Went to my December machine knitting meeting and Ellen gave us a cute container with caramels in it. I had one the minute I got to my car. It was so good and I knew my daughter would love one. I called her to tell her I had them, so I wouldn't eat them all before I got home. She too loved the buttery homemade taste of these caramels. I asked Ellen if I could have the recipe and she said, "Of course." I named the recipe after her. I do that when someone gives me a recipe that's going to be around for a while. That way I can think about the person who gave it to me when I make it.
Ellen’s Caramels
1 cup butter
1 pound (2 ¼ cups) brown sugar
Dash of salt
1 cup light corn syrup
1 15-ounce can sweetened condensed milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
Melt butter in heavy 3-quart saucepan. Add sugar, and salt; stir thoroughly. Stir in corn syrup; mix well. Gradually add milk, stirring constantly. Cook and stir over medium heat to firm ball stage (245 degrees), takes 20 to 25 minutes. Remove from heat; stir in vanilla. Pour into buttered 9x9x2 inch pan. Cool and cut into squares. Makes about 2 ½ pounds.
Very easy recipe. One special piece of cooking equipment needed. A candy thermometer. My can of Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk was 14 oz. Typo or did they use to be 15 oz? 14 worked fine.
In 30 minutes anyone could have 2 1/2 pounds of caramels cooling in their kitchen. My aunt said they were commercial quality.
They were very easy to cut if I used the tip of my sharp knife and drew it straight toward side of pan. I cut mine into 64 pieces. I scored it evenly 8 across and cut each strip into 8 pieces. They were delightfully too big. It took me 3-4 bites to eat one. I think next time I'll try 9 or 10 across.
I wrapped each piece in wax paper that I cut to fit. Ellen wrapped hers in plastic wrap. Both worked out well. The caramels held their shape well in their wrappers. I made the mistake of cutting my caramels while in the middle of a 49ers games. I tried a bite resumed my game and when I came back an hour or so later they were spreading slowly. Not enough to make a mess other than with my portioning.
I've gotten equally rave reviews. Passed the recipe along. I seldom hear of anyone using a recipe I passed along. In this case 2 people have already made caramels. Lucky them!
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