Toffee II

  4.1 – 13 reviews  

Beautiful, delicious bread.

Prep Time: 10 mins
Cook Time: 20 mins
Total Time: 30 mins
Servings: 20
Yield: 1 pound

Ingredients

  1. 1 cup white sugar
  2. ½ pound butter
  3. ¼ cup water
  4. ⅛ teaspoon salt
  5. 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  6. 6 (1.45 ounce) bars dark chocolate candy

Instructions

  1. Grease a 9×13 inch baking pan.
  2. Combine sugar, butter, water, and salt in a heavy saucepan. Cook, stirring continuously until the mixture reaches light crack stage (310 degrees F, 160 degrees C) on a candy thermometer). Remove the pan from heat and stir in vanilla. Pour mixture into the prepared baking pan.
  3. Lay chocolate bars on top of the hot mixture and spread the melting chocolate over the top of the mixture. Chill well. Crack into pieces to serve.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 189 kcal
Carbohydrate 18 g
Cholesterol 25 mg
Dietary Fiber 1 g
Protein 1 g
Saturated Fat 8 g
Sodium 81 mg
Sugars 16 g
Fat 13 g
Unsaturated Fat 0 g

Reviews

Julie Delgado
I don’t have a candy thermometer but found out online that it should be the light brown color of almond skins for the hard crack stage. When it starts to brown you have to watch it because it browns fast near the end. Mine was hard and not chewy or burnt but maybe could have been taken off the heat a tad sooner. I also turned the heat down near the end to avoid burning it. Another tip was to test a little dropped into cold water for doneness.
Heather Green
My 11 year old who loves baking tried this as his first attempt at candy making. It’s amazingly delicious! I helped him with the thermometer and warned him that he needed to work quick to get the pot off the heat the instant it got to the proper temperature, and watched him as he did it, and it tasted just s teensy bit burnt. Maybe next time we’ll go a few degrees shy of the 310 recommendation. It’s possible that our thermometer needs calibration too. Regardless, the end result is SO good!
Brittany Mills
Didn’t think it would turn out so o good,actually DELICIOUS thank you for this recipe!
Elizabeth Robinson
Great recipe. I was confused with the temperature as 310f is only 154c. I checked other recipes and cooked it to 300f and it turned out perfect. Don’t scrimp on ingredients-use the good stuff! I used Hershey bars because I had them and topped with chopped walnuts.
Lisa Stewart
Although it is true many candy recipes you do not stir, you must stir this constantly because of the butter content. Cooked on just medium as the first batch I burned as temp went up much faster than in most candy recipes. Used dark chocolate chips instead of bars and spread around, worked great.
Kevin Melton
I tried making this recipe and it separated and could not be used. My daughter who is a Chef told me that you should never stir candy while it’s cooking. It makes it break down and separate. I really wish this would have worked because it smells heavenly!
Kevin Santos
simply put this is the best recipe ever. quality takes time! people beg me to make this.
Tracy Hardin
Don’t place this on a granite counter top when cooling or it will cool too fast and the chocolate won’t stick.
Michael Williams
This was so easy to make and tasted just like a Heath candy bar! I will be useing this again for sure. Followed the recipe exactly. Be sure to stir the entire time so the sugar doesn’t burn!! After the chocolate was melted and smooth, I placed the dish in the fridge to speed up the cooling. Then broke into pieces and used in a chocolate trifle…YUM! This was my first time making toffee and I would for sure recommend this recipe to anyone.
Nicholas Jones
It was easy to make. After chilled and cracked, it became sticky and not crisp.
Brooke Velazquez
It was not half bad … It was 3/4 bad took too long , make sure you have your stove on high
Joshua Richards
Wow! Definitely a keeper!
John Higgins
This one was pretty good and fairly simple, but one does have to be sure the pan you put it into is not a glass one. You can use even a cookie sheet, and without even chilling it, and once it has cooled and the chocolate is set you just sort of twist the metal sheet and the candy will break into pieces. You can hit it with a hard knife, spoon, or other utensil if the pieces are large and you want to make them smaller. Just a tip I use when I make any hard candy. I also like to put some chopped nuts (preferably pecans) on top of the melting chocolate.

 

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