Hundred-Year-Old Rules for Candy Making

Rules for Candy Making
Source: Cook Book of the Susquehanna Valley Country Club, Sunbury, PA (1924)

I cook a lot and often the lack of detail in old cookbooks is not a problem. I just intuitively can figure out the how to make the recipe. However, when I make candy, it tends to be hit or miss whether it turns out exactly right.  These 1924 tips are helpful, but not very detailed. I also find some more recent tips very useful:

The Does and Don’t of Candy Making (Iowa State University Extension)

A Beginner’s Guide to Candy Making at Home (candymakingclub.com)

Candy Temperatures and Testing Your Candy Thermometer (The Spruce Eats)

20 thoughts on “Hundred-Year-Old Rules for Candy Making

  1. I’ve been thinking about making fudge again, and I recognize some of these tips. I still have my mother’s high-sided candy-making pan, and I always follow her advice: never stir while cooking, use a candy thermometer, make sure you work by temperature, and when it starts to set up, move fast! Since moving to Texas, I’ve added “Never, ever try to make candy (or meringues) on a humid day.”

    1. I like how you summarized your mother’s advice. They succinctly describe the most important things when it comes to making candy. I have a bad habit of double checking myself using the old method of dropping a little of the hot candy in cold water to figure out which stage it’s at (soft ball, hard ball), and then it never quite agrees with the candy thermometer so I need to make a decision about what to do.

  2. When I think about fudge, I think about my Aunt Jeanette’s. She made fudge a lot, and did it well. When we visited her house, there was always a three-tiered dish she put out with an assortment, and it was always wonderful. Now, my mother was the impatient one in candymaking, and she never used a thermometer, just the various blob in cold water tests. Thus, we all joke now that we were adults before we realized you didn’t eat fudge with a spoon…

    1. There are some lovely old candy dishes. I hate to admit it, but I sometimes use the various cold water tests — but, as you noted, doing that has often gotten me into trouble.

    2. My husband on the other hand….likes fudge cooked so hard it almost crystalizes…Cause that is the way his mama made it

    1. I’ve made the same mistake – though I tend to overcook rather than undercook fudge and it ends up being crumbly. I think that there’s getting to be a theme here – It’s important to use a candy thermometer. 🙂

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