4-Ingredient Microwave Oreo Fudge

4-Ingredient Microwave Oreo Fudge

#SPONSORED

My life can pretty much be measured in batches of fudge. It’s always been the go-to sweet treat in the Williams household and there’s nothing my mom couldn’t make faster than a batch of fudge – unless of course she had to drive to the shops for condensed milk, then it would be the second quickest thing she could make. If only I’d figured this recipe out sooner, I could’ve saved her time and spent more time eating fudge.

This 3-ingredient, microwave magic fudge is condensed milk -free. But before you think I’ve lost my mind because who wouldn’t want to put condensed milk in everything (I know you’ve thought about it), it means that you can now make fudge using just sugar, milk powder and butter. Yes people, this is the fudge of the future! Don’t skimp and use just any sugar though, add a sugar with flavour and body – I love using the Natura Sugars Unrefined Soft Brown Sugar for fudge because it’s light caramel flavour adds more than just sweetness. It’s also unrefined which means it’s still got goodness in it (and yes sugar can have goodness in it too you know!).

So about my life in fudge (book title perhaps?), while I blame my mother for my fudge addiction, it really started with my first best friend, Taryn. We were 6 and the very first time I visited her house, I immediately knew we would be besties for life – her mom owned Pudge Fudge (the best homemade-fudge-you-could-buy in the world). And as every Friday was restocking day (I.e she’d bake an insane amount of fudge) it meant there were an equally insane amount of corner pieces and off cuts – which I was only too happy to help her ‘dispose’ of.

When Taryn immigrated to New Zealand I was heartbroken, but our mutual love of fudge lived on! I made fudge every chance I could get – if I had to come up with a product for entrepeneurship day at school? Fudge. School projects? Fudge again. English orals? They always ended in fudge – You get fudge, you get fudge, everybody gets fudge!

My very first visit to Cape Town when I was 13 was not remembered for going up Table Mountain, or the aquarium, or riding an escalator (hey, the town of George just doesn’t have them, okay!), but instead by my discovery of the American Fudge Factory! Who remembers it? I’d press my face up against the glass and gawk at the fudge makers whipping and folding the hot fudge with a paddle until it was smooth and then they’d fold in all manner of delicious and naughty things inside before cutting it into slabs. I’d spend all my pocket money on trying the different flavours but my favourite was cookies and cream. In our family though, there was one flavour that always caused a giggle. After visiting the American Fudge Factory one year, my cousin gifted my grandmother with a box of chocolate-flavoured fudge. When we received a phone call from my hysterical grandmother exclaiming that we had to call the police because someone was trying to kill her, we were confused, until we found out that she’d opened the gift box of fudge and discovered ‘Death by Chocolate’.

So to avoid confusing death threats and fudge, I’ve instead remade my favourite cookies ‘n cream flavour with pretty Oreo bottoms. But by all means, if you’d like to die at the hands of chocolate (who wouldn’t) place whatever chocolatey goodness you want into this fudge just don’t go giving it to nervous little old ladies!

4-Ingredient Microwave Oreo Fudge

Makes 24

 

16 chocolate sandwich cookies (Oreo’s)

185g butter, melted

1 ¼ cup milk powder

2 ¾ cups Natura Soft Brown Sugar

1/3 cup boiling water

1 tsp vanilla extract

 

Line a 20 x 20cm baking tin with baking paper and arrange the oreo’s on the bottom. In a large microwave-safe bowl, combine the melted butter, milk powder, soft brown sugar and boiling water and mix well. Microwave on full powder for approximately 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the fudge is a deep golden brown. To test if the fudge is ready, drop a small amount of the hot fudge into a cup of tap water, it should form a soft ball almost immediately. Stir in the vanilla extract. Pour the fudge into the prepared baking tray and allow to cool completely before cutting into pieces.

Disclaimer: This post has been created in collaboration with Natura Sugars – I only work with brands I think are awesome and that I actually use myself.

Microwave Condensed Milk Fudge

Microwave Condensed Milk Fudge

Last week I found myself in a rather problematic situation – standing in front of my grocery cupboard with the incredibly difficult decision of what snack will best suit my rainy-day snuggling and Grey’s Anatomy marathon… Just when I was about to give up and accept that my fluffy pink slippers would have to be swopped for boots (as a chocolate mission to the shop around the corner was obviously in order), I spotted a tin of condensed milk!  In our family, condensed milk is the god of all things sweet, sticky and yummy. If the pantry was stocked with any kind of chocolate, sweet or biscuit you could imagine, the condensed milk would be the first to go. Always. Whether enjoyed straight out the can, with a teaspoon, or boiled in the tin to a thick gooey caramel.  Oh, but of course I’m forgetting fudge! One of the biggest debates in our family occurs when my mom whips out a tin of condensed milk after dinner and asks the same question which immediately jumped to mind while I was standing and eyeing that tin…
Condensed milk or fudge? After some deliberation, I settled on BOTH – I’d make the fudge and strategically leave enough condensed milk behind in the tin… which I can guarantee (unless it’s like half the tin) will not flop the fudge. Best of both world!

Microwave Condensed Milk Fudge

(makes 36 pieces)

 

125g butter, melted

2 cups caster sugar

1 tin (385g) condensed milk

1tsp vanilla extract

 

Combine butter and sugar in a large microwave safe bowl.  Add condensed milk – do not stir. Microwave on high for about 10 minutes (stirring after 1 minute each time) or until it reaches a deep caramel golden brown. To test the fudge, smear a little of the mixture onto a cold plate or cold surface. If it sets, it’s done.  Allow to cool slightly, then add the vanilla and beat with a wooden spoon until the fudge just starts to set then quickly pour into a 20cm square tin lined with baking paper and allow to set before cutting into squares.