Chewy Chocolate Maple Brazil Nut Toffees

Chewy Chocolate Maple Brazil Nut Toffees

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The only thing more delicious than the combination of maple syrup, Brazil nuts and chocolate in these toffees is their luscious, chewy texture. 

Chewy Chocolate Brazil Nut Toffees. With these toffees being such a mouthful, I made their name one too, didn’t I?! 

Believe it or not, this toffee recipe didn’t make the cut when we were doing final changes to my cookbook, ‘Chocolate’! We shot 120 recipes but only 90 made it in. But that doesn’t mean these toffees weren’t worthy. They are so good that I can’t actually remember why we left them out – I blame it on the chocolate coma! 😉

Toffees are always a bit of effort to make, but the result is so worth it! There are a few tricks to perfecting toffees:

  1. Don’t be afraid of the toffee. It senses your fear and will crystallize! 
  2. Always stir the sugar syrup over low heat (don’t boil) in the beginning stages to melt the sugar crystals. Once they’re all melted (I use the back of a metal spoon to check), THEN you can bring it to the boil. Any sooner, and you’ll just end up with a crystally mess. 
  3. Brushing down the sides of the pot with hot water will also help prevent crystals and ensure your toffee is on point!
  4. A sugar thermometer will make life easier, but if you don’t have one, I’ve also provided ways to test the temperature without one.
  5. You know those little sachets you get when you buy shoes and handbags? SAVE THEM! They absorb humidity and if you pop a few in the airtight container you store your toffees in, it will stop them turning into a sticky mess. You’re welcome! 

If you haven’t yet got a copy of my book, it’s available online at Takealot and Loot or at all major bookstores including Exclusive Books, Bargain Books and Wordsworth. Its packed full of 90 brand new recipes with jaw-dropping food photography from my friend Hein van Tonder of HeinStirred.com. If you have your copy already, I’d love to hear what you’ve made from it so far! 

Chewy Chocolate Maple Brazil Nut Toffees
Yields 35
A firm but chewy toffee that's perfectly offset with bitter chocolate and brazil nut crunch!
Print
Total Time
2 hr
Total Time
2 hr
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0 g
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Nutrition Facts
Serving Size
0g
Yields
35
Amount Per Serving
Calories 0
Calories from Fat 0
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 0g
0%
Saturated Fat 0g
0%
Trans Fat 0g
Polyunsaturated Fat 0g
Monounsaturated Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg
0%
Sodium 0mg
0%
Total Carbohydrates 0g
0%
Dietary Fiber 0g
0%
Sugars 0g
Protein 0g
Vitamin A
0%
Vitamin C
0%
Calcium
0%
Iron
0%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your Daily Values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Ingredients
  1. 200 ml water
  2. 500 g (625ml) white sugar
  3. 5 ml (1 tsp) vanilla extract
  4. 1 x 385 g tin sweetened condensed milk
  5. 330 g (245ml) glucose syrup (available from baking shops)
  6. 100 g (70ml) maple syrup
  7. 150 g (150ml) unsalted salted butter, at room temperature
  8. 100 g The Kate Tin Dark Baking Chocolate, melted
  9. 100 g Brazil nuts, toasted and chopped
Instructions
  1. Grease and line a deep 30 x 30-cm cake tin with non-stick baking paper.
  2. Combine the water, sugar, vanilla and condensed milk in a large, heavy-based saucepan. Slowly bring to the boil while stirring constantly
  3. Add the glucose and maple syrups and continue cooking over a medium heat while stirring until the mixture reaches 110 °C(test for thread stage by drizzling a small amount of the sugar syrup from a spoon into a cup of cold water – the syrup will form fine threads instead of instantly dissolving in the water). Add the butter and cook until 118 °C (or until the syrup forms a firm ball when dropped into a cup of cool water).
  4. Pour the mixture into the prepared tin and allow to cool completely. Cut the toffee into 3-cm squares. Dip each toffee into the melted chocolate, then sprinkle over the Brazil nuts. Allow to set on a lined baking tray.
Notes
  1. Store in an airtight container in a cool place (not the fridge) for up to 2 weeks.
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The Kate Tin https://thekatetin.com/
TIP: If you’re feeling up to the challenge of tempering your own chocolate – see my step-by-step here; alternatively, use good-quality baking chocolate as a shortcut.

