I Finally Re-Created My Grandma's Maple Fudge (It's Even Better than I Remembered) (2024)

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Patty Catalano

Patty Catalano

Patty is a recipe developer and food writer. She worked Alton Brown’s Research Coordinator and podcast producer and in the Oxmoor House test kitchen. She loves maple syrup, coffee and board games. Patty lives in Atlanta with her husband and two children.

updated Feb 17, 2021

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I Finally Re-Created My Grandma's Maple Fudge (It's Even Better than I Remembered) (1)

A French Canadian confection made with maple syrup or brown sugar and served as a spread or fudge.

Makes25 (about 1-inch) piecesPrep5 minutesCook18 minutes to 35 minutes

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I Finally Re-Created My Grandma's Maple Fudge (It's Even Better than I Remembered) (2)

Over the past year, I’ve found myself slogging from one meal to the next, operating on autopilot to feed my homebound family. It had felt like forever since I’d cooked or baked for fun! Desperate to reignite my love of cooking, I decided to take on a nostalgic challenge and re-create my grandma’s sucre à la crème. Candy-making always forces me to be present in the kitchen, and if I got it right, I knew I’d be rewarded with the most incredible maple treat — a favorite of mine as a kid.

My grandma was a soft-spoken woman, her face framed with an angelic ring of white curls. But she was also a card shark and gave the fiercest of hugs. She raised my dad and his sister on a farm in northern Vermont where they grew potatoes and tapped maple trees for syrup. My grandma used the steady supply of homemade maple sugar to make sucre à la crème, a French Canadian confection that’s often served at Christmastime. She’d make us some as a treat every time she came to visit (no matter the time of year).

It’s been more than 10 years since my grandma has passed, but I still laugh every time I think of her scoffing at my sister when she asked about the ingredients in sucre à la crème. The answer should have been obvious to anyone who took as many years of French lessons as we did: sugar and cream! Off the farm, my grandma swapped in brown sugar, and while it still makes a rich and tasty caramel, I’m partial to the maple syrup version. After hunting down her recipe card, I got to work testing — and I’m happy to report I’ve perfected the sweet treat.

What Is Sucre à la Crème?

Sucre à la crème is the French Canadian kin to other brown sugar sweets like penuche (brown sugar fudge), and tablet, a Scottish dessert. Penuche is made with brown sugar, milk, and butter, and often has nuts stirred in. Tablet is made of sweetened condensed milk, butter, and sugar, and is thinner, grainier, and more crumbly than fudge. Sucre à la crème leans on heavy cream for fat and is traditionally made with maple syrup or sugar. Given the expense of pure maple sweeteners, light brown sugar can be substituted and will still provide the caramel-like flavor.

Two Ways to Prepare Sucre à la Crème

Many people prepare sucre à la crème as a creamy fudge, but my grandma always served it as a thick caramel spread. Both iterations start with the same set of ingredients:heavy cream, maple syrup (or light brown sugar), granulated sugar, and light corn syrup. The rich cream provides liquid and fat, giving the candy body and smoothness. Corn syrup inhibits the sugar crystallization that can cause grittiness — think of it as an insurance policy against sandy-textured fudge.

A candy thermometer is the best way to make sure the sugar syrup cooks to exactly the right temperature. No candy thermometer? No problem. My grandma tested it by dropping a small amount of syrup into a glass of cold water. When it cools into a soft, malleable ball, it’s ready. The soft ball stage ranges from 234°F to 240°F, but for that truly melt-in-your-mouth texture, pull the saucepan off the heat when it reaches 234°F.

For the caramel spread: Pour the syrup into a shallow heat-proof dish and let it cool completely.

To make fudge: Cool the syrup to 130°F without stirring to avoid activating the sugar seed crystals that can grow large and give the fudge a gritty texture. Once it cools, stir with a wooden spoon or silicone spatula until it lightens in color. Transfer to a parchment-lined pan.

Whether you make the spread or the fudge, only pour the free-flowing candy into the prepared pan. Do not scrape sides of the saucepan clean —think of those as the cook’s treat. The sugars that collect on the sides of the pan cook and crystalize at a different rate than the free-flowing sugar, and may seed the sucre à la crème with crunchy crystals.

