Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge Recipe - Food.com (2024)

4

Submitted by Kathy Sterling

"My mom used to make this fudge recipe for holidays and it has always been a favorite of the family."

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Ready In:
45mins

Ingredients:
7
Yields:

36 Pieces

Serves:
36

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ingredients

  • 3 cups sugar
  • 23 dark unsweetened cocoa, I like Hershey's Cocoa Powder
  • 18 teaspoon salt
  • 1 12 cups whole milk
  • 14 cup butter
  • 12 cup pecans, finely chopped (optional)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

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directions

  • Line 8 or 9 inch square pan with foil.
  • Mix sugar, cocoa and salt in a heavy 4-quart saucepan.
  • Stir in whole milk.
  • Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until mixture comes to a full rolling boil.
  • Boil without stirring until mixture reaches 234 degrees on a candy thermometer or until small amount of mixture dropped into very cold water forms a soft ball.
  • Remove from heat and add butter and vanilla. Do Not Stir. Cool at room temperature to 110 degrees.
  • Stir in pecans.
  • Beat with a wooden spoon until fudge thickens and just begins to loose some of its gloss.
  • Quickly spread into prepared pan.
  • Cool completely.
  • Cut into square.
  • Store in a tightly covered container at room temperature.

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Reviews

  1. This was just the fudge recipe I was looking for! It is sooo good! And no corn syrup either! Thanks for posting!I omitted the pecans and used organic evap. cane juice, organic cocoa powder, raw goat milk, organic salted butter, sea salt, and homemade organic vanilla extract. I'm making batch number two in e few minutes!

    BeagleMommy

  2. I made it exactly as the recipe called for, even using the Hersey's cocoa. It was creamy and just the perfect consistence. However, the chocolate flavor tasted of cocoa and not chocolate. Next time I'll use another source of chocolate such as Belgium Baking Chocolate.

    adamsonjennifer

  3. Want to make it, as it sounds perfect, but how much cocoa? It says 2/3 _______ . Thanks

    jr5520

  4. I'm letting mine cool right now...will post the complete review later...here's hoping...

    bonniecrim336

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

Kathy Sterling

  • 1 Follower
  • 5 Recipes

I have been married to my high school sweetheart for more than 42 years and still love being a wife, mother and grandmother.I am a self employed Interior Decorator and love helping my clients create beautiful surroundings. I have a real passion for my job and consider it a hobby as well as a career.I like cooking for family and friends, special occassions are always fun. My husband is a picky eater, so I try out new things on my friends.I don't cook everyday, we do eat out a lot, but when I do, I really enjoy it. Starting out 2010, I decided to put my family cookbook together so my siblings, children, cousins and extended family would enjoy them as I have for years to come.The Family Favorites Cookbook will be a collection of everyone's requested receipes from our mothers, grandmothers and siblings. I hope it will be shared for many years with our decendants so they will have an idea of the foods we grew up with.I have an extensive cookbook collection and read them like most people read novels. I love the ones that tell family history and stories. Local church cookbooks and area cookbooks by women's groups are always special to me.My first cookbook memory was when I saved my money and purchased a Better Homes and Garden cookbook for my mother as a gift for Mother's Day. I knew she wanted the book and I saved my money and rode my bicycle to the local drug store to purchase it. That cookbook was the gift I always gave at wedding showers and I now have a collection of the red checkered cookbooks.I like making desserts best as everyone in our family love sweets. Our family holiday dinners are usually full of some of the best desserts known to man. I am well known for preparing Shrimp Gumbo, Pot Roast and Seafood Delight. Friends and family want to come to our home when I make those dishes. My daughters are now learning how to cook them as well as I do so the tradition continues.When we eat out, we usually eat Mexican food as it is time consuming to prepare and inexpensive to eat at most restaurants. Everyone in our family likes Mexican food so it is always a crowd pleaser.When I eat out with friends or business associates, I typically like to eat at a Seafood restaurant or Chineese restaurant since my husband does not like either one.

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Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge Recipe  - Food.com (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good fudge? ›

Tips for Making Fudge
  • Monitor the Temperature with a Candy Thermometer. If you end up with soft fudge that turns into a puddle in your hands or hard fudge that is a bit reminiscent of a crunchy candy, improper temperature is likely to blame. ...
  • Avoid Stirring Once the Mixture Comes to a Simmer. ...
  • Beat Thoroughly.
Mar 8, 2023

Why is my old fashioned fudge not hardening? ›

Fudge Didn't Set

If your fudge turned out super sticky, or it didn't set as it cooled, it probably never got hot enough. This mistake is super easy to avoid if you use a candy thermometer and cook the fudge to the temperature specified in the recipe (usually between 234 and 239°F).

