Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels – My Recipe Reviews (2024)

by sblades 3 Comments

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Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels are the best example of gooey, delicious homemade caramels!

These caramels are another new test recipe for Christmas platters. I knew they would turn out well because they're Ina Garten's recipe and every recipe of hers I've tried has been a success.

A couple of years ago I tried another caramel recipe and although it came out pretty well, it was so slippery and buttery that they were hard to handle and left quite the butter trail behind.

These Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels came out perfectly! Soft and buttery without being greasy, and so, so very creamy.

A note on making caramels and candy in general. If you've made candy before, you already know this - always use a candy thermometer and never turn your back on the candy while it's cooking! It can go from a friendly little transparent boil to a frighteningly dark burn in an instant.

Also, don't stir the sugar/syrup mixture while it's boiling or it will be grainy. Swirl the pot around gently if you really feel you need to.

All-in-all this recipe was step-by-step easy to follow with terrific instructions. Ina Garten calls hers "Fleur del Sel Caramels" and she sprinkles salt lightly on the finished caramels, but I used salted butter and found that topping them with a sprinkle of salt made them too salty for us.

I enjoyed the candy-making process on these Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels and this recipe will be my go-to from now on.

Don't forget to keep them refrigerated. They are very soft and will spread at room temperature. I could see these dipped in a coating of chocolate. Oh, yeah!

Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels – My Recipe Reviews (5)

Soft and Creamy Homemade Caramels

Yield: 36 pieces

Prep Time: 45 minutes

Cook Time: 45 minutes

Inactive Time: 2 hours

Total Time: 3 hours 30 minutes

****Outstanding. Very soft and creamy - such a smooth texture. They're unbelievably good. Adapted very slightly from Ina Garten.

Ingredients

  • vegetable oil
  • ¼ C water
  • 1 ½ C sugar
  • ¼ C light corn syrup
  • 1 C heavy cream
  • 5 tablespoon unsalted butter
  • 1 scant teaspoon fine fleur del sel, (I used kosher salt)
  • ½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Instructions

  1. Prepare wrapping papers by cutting 4x4" pieces of waxed paper (about 36 pieces). Line an 8" square baking pan with parchment paper, allowing it to drape over 2 sides (for lifting out), and very lightly brush the paper with the oil.
  2. In a deep saucepan, combine the water, sugar, and corn syrup and bring them to a boil over medium-high heat (don't stir after the initial combining of ingredients). Boil until the mixture is a warm golden brown. Remove from heat immediately.
  3. While the sugar/syrup mixture is cooking, in a small pot bring the cream, butter and 1 teaspoon of salt to a simmer over medium heat. Turn off the heat and set aside.
  4. When the sugar/syrup mixture is finished and removed from heat, slowly add the cream mixture to the sugar/syrup pan. Be very careful! It will bubble up violently and is very hot! Stir in the vanilla with a wooden spoon and return the pan to medium-low heat for about 10 minutes, until a candy thermometer reaches 248 degrees (firm ball) on a candy thermometer.
  5. Very carefully pour the very hot mixture into the prepared pan and let sit at room temperature for 5 minutes. Move the pan to the refrigerator and let it firm up for 3-4 hours.
  6. When the caramel is cold and firm, lift the parchment paper out of the pan and onto a cutting board. Cut the caramel into 6 by 6 rows. Take one piece of the caramel and place it on one edge of one of the waxed paper pieces. Gently, but firmly roll up the caramel and twist the ends to seal. Keep refrigerated and serve the caramels chilled.

Notes

Tips and Stuff:

Don't use table salt for these - it will make them way too salty. Fleur de Sel and kosher salt are pretty much interchangeable.

When you see the boiling sugar mixture start to lightly brown, watch carefully and take the pan off the heat almost immediately unless you like a more burnt caramel taste.

For the cream and butter mixture, let it just come to a simmer and then remove from the heat. You can stir this mixture, just not the boiling sugar mixture.

If you're using salted butter (as I did), taste one of the caramels with a sprinkle of salt on top and see if it's too salty. I thought it was, so left the finishing salt off.

The very easiest way to cut the caramels is with a sharp pizza cutter.

You can make these disk shaped or log shaped - whatever floats your boat.

These are very soft and creamy, so if you're looking for a firm caramel, this isn't it.