 

Muscovado Toffees

Muscovado Toffees

These Muscovado Toffees have a rich, dark molasses flavour and a lovely chew to them – the best toffee recipe ever!  

#SPONSORED

I was 10 years old when I first tasted the muscovado toffees that would forever be imprinted in my mind. The toffees were made and sold by a little old lady at the Great Brak River craft market. They were large cubes of dark, dusky-flavoured toffee wrapped in brown paper and these sweets were the highlight of every visit. To eat them (and avoid a trip to the dentist), you had to wedge the chunk of toffee into your cheek. You’d then have to wait so it would soften before chewing.

They were an eyes-closed-moment. I’ve searched most of my adult life for the recipe that would recreate the flavour I remember. While I’ve tried to make toffees with every kind of sugar, they failed to taste like the toffees I remember. It wasn’t until Natura Sugars introduced their Dark Muscovado Sugar to South Africa that I finally found the missing secret ingredient! 

What is Dark Muscovado Sugar? 

The key to the depth of flavour in these toffees is to use proper Dark Muscovado Sugar. Some sugars labelled as Muscovado are really just white sugar with the molasses added back in. Some of them don’t even use molasses but instead add syrup. How do you know? Check the label at the back.

True Muscovado sugar (like the kind Natura Sugars makes which comes from Mauritius) is unrefined. This means the molasses is never removed and all the goodness and flavour is left in the sugar. It is so good, you can eat it with a spoon! You’ll taste sweetness first then floral and fruity notes and a delicious smoky aftertaste. These are all flavours that make this toffee amazing!

My Toffee Tips

Sugar cookery can be intimidating. But there are a few pressure points which will help you get the texture of these muscovado toffees spot on. 

First, when you place all the ingredients together in a saucepan, don’t bring it to a boil immediately. The key is to let the sugar melt completely first. Boiling it before this happens will cause your sugar syrup to crystallize. 

Second, avoid any sugar crystals on the sides of the pot.  Use a pastry brush dipped in hot water to brush them away. 

Third, invest in a sugar thermometer. The difference between a soft, soggy toffee and a lovely chewy toffee is a matter of a few degrees. I have an old sugar thermometer which I inherited from my great grandmother as well as a digital thermometer; either will do the job and they’re more affordable than you think. 

Fourth, when it comes to toffee, moisture is the enemy. Make sure you store the wrapped toffees in an airtight jar. I place a layer of rice or silica gel sachets in the bottom to absorb any moisture from the air. Not they’ll last long enough for you to store them, anyway! 

How to make Muscovado Toffees:

 

Muscovado Toffees 

 

300g Natura Sugars Dark Muscovado Sugar

110g (80ml) golden syrup

50ml milk

50ml double cream

30g salted butter

large pinch of bicarbonate of soda

 

Line the base and side of 20cm x 30cm baking tin with baking paper.

Heat the sugar, golden syrup, milk, cream and butter in a heavy-based saucepan over a medium heat. Stir until the sugar has dissolved. Insert a sugar thermometer and bring the mixture to the boil.

Let the sugar syrup boil until it reaches 138°C, soft crack stage.

Once the sugar syrup has reached the correct temperature, remove the pan from the heat. Add the bicarbonate of soda and mix well and pour into the prepared tin. Allow to cool for about 5 minutes. 

Once the mixture has cooled slightly and is just set, score the toffee into 4cm x 2cm pieces.  Scoring the toffee will make it easier to break later.

Leave the toffee to cool for about 20-30 minutes or until completely cold.  Remove the toffee from the baking tin.

Break the toffees into pieces. Wrap in cellophane and store in an airtight container in a cool dry place for up to 4 weeks. Makes 50.