Serving Sucre à la Crème

In my family, we eat sucre à la crème by the spoonful or spread atop buttery, salty Ritz crackers (so fancy!). For the fudge, shower the top with a finishing salt, like Maldon, if you have it. While my grandma never did this, the crunchy salt is a welcome contrast to the intense sweetness of the maple (or brown sugar) fudge.

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Sucre à la Crème (Maple Fudge)

A French Canadian confection made with maple syrup or brown sugar and served as a spread or fudge.

Prep time 5 minutes

Cook time 18 minutes to 35 minutes

Makes 25 (about 1-inch) pieces

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon

    unsalted butter

  • 2 cups

    heavy cream

  • 2 cups

    maple syrup or packed light brown sugar

  • 1/2 cup

    granulated sugar

  • 2 tablespoons

    light corn syrup

  • Flaky salt, such as Maldon (optional)

Instructions

  1. Coat an 8x8-inch baking pan with 1 tablespoon unsalted butter. If making fudge, line the buttered pan with a parchment paper sling that hangs over two sides of the pan by 2 inches.

  2. Place 2 cups heavy cream, 2 cups maple syrup or packed light brown sugar, 1/2 cup granulated sugar, and 2 tablespoons light corn syrup in a 4-quart heavy-bottomed saucepan and stir to combine. Attach a candy thermometer to the side of the pan.

  3. Cook without stirring over medium-high heat until the mixture reaches 234°F or the soft ball stage, 30 to 35 minutes for maple syrup and 18 to 20 minutes for brown sugar.

  4. Option 1: Caramel spread. Pour the syrup into the prepared pan and set aside to cool. Pour only the free-flowing syrup and do not scrape the bottom or sides of the pan clean. Sprinkle with flaky salt, if desired, and set aside at room temperature to cool.

  5. Option 2: Fudge. Immediately remove the pan from the heat and set aside to cool to 130°F (do not stir), 25 to 35 minutes. Once cooled, remove the thermometer and stir with a wooden spoon just until the syrup loses its shine, thickens, and lightens in color, about 10 minutes.

  6. Transfer the fudge mixture to the parchment-lined pan. Do not scrape the sides of the pan clean. Spread into an even layer, sprinkle with flaky salt, if desired, and cool to room temperature, 3 to 4 hours. Cut into 25 squares.

Recipe Notes

Storage: Store the caramel spread or fudge at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks. Fudge can be frozen for up to 3 months. Use parchment or wax paper to separate the pieces during storage.

Filed in:

Candy

dairy

Dessert

Gluten-Free

sweets

canadian

I Finally Re-Created My Grandma's Maple Fudge (It's Even Better than I Remembered) (2024)

FAQs

What to do with failed fudge? ›

Options for what you can do with your unset fudge:

OPTION 1) Depending on how runny it is, you can either use it as a frosting for cakes, or a sauce for ice-cream. OPTION 2) Freeze it overnight. Cut it into squares. Cover each square thickly in melted chocolate, ensuring no part of the fudge is exposed.

Was fudge made by mistake? ›

That appetite for fudge dates back more than a century. Food historian Joyce White says fudge is based on a recipe for chocolate caramels, which was very similar. "What probably happened is that there was someone in Baltimore, messed it up, or 'fadged' it," she said. "Fadge is a word that means you messed up.

What does cream of tartar do in fudge? ›

Cream of tartar is used in caramel sauces and fudge to help prevent the sugar from crystallizing while cooking. It also prevents cooling sugars from forming brittle crystals, this is why it's the secret ingredient in snickerdoodles!

Why is my 3 ingredient fudge not setting? ›

The main reason is that your Fudge has not reached the optimum temperature. If your mixture only reaches 110 or 112 degrees Celsius it will always be soft. That's why we recommend investing in a sugar thermometer. Another reason your Fudge is not setting is that the ratio of liquid to sugar is too high.

How do I fix messed up fudge? ›

To fix oily, hard or grainy fudge, scoop the fudge back into a pot with about a cup of water. Cook it over low heat until the fudge dissolves. Then bring the fudge back up to the temperature specified in the recipe and follow the remaining steps. The flavor may be slightly diluted, but the texture will be improved.