Nutrition Information:

Yield: 36Serving Size: 1 piece
Amount Per Serving:Unsaturated Fat: 0g

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Comments

  1. Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels – My Recipe Reviews (6)Marcellina

    Oh how lovely! These would make great Christmas gifts!

    Reply

    • Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels – My Recipe Reviews (7)sblades

      Thanks Marcellina! That's exactly where these are going (minus a few I had to "test").

      Reply

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Creamy Soft Homemade Caramels – My Recipe Reviews (2024)

FAQs

Why is my homemade caramel so hard? ›

The water evaporates, leaving sugar crystals behind. If even one sugar crystal falls back into the pan of cooking caramel, it starts a chain reaction of sugar crystals and the entire pan will harden. The result? Gross, grainy caramel that is unusable in most recipes.

Why are my homemade caramels sticky? ›

Certain ingredients like corn syrup can make it sticky. Not cooking the candy all the way to hard crack stage can make it more sticky. High humidity in the air can make it sticky.

How long do homemade soft caramels last? ›

Homemade caramel typically lasts about 2 weeks when stored in an airtight container at room temperature. Refrigerating homemade caramel can extend its shelf life to about a month, and freezing it can further prolong its usability up to a year. However, the texture may change slightly upon thawing.

What is the best thing to wrap homemade caramels in? ›

Most caramels will need a little time at room temperature in order to cut more easily. Cut in squares and wrap in waxed paper or parchment paper. Wrapped caramels can also be frozen.

What makes caramel softer? ›

This recipe makes a soft caramel as opposed to a hard caramel like the one that I use in my salted caramel cookies which is made from using melted sugar. The softness comes from the ratios of ingredients - condensed milk and butter help to soften the mix to give perfectly chewy, delicious caramels.

What is the difference between hard caramel and soft caramel? ›

If the caramel forms a pliable soft ball, for instance, it's around 240°F. If it forms a hard ball, it's between 250°F to 260°F, etc. Sometimes recipes will even use the descriptors below to specify the stage your caramel should be cooked to.

How do you fix too hard caramel? ›

If caramels are too hard, you can try placing them back in a saucepan, adding a couple tablespoons of water and stirring until the thermometer reads 242°F. Pour back into a prepared buttered pan. If caramels are too soft, that means the temperature didn't get high enough.

How do you keep caramel from hardening? ›

To help prevent the caramel from crystallizing, you can add an acid to the sugar before you begin: add about half a tablespoon of lemon juice to each cup of sugar and mix it with your hands; it should be the consistency of wet sand. Heat the sugar over medium-high heat until it melts.

Why do you put vinegar in caramel? ›

Add acid. Acid ingredients (like vinegar or lemon juice) can help prevent re-crystallization which causes caramel to become grainy. Acid physically breaks the bonds between the glucose and fructose molecules that form sucrose and ensure that it stays apart.

How do you know when homemade caramel is done? ›

The caramelization process happens quick, and you want to be there when it's time to remove it from the heat. From golden, the mixture will continue to darken. Pull you pan off of the heat when you see the mixture turn to the color of a shiny copper penny. That's how you know it's done!

Can you leave homemade caramel out overnight? ›

This sweet sauce can be left out at room temperature for a few days, but because of the dairy incorporated into the sauce, it's best kept refrigerated. Plus, popping it in the fridge will keep your caramel sauce fresher for longer.

How do you know when soft caramel is done? ›

For soft caramels 238F is the perfect temperature. I like to use a candy thermometer while I'm stirring/cooking the caramels then MOST IMPORTANTLY double check the temperature with an instant thermometer. Be sure to check the temperature in the middle of the caramel mixture!

Why do my homemade caramels stick to the wax paper? ›

In general the paper sold for home use is too light weight, the grain of the paper isn't made to withstand twisting (it tears), and the wax coating is too light to prevent the moisture from the candy from seaping into the paper and weakening it thus causing it to tear and stick.

Can I wrap caramels in Saran Wrap? ›

Wrap with plastic wrap (or put on the lid if your pans are lidded) and store all day or overnight in the fridge.

How do you fix caramel that got too hard? ›

If caramels are too hard, you can try placing them back in a saucepan, adding a couple tablespoons of water and stirring until the thermometer reads 242°F. Pour back into a prepared buttered pan. If caramels are too soft, that means the temperature didn't get high enough.

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