture to a boil.
- Add the almonds and stir to coat them evenly in the sugar syrup.
- Your goal is to cook the almonds until the sugar crystallizes and caramelizes.
- When water is added to the sugar, the sugar crystals are dissolved.
- As it boils, the syrup becomes thicker as the water evaporates and big soap-like bubbles begin to form.
- Soon, all the moisture evaporates and the mixture becomes sandy.
- The sandiness is the sugar recrystallizing.
- It only takes the reformation of one sugar crystal to recrystallize the others.
- Keep stirring!
- Next, you see the sugar closest to the heat change from sandy to a clear liquid.
- The melted sugar clings to the almonds.
- When the sugar changes from clear to golden brown, the nuts are caramelized.
- Once this happens, pay close attention; the time it takes to pass from caramelized to burned is only a matter of seconds, especially when making smaller batches.
- You know the nuts are finished when most of the sandy sugar is gone.
- The first few times you make these, I suggest you try the following: When the sugar closest to the heat changes from sandy to liquid, remove the pan from the burner and continue to stir.
- The residual heat in the sugar and nuts will continue to cook the mixture while you stir it.
- Lower the heat to medium-low and continue to stir the nuts while moving the saucepan on and off the heat at 10-second intervals.
- This will give you more control as it cooks.
- When the nuts begin to caramelize, remove them from the heat and finish stirring.
- Use a wooden spoon to spread the caramelized nuts onto a parchment paper-covered baking sheet.
- Do not touch the nuts as they are extremely hot.
- Let the nuts cool completely.
- If your freezer will accommodate the baking sheet, you can place the nuts in the freezer for about 30 minutes to speed up the cooling process.
- When completely cooled, break apart any nut clusters that may have formed.
- At this stage, you can choose to serve the nuts as they are.
- Place the caramelized nuts in the coating pan attached to the stand mixer.
- Spin at low speed.
- Use a ladle to add the chocolate to the spinning nuts.
- Add 1 ladle at a time until the nuts are coated to the desired thickness.
- If a thicker coat is desired, use more chocolate.
- If a thinner coat is desired, decrease the amount of chocolate.
- Finish by adding cocoa powder to the coating pan.
- Remove and serve.
sugar, water, almonds, bittersweet chocolate, milk chocolate, cocoa
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/chocolate-covered-almonds-recipe.html (may not work)