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!

What is the secret to smooth fudge that is not gritty? ›

Once a seed crystal forms, it grows bigger and bigger as the fudge cools. A lot of big crystals in fudge makes it grainy. By letting the fudge cool without stirring, you avoid creating seed crystals.

Do you stir fudge while it is boiling? ›

Brush the sides of the pan with a wet brush at the beginning of cooking to dissolve sugar crystals stuck to the sides. Never stir the mixture during cooking or sugar could crystallize again. The mixture may seize and become grainy. Use a candy thermometer or conduct a cold water test to check if the fudge is done.

How do you firm up homemade fudge? ›

If your fudge is soft or runny, it probably didn't come up to a high enough temperature while it was cooking. Put it back into the saucepan and add 1–2 US tbsp (15–30 ml) of 35% fat whipping cream. Stir the fudge as it heats, but only until the sugar in the chocolate is completely melted again.

Can I fix fudge that didn't set? ›

OPTION 3) Sieve together some powdered sugar and cocoa powder, and gradually work this into your unset fudge until it reaches the consistency of dough, then roll out and cut into squares, or shape into balls and then roll in powdered sugar (roll the balls in icing sugar, not yourself).

What makes fudge softer? ›

Undercooked. This fudge was cooked until the temperature reached only108 °C (226 °F). At this temperature, the sugar is not concentrated enough... there is too much leftover water in the syrup and the resulting fudge is soft.

How is Mackinac Island fudge made? ›

The team has the process down pat: One person weighs the ingredients—raw chocolate from Germany, sugar from Bay City, and cream and butter—into a copper kettle set over a propane gas burner. The maker constantly stirs with an oak paddle until the sugary mixture reaches a roaring boil, about 16 to 17 minutes.

What is the ball method fudge? ›

According to most recipes, the ingredients of fudge are cooked to what is termed in kitchen parlance the soft ball stage, that point between 234 and 240 °F (112 and 115 °C) at which a small ball of the candy dropped in ice water neither disintegrates nor flattens when picked up with the fingers.

Why do you add vanilla to fudge? ›

Vanilla is often added to chocolate candies or other chocolate recipes because it complements and accents the flavor of chocolate.

Why do you stir fudge with a wooden spoon? ›

In his book On Food and Cooking, food scientist Harold McGee writes, “A metal spoon can induce crystallization by conducting heat away from local areas of the syrup, cooling them and so leaving them supersaturated [causing crystallization].” He recommends using a wooden spoon, which doesn't conduct heat.

Why does my fudge crumble when I cut it? ›

The ingredients for fudge are combined and cooked to 234 degrees, cooled to 110 degrees without stirring, then beaten until creamy. Candy that isn't cooked long enough will end up too soft; overcooking makes fudge crumbly or hard.

What is a substitute for 1 teaspoon of cream of tartar? ›

You can use 1.5 teaspoons (6 grams) of baking powder to replace 1 teaspoon (3.5 grams) of cream of tartar. This substitution is ideal because it can be used in any recipe without modifying the taste or texture of the final product.

What makes high quality fudge? ›

You have to control two temperatures to make successful fudge: the cooking temperature AND the temperature at which the mixture cools before stirring to make it crystallize. Confectionery experiments have shown that the ideal cooking temperature for fudge is around 114 to 115 °C (237 to 239 °F).

What gives fudge its firm texture? ›

The key to creamy, luscious fudge is controlling crystal formation. If the sucrose (table sugar) crystals are small, the fudge will feel creamy and smooth on your tongue. But if the crystals are large, the fudge develops a crumbly, dry, or even coarse texture.

How can I firm up my fudge? ›

How do you fix fudge that is too soft? Bring the fudge back to a boil with 1–2 US tbsp (15–30 ml) of cream. If your fudge is soft or runny, it probably didn't come up to a high enough temperature while it was cooking. Put it back into the saucepan and add 1–2 US tbsp (15–30 ml) of 35% fat whipping cream.

How do you keep fudge smooth? ›

If the sugar crystals are not properly dissolved before cooling, they can create a gritty texture. To avoid this, ensure that you stir the fudge mixture consistently and remove any sugar crystals that form on the sides of the pan using a wet pastry brush.

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