 

Raspberry Coconut Ice Hearts (No-Cook)

Raspberry Coconut Ice Hearts (No-Cook)

Boiled coconut ice was one of my favourite things to make as a kid – I used to use the recipe on the side of the sugar packet until quite recently, well, until I discovered this no-cook coconut ice and my life changed forever! Because nobody likes standing over a boiling pot of sugar in the middle of summer!  Icing sugar, condensed milk and coconut make a deliciously creamy treat, especially when layered with tart raspberries. Make it extra special and drizzle or dip it in dark chocolate – or white chocolate!

Raspberry Coconut Ice Hearts

Makes 24

 

2 cups Natura Sugars Demerara icing sugar, sifted

3 1/2 cups desiccated coconut

1 can (397g) condensed milk

½ tsp vanilla extract

2 drops rose water (optional)

pink food colouring

60g blended, fresh raspberries.

 

Line a 20cm square cake tin with baking paper. To make the coconut ice, place the icing sugar and coconut into a large mixing bowl. Add the condensed milk and vanilla and mix well. Press half the mixture into the lined baking tin to form a smooth layer. To the remaining coconut ice, add the rose water, pink food colouring and blended fresh raspberries. If the mixture is still sticky, add a little coconut until it’s the same consistency as the white layer. Press the pink layer on top of the white layer and allow to firm up for 1 hour. Once slightly firm, unmould the coconut ice then slice the 20cm square in half. Place the one half on top of the other to form 4 stripes. Using a sharp bread knife, slice the coconut ice into 1cm slices then use a small heart-shaped cookie cutter to cut out shapes from the slices. Place on a lined baking sheet, uncovered, for 1-2 hours until firm. Store in an airtight container for up to 4 weeks.

 

 

TIP Save the off cuts and fold them into ice cream or crumble on top of a frosted cake as a quick decoration.

Blueberry White Chocolate Marshmallows

Blueberry White Chocolate Marshmallows

#SPONSORED

Making marshmallows always terrified me. Even though I was one of those kids who made spun sugar and mousses and gateaux and all sorts of pastries I couldn’t even pronounce, I never attempted marshmallows. Maybe it was the gelatine or just that they looked so intimidating! But one day, my sister casually flipped open one of my mom’s recipe books and at the age of 11, made a batch of the fluffiest, pristine coconut marshmallows I’d ever seen! They were just perfect. And I was jealous.
Now don’t for a second think that my sister is some sort of baking protégé, although she was always my trusty assistant in handing me little bowls of weighed out ingredients during the cooking shows I would put on in our kitchen. She was good at tasting, yes, but not baking. So when she casually whipped up that batch of marshmallows one day, my fear was conquered. If my little sister could do then so could I!
Marshmallows (like most other sweets) are so easy to make – gelatine, good-quality caster sugar, glucose and a little water are whipped into fluffy clouds of melt-in-the-mouth deliciousness! The reason I say ‘good-quality sugar’ is that because there are so few ingredients, most of your flavour is coming from the sugar itself. I used the Natura Golden Caster Sugar which is unrefined and has a subtle caramel flavour. It’s also silky smooth which means it dissolves quickly – nobody likes gritty mallows! For extra flavour, I’ve also dusted them in Demerara Icing Sugar. This stuff is so good – it’s made from demerara sugar and is unbleached and is what real icing sugar should taste and look like!
The best thing about marshmallows is that they can be whatever you want them to be – chocolate, caramel, fruity, spicy, swirly, two-toned, knots, strings, shapes! So, come now, don’t be scared, give marshmallows a chance!

