Hot Fudge Sauce

  4.1 – 17 reviews  • Sugar
I first had this in a coffeehouse in Highwood Illinois in the 60’s where my dad, my brother and I used to play folk music on stage. I was 6 or 7 at the time. I used to make this recipe at the Pump Room when I was pastry chef there in a 5 gallon bucket. We served “the World’s Smallest Hot Fudge Sundae” (another one of Rich Melman’s brilliant ideas) there which used only 2 tablespoons of sauce and still I had to make it every other day!
Level: Easy
Total: 35 min
Prep: 5 min
Cook: 30 min
Yield: 4 to 6 servings

Ingredients

  1. 1 cup sugar
  2. 3 cups cream
  3. 1/4 cup light corn syrup
  4. 4 ounces unsweetened chocolate
  5. 1/4 cup butter
  6. 1 tablespoon vanilla extract

Instructions

  1. Put everything except the vanilla in a pot and bring it to a boil. Continue cooking until it looks like it’s broken and separating. Take it off the heat, whisk in the vanilla; then blend it with a hand blender to smooth it out. Chill until ready to serve; then heat it up. Pour over scoops of ice cream, topped with whipped cream and chopped peanuts.

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 6 servings
Calories 775
Total Fat 62 g
Saturated Fat 38 g
Carbohydrates 53 g
Dietary Fiber 3 g
Sugar 48 g
Protein 5 g
Cholesterol 184 mg
Sodium 60 mg

Reviews

Jennifer Bowen
This is the most amazing fudge sauce I have ever had!
Michael Drake
Thin buttasty. Shouldn’t it be hot when served and stick to the ice cream?
Susan Bridges
Very thin added atleast 4 more oz of semi sweet chocolate
Meghan Dixon
The recipe was exceptionally easy and the entire family loved it. One thing that I did modify was that I added Belgian Dark Chocolate in addition to the unsweetened chocolate. The texture was smooth and the flavor was out of this world. No more store-bought stuff.
John Scott
I usually review the comments before trying a recipe, but tonight I broke out the ingredients and was short 1 c heavy cream. I reduced the butter to 1/8 c, reduced the sugar to 1/2 c, and used extra bittersweet chocolate. I kept whisking over low heat until the chocolate melted and the mixture just came to a simmer. Success! It is sticky and thick as it cools.In my glass carafe, it is still thin, but I expect it to thicken up like it did in the bottom of the pot.
Peggy Smith
I voted 5 becuase it`s a great recipe and I just love chocolate!!!!!!!!!!!
Jeffrey Franklin
Like others mine turned out little more than a chocolate sauce. Not fudge like at all. Its possible that I didn’t boil the mix long enough, but the recipe is very scarce on timing. It should be fairly easy for Gale to give us some time frames: is it about 5 min, 10 min, 15, longer?

So while I suspect my technique is lacking, an “easy” recipe should be more explicit and not rely upon the cook knowing when something “looks” right.

Timothy Krause
i looked all over for a recipe.when i forund this one by gale gand i kneww it fould be good because she bakes lie my mother.i just didnt kno how wonderfull it would be. i should know because i am a hotfude addict,so anyone who is like me will love this.i aslso made this with a dark cocoa powder substitute and came out wonderfull as all of ms gands are.
Joseph Burton
I am a big fan of Gale, so I blame myself for my failure to produce anything resembling a hot fudge sauce out of this recipe. I brought the mixture to a boil, but it never seemed to separate. It bubbled a lot and I took it off the heat when I thought it was going to burn. When I tried to mix it with a handmixer it separated into an oil and a very hard, thick chocolatey mess that turned hard on our icecream. I am usually not a terrible cook, but this recipe made me feel like one.
Dr. Christopher Harris
I served this hot fudge sauce for my 40th birthday with ice cream and brownies. WOW! I doubled the recipe and had a lot left over so I froze some. I brought it to a friends house for a dinner party and her 7 year old got on the phone to call and ask me to make her some more.

 

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