Saturday, February 21, 2009

TWD: Caramel Crunch Bar

This is a keeper! If I'm not careful, I'll finish the entire pan by myself. Luckily, I have very willing taste testers who are willing to taste anything. They also LOVED these bars. I couldn't find any toffee bits, so I made some from scratch. Scroll down for the recipe I used - just skip the pecan bit.

The first few pictures below show the toffee mixture at various stages. You need to stay by the stove and stir constantly. Once it reaches 300 degrees, it takes only a blink of an eye to reach 310 degrees.

I'll update this post with more coherent narration when I'm back home in next week. I'm in New Orleans on a trip and trying to post this using my iPhone, and it's not the easiest thing to do. I can't fix the font and such. Good thing that started the post before I left home with the pictures and the toffee recipe. Anyway, I wanted to make sure this posted today but will update it as promised...I'll also include one of the ten thousand pictures I took of beignets.

Laissez les bons temps rouler!







Pecan Toffee

Yield: Makes About 2 1⁄2 Pounds

Ingredients:
  • 2 tsp. plus 2 cups butter
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 2 tbsp. light corn syrup
  • 2 tsp. kosher salt
  • 2 cups chopped toasted pecans

Directions:
  1. Grease the bottom and sides of a 10"×15" jelly roll pan with 2 tsp. butter and set aside. Put remaining butter, sugar, corn syrup, salt, and 1⁄2 cup water into a medium pot and bring to a boil over medium high heat while stirring constantly. Attach a candy thermometer to inside edge of pot and cook, continuing to stir constantly, until sugar mixture is deep golden brown and registers 310° (the hardcrack stage), about 20 minutes.
  2. Pour the hot toffee onto the prepared pan and, using oven mitts, tilt and turn the pan to fill it evenly.  Sprinkle the pecans over the top. (If you'd like to coat the toffee with chocolate before adding the nuts, let the toffee cool for 5 minutes, then sprinkle 2 cups semisweet chocolate chips over the top. Let sit for 1 minute, then use a rubber spatula to gently spread the melted chocolate evenly over the top. Sprinkle the pecans over the chocolate and gently press them down.)
  3. Refrigerate toffee until it hardens, about 1 hour, then break into bite-size pieces. Serve toffee immediately or store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
This recipe was first published in Saveur in Issue #107

4 comments:

Danielle said...

Hope your havig a great time at Mardi Gras!
Homemade toffee wow you went above and beyond for this recipe! I bet homemade toffee is better then that stuff in a bag ;)

Anonymous said...

Of course you're having a blast in NO, so I'm not going wish you fun. I've never been and it sounds so amazing.
Homemade toffee sounds wonderful.

Nora said...

These look really yummy!

I took a look at your blog and everything looks very good. I am not a member of TWD but wish to be. Your blog is very cool and I hope that you keep on posting. I put you on my favorites so I can keep up with your blog! happy baking!

Nora

p.s
My blog site is:
norasworldofbaking.blogspot.com
visit it if you would like to and comments are immensely appreciated!

Anonymous said...

Yum! They look real good.