Blueberry White Chocolate Marshmallows

Makes 15

 

½ cup (150g) pureed blueberries

1 tbsp Natura Golden Caster Sugar

150ml water

200g Natura Golden Caster Sugar

2 tbsp gelatine powder

1/2 cup glucose

125g The Kate Tin White Baking Chocolate, chopped and melted

1/2 cup (80g) Natura Demerara Icing Sugar, sifted

¼ cup corn starch, sifted

Line a 20cm square cake tin with baking paper. Stir the sugar into the pureed blueberries and microwave for 2 minutes to make a quick jam then set aside to cool. Place the water, sugar and gelatine in a saucepan over low heat and stir until the gelatine and sugar is dissolved. Do not let the mixture boil. Remove from the heat and place in the bowl of an electric mixer. Add the glucose and beat on high for 8-10 minutes or until the mixture is thick and holds it’s shape. Fold in the cooled melted chocolate swirl in the blueberry jam and pour into the lined baking tin. Cover and allow to set in the refrigerator for an hour. Once set, unmould and use a hot or oiled knife to cut into squares. Dust with a mixture of the icing sugar and corn starch and store in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks.

Disclaimer: This post has been sponsored by Natura Sugars, however, I only work with brands I think are awesome and that I actually use myself.
WATCH HOW TO MAKE THE RECIPE HERE:
Homemade Rose Turkish Delight

Homemade Rose Turkish Delight

Ah Turkish delight, I remember when I used to knick you out of the beautiful box you came in which my grandfather hid away in his not-so-secret sweet drawer. I’d always tell myself that I would just take one, that would turn into two and then three… Always the pink ones – never those pale awful white ones – and despite me thinking that my grandfather never noticed, the fact that my grandfather was always left with a box of white turkish delight, eventually gave me away – and probably because I also had icing sugar all over my face!  Making your own Turkish delight is so easy – with a little patience and a lot of sugar and rose water, you can have perfect cubes of jelly happiness to wrap as a gift, cover in chocolate, fold into vanilla ice cream or top a cake with (like I did below). I flavoured the whites cubes with orange blossom water instead of whatever gastly flavouring they use in the store-bought boxes.  It works so well with the rose water, but you can experiment with folding in roasted almonds, pistachios or safely stick to the rose water. Whatever flavour you decide on, just make sure you hide the sweets in a far more secret place than my grandfather did, otherwise, just like him, you’ll find nothing left in the box!

Turkish Delight

Makes 40

500g Natura Golden Caster Sugar

300ml water

juice of 2 lemons

70g cornstarch (Maizena)

25g powdered gelatine

few drops pink food colouring

25ml rose water

25ml orange blossom water

For dusting:

1 cup icing sugar, sifted

1 cup cornstarch, sifted

Line 2 x standard loaf tins with cling wrap and set aside. Place the sugar, 200ml water and lemon juice in a saucepan and stir over a low heat until completely dissolved. Bring to the boil and simmer for 1-2 minutes.  Mix the remaining water with the cornstarch to form a paste then whisk into the simmering mixture gradually. Bring the mixture to a boil and cook for 10 minutes, while stirring vigorously. Sprinkle over the gelatine powder and stir until dissolved.  Divide the mixture into two then two one batch add the pink coloring and rose water, and to the second batch, just the orange blossom water. Pour the sweet mixtures into separate prepared containers and allow to set at room temperature.  Combine the icing sugar and cornstarch in an airtight container. Cut the Turkish Delight into 2cm-blocks using a hot knife and dust in the icing sugar and corn starch until coated well. Allow the sweets to mature in the container, tossing them in the icing sugar mixture (you may need to add more if it is absorbing a lot) for a day or two until the sweets stop sweating water. Store in an airtight container.

TIP Allowing the sweets to sweat is an important step in getting the unique texture of Turkish Delight – be patient and don’t skip it!

*Recipe originally created for www.Food24.com

Vanilla, Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts

Vanilla, Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts

Homemade Vanilla and Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts
For as long as I can remember, every gift I’ve ever given my father, has involved nougat. He can’t get enough of the stuff and can devour an entire stash in one sitting. No surprises as to who I get my sweet tooth from (she says as she licks her sticky nougat fingers in order to type this post)! This Christmas I’ve decided that I’m making all my own gifts, mainly because:

1) It’s cheaper.

