Candy Canes
- Scant 5 cups sugar (1 kilo)
- 3 tablespoons vinegar (40 grams)
- 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons water (250 grams)
- Essential oils ? assorted flavors
- Food color paste ? assorted colors
- Before you begin this recipe, please take a class from a professional on working with sugar.
- This is a skill that professional pastry chefs develop after years of experience.
- Working with sugar will burn your fingers so know before you start that your fingers will develop burn blisters.
- Place the sugar, vinegar and water in a saucepan over high heat.
- Insert a candy thermometer and cook until the sugar reaches 320 degrees F. Use a pastry brush to keep the inside of the saucepan clean as the sugar cooks or the sugar may recrystallize.
- To do this, dip a clean brush in cold water and brush the inside of the pan clean.
- Pour the cooked sugar onto 3 or 4 silicone baking mats.
- If you want to color and/or flavor the sugar with food colors and/or flavored oils, this is the time to do so.
- Add a few drops of color to the sugar.
- Mix with a wooden skewer.
- To get started, push the sugar from the sides toward the center.
- This process takes a little while.
- Try to keep the sugar divided by color.
- Use the mat to push the firm sugar around the edges toward the center.
- Use a folding motion to accomplish that task.
- The next step is to pick up the sugar with your hands.
- Place each color under the heat of the sugar lamp.
- Pull the sugar until it becomes glossy and the color is evenly distributed.
- You will need to pull the colors simultaneously.
- Keep them under the sugar lamp but keep an eye on them.
- The lamp can melt the sugar so it is important keep rotating it and folding it onto itself.
- Start with 2 pieces of colored sugar.
- I used red and green.
- Pull them into a rectangular shape that is about 1 1/2-inches wide by 3-inches long and 1/2-inch thick.
- Place the pieces side-to-side and let them stick together on the long side.
- Place a piece of white sugar that is about 1/2-inch wide by 3-inches long and 1/2-inch thick in the middle.
- Close the red and green around it.
- Roll it and twist it while pulling it.
- When it gets to the desired thickness, use a scissor to cut the length and shape into a cane.
- Allow to cool completely.
- The white is inside and will become apparent when eaten.
- Jacques?
- tips: Vinegar keeps the sugar from crystallizing.
- You will not taste the flavor.
- It serves as an acid in this recipe.
- Sometimes candy cane recipes contain corn syrup, which makes the sugar very dry and very hot.
- Adding corn syrup makes it more difficult to work with the sugar at home.
- Remember, the sugar is at 320 degrees F, and that will burn you.
- The ideal work surface is a silpat placed over cool marble or granite.
- If you do not have marble or stone, use wood.
- It is a good idea to use gloves to help protect your hands from the heat and to prevent burning.
- I use a special sugar box that includes a special heat source, If you don?t have one, you can work in front of the oven.
- Set the oven to 300 degrees F. Open the oven door and place the silpat on the oven door.
- It provides a similar effect to the sugar box heater.
sugar, vinegar, water, color paste
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/candy-canes-recipe.html (may not work)