How do I prevent fudge browning?
I'm trying to make a fudge inspired by some I have seen made in a fudge shop here in the UK (although it is an American-style fudge, not the softer British kind). The recipe the shop uses substitutes cream for the butter in traditional recipes, and uses pure corn syrup as the sugar. They manage to get the fudge to stay completely white, without it browning at all, yet when I try to replicate this at home I always get a pale brown colour with a toffee flavour that isn't present in the shop-made fudge. The process I'm using is this:
- Mix milk, cream and corn syrup
- Heat to 112C
- Add vanilla
- Pour into a cold tray to cool
- Stir and stretch for the final phase of cooling
Any suggestions what might be going wrong?
Best Answer
Fructose is one of the sugars in corn syrup. The problem is that 112 C is above the caramelization temperature of fructose, which is 110 C (230 F); this is uniquely low among the various common sugar molecules, most of which begin to caramelize around 160 C (320 F).
The toffee flavor that you are getting is due to the caramelization components.
However, without seeing your exact recipe it is hard to know what to change. I would suggest using table sugar with its much higher caramelization temperature instead of corn syrup would be the most appropriate solution.
It should dissolve the dairy, so you should not need to make a syrup.
However, sucrose (table sugar) has different crystallization properties than fructose and corn syrup, so after you get the main part of the candy mixture up to temperature and then cooled some, you might wish to add a tablespoon or two of corn syrup to help reduce the likelihood of graininess.
You could also try reducing the temperature to say 108 C, but this may affect the final ratio of water to sugar as less water will have been evaporated off, which would change the crystallization pattern in the confection, and thus is texture. It could end up quite sticky or even gooey.
It will probably be easier to search for a recipe for this confection that is already tuned to do what you want, as modifying candy recipes is very tricky; you must get the science and technique just right.
Note: fudge by its very nature is a a solid suspension of very tiny sugar crystals embedded in a dairy/syrup phase. The cooling and beating in traditional fudge recipes are to control the growth of the sugar crystals, so that they are numerous and very, very tiny (which gives the smooth silky texture) as opposed to larger and fewer (which gives a grainy texture).
As fructose and corn syrup tend to resist crystallization, it is odd to have a fudge like recipe with corn syrup as its main sugar component.
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