2) I get to eat the ‘off-cuts’.

3) Nougat tastes better than socks.

4) Nougat is more thoughtful (than socks).

5) Boney M doesn’t play on repeat in my kitchen.

So I’m making a gigantic batch of nougat – for not just my dad but the whole family. You get nougat! You get nougat! Everybody gets nougaaaaat!

Homemade Vanilla and Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts
Like all my favourite things, this one is versatile – you can pretty much design your own according to your – I mean your friends’ – taste. I went for a fancy-sounding but uber delicious combination of vanilla, honey, macadamia nuts and proper extra virgin olive oil. I know we think of olive oil as great for salads and drizzling over literally everything savoury (a la Jamie Oliver) but I’m telling you that good olive oil adds something really special to desserts, not only adding complexity but balancing the sweetness too. I used Olive Pride’s Extra Virgin Olive Oil in my nougat since it has a lovely peppery flavour that is just heavenly with the vanilla and honey.
Homemade Vanilla and Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts
Nougat has always intimidated me a bit, I’m not going to lie. In fact, the last time I made it was probably in cooking school (eek!). But this recipe right here is gold! If you don’t already have a sugar thermometer, then get yourself one as a Christmas gift because it is totally worth not running around the kitchen going ‘Is it ready? Maybe I should wait… No, it’s ready. Or not.” The only chicken that should be headless in your kitchen at this time of year, is the one in your oven for lunch. And speaking of gifts to yourself, would you not be the happiest sugar addict on this earth if you received this:
Homemade vanilla and olive oil nougat with macadamia nuts
A folded tea towel, a vintage baking tray (or box), some wrapped up sticks of your homemade nougat and a pretty bottle of olive oil – winning! You can also win at the fabulous competition that Olive Pride is running; simply SMS ‘Olive Pride’ and the last 4 digits of the barcode to 46797. Not only do all the SMS proceeds go to BrightStars, a safe home for children but you can also win a R2000 shopping voucher plus a R500 hamper of yummy olive products.

Now while you go win stuff, I’m going to find out how to get nougat off a Macbook keyboard…

Homemade Vanilla Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts

Vanilla Bean and Olive Oil Nougat with Macadamia Nuts

Makes 12 bars

 

2 x A4 rice paper sheets (available from baking shops/in the baking aisle)

350g liquid glucose (available from baking and health shops)

115g honey

550g (2 ½ cups) caster sugar

1 vanilla bean, split (shop my vanilla beans here)

2 large egg whites

50g salted butter

50ml Olive Pride Extra Virgin Olive Oil

400g macadamia nuts, roasted

Line the base and sides of a 20cm square cake tin with baking paper. Cut the rice paper to fit the tin – place one in the bottom and keep the other aside for the top. Place the glucose, honey and vanilla in a saucepan over a low heat until melted, then add the caster sugar and stir until the sugar is completely dissolved and the syrup is translucent. Bring the syrup to the boil and simmer until it reaches 130 degrees celcius on a thermometer.

Start beating the egg whites in an electric mixer to form stiff peaks so that by the time the syrup reaches 140 degrees celcius you’re ready.Gently pour the hot syrup down the side of the bowl into the stiffly-beaten egg whites in a steady stream. Beat for 1 minute or until thick and glossy then gradually add the butter and olive oil. Working quickly, stir in the nuts and spoon the mixture into the lined baking tray. Top with the remaining piece of rice paper and press down to form an even slab of nougat. Allow to cool and set completely for 2-3 hours.Slice into bars or pieces using a sharp serrated knife and a sawing action. Wrap the nougat immediately in baking paper, wax paper or cellophane and store in a cool dry place in an airtight container.

 

VARIATIONS Experiment using different nuts – such as pistachios, almonds and pecan nuts – dried fruit like cranberries, and even coffee beans are delicious in this recipe!

 

Disclaimer: This post has been sponsored by Olive Pride who produce a delicious range of olive products, including the Extra Virgin Olive oil used in this post. www.olivepride.co.za