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About Fudge from WikiPedia.com

Fudge is a type of confectioneryconfectionery which is usually very sweet, extremely rich and sometimes flavoured with cocoacocoa. It is made by mixing sugarsugar, butterbutter, and milkmilk and heating it to the soft-ball stagesoft-ball stage at 240 °F°F (116 °C°C), and then beating the mixture while it cools so that it acquires a smooth, creamy consistency. ChocolateChocolate can also be mixed in to make chocolate fudge.

Origins

The components of Fudge are very similar to the traditional recipe for Scots TabletScots Tablet, which is noted in "The Household Book of Lady Grisell Baillie" (1692-1733). The term "fudge" is often used in the United Kingdom for a softer variant of the tablet recipe.

One of the first documentations of American-style fudge (containing chocolate) is found in a letter written by Emelyn Battersby Hartridge, a student at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. She wrote that her schoolmate's cousin made fudge in Baltimore, MarylandBaltimore, Maryland in 1886 and sold it for 40 cents a pound. Miss Hartridge got hold of the fudge recipe, and in 1888, made 30 lb (14 kg) of fudge for the Vassar CollegeVassar College Senior Auction. This Vassar fudge recipe became quite popular at the school for years to come.[1][1]

Word of this popular confectionconfection spread to other women's colleges. For example, WellesleyWellesley and SmithSmith have their own versions of this fudge recipe.

Chemistry

Fudge is a drier variant of fondantfondant.

In forming a fondant, it is not easy to keep all vibrationsvibrations and seed crystalsseed crystals from causing rapid crystallisationcrystallisation to large crystals. Consequently, milkfatmilkfat and corn syrupcorn syrup are often added. Corn syrup contains glucoseglucose, fructosefructose (monosaccharides) and maltosemaltose (disaccharide). These sugarssugars interact with the sucrosesucrose molecules. They help prevent premature crystallization by inhibiting sucrose crystal contact. The fat also helps inhibit rapid crystallisation. Controlling the crystallization of the supersaturatedsupersaturated sugar solution is the key to smooth fudge. Initiation of crystals before the desired time will result in fudge with fewer, larger sugar grains. The final texture will have a grainy mouthfeelmouthfeel rather than the smooth texture of quality fudge.

One of the most important parts is its texture. The temperature is what separates hard caramelcaramel from fudge. The higher the peak temperature, the more sugar is dissolved, the more water is evaporated; resulting in a higher sugar to water ratio. Before the availability of cheap and accurate thermometers, cooks would use the ice water testice water test, also known as the cold water test, to determine the saturation of the candy. Fudge is made at the "soft ball" stage which varies by altitude and ambient humidity from 235 °F (113 °C) to 240 °F (116 °C).

Some recipes call for making fudge with prepared marshmallowsmarshmallows as the sweetener. This allows the finished confection to use the structure of the marshmallow for support instead of relying on the crystallization of the sucrose. Fudge squares can be substituted for the marshmallows.

 
 

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