What happens if you don't stir fudge? ›

By letting the fudge cool without stirring, you avoid creating seed crystals. Stirring would help sucrose molecules "find" one another and start forming crystals. Stirring also introduces air, dust, and small dried bits from the walls of the saucepan—all potential seeds for crystal formation.

What is the secret to good fudge? ›

Valuable tips for successful fudge
  • Don't stir during cooking. Fudge can be cooked on the stove or in the microwave. ...
  • Avoid crystallization. During cooking, sugar crystals can stick to the sides of the pan. ...
  • Let cool before beating. After being cooked, the sugar must crystallize again to create fudge. ...
  • Beat the mixture.

What happens if you boil fudge too long? ›

Too cooked

The result is hard and brittle fudge. To save the fudge, put it in a saucepan with 45 to 60 ml (3 or 4 tbsp.) of 35% cream and bring to a boil, stirring until the sugar is completely melted. Then let it boil without stirring until the thermometer reaches 114 to 115 °C (237 to 239 °F).

What is the fudge capital of the world? ›

Fudge on Mackinac Island Today

Ford came to Mackinac Island in 1975 he opted for vanilla pecan.) Whether you visit Mackinac Island on National Fudge Day in June or any other day – maybe during the Mackinac Island Fudge Festival in August – come find your favorite flavor and experience the fudge capital of the world!

Should you stir fudge? ›

Avoid Stirring Once the Mixture Comes to a Simmer

Another key part of a successful fudge texture is when you stir the mixture. Stirring the sugar and milk during the initial stages of cooking allows the sugar to dissolve. However, once the mixture comes to a boil, it's time to put the spoon down.

Can you reboil fudge that hasn't set? ›

How can you fix soft fudge? Put it in a microwave safe bowl that is large enough that it won't boil over. Reheat it to the boiling point and cook for about 3 more minutes. Then you can beat some powdered sugar into it if this doesn't make it set.

How do you make fudge creamy and not grainy? ›

It's not brittle or crumbly, at least not unpleasantly so. By cooling the fudge prior to agitation (like in the recipes included in this article), on the other hand, you'll get much smaller, finer sugar crystals and a finished fudge with a smooth, creamy texture.

How to tell if fudge is ready without a thermometer? ›

Using a clean spoon, carefully take a little of the syrup and drop it into the bowl of cold water. Leave to cool for a moment then pick up the ball of syrup. If it's pliable, sticky and can be moulded in your fingers easily, it has reached the soft ball stage and the syrup can be used to make fudge and marzipan.

How long to boil fudge to soft ball stage? ›

How long does it take to make fudge:
  1. about 18 min to reach boiling.
  2. about 40 minutes to reach soft ball stage.
  3. 60 minutes to cool.
  4. 28 minutes to beat in a KitchenAid (your time for this may vary)
  5. 4 hours to set.

Why is fudge so hard to make? ›

Making fudge can be a challenging endeavor, requiring precision and attention to detail to achieve the perfect texture and consistency. The process of making fudge involves a delicate balance of cooking, cooling, and beating, and the smallest mistake can result in fudge that is too soft or too hard.

What can I do with fudge that won't set? ›

To fix it, you can reheat the fudge mixture over low heat and continue cooking until it reaches the proper temperature. Be sure to use a candy thermometer to monitor the temperature accurately. Alternatively, you can try to salvage chewy fudge by mixing it into ice cream or using it as a topping for desserts.

Can you make fudge soft again? ›

Grab the saucepan that you initially used to cook the fudge and toss the fudge back in along with 1 ½ cups of water and a splash of cream. Adding some cream of tartar is a helpful way to keep the sugar crystals at bay as well — it's not essential, but if you have some, definitely pour a little in.

Can fudge be melted and reset? ›

Don't panic if your fudge is grainy, nothing is lost it just requires some more work. Pop the grainy fudge back into the pan along with some water and a little cream and melt the fudge back down to a liquid and re-boil it to temperature.

How do you fix separated chocolate fudge? ›

Remove the seized chocolate from the stove and add a liquid (water, coconut milk, milk etc) slowly, mixing well. I used water. The chocolate will absorb a surprising amount of liquid so just keep adding and mixing until you come to the consistency you like. Add vanilla and more sweetener to taste (I used maple syrup).

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