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Posts tagged “national toffee day”

January 8th is National Toffee Day!

John-Bryan Hopkins

High-res version

Here are today’s five thing to know about English Toffee:

Toffee and Caramel are sometimes interchangeable.

toffee_8771

Toffees consist of mainly sugar and water, while caramels use dairy products in their production, making them softer

almond-toffee-bark-31

Almond butter treats are toffee from England.

giphy13

Michigan toffee comes in varies styles, some hard and some chewy, some chocolate covered with nut sprinkles.

wpid-wp-1429969448892

Tafia, a West Indian rum of molasses or sugarcane juice, is theorized to be the source of the word “toffee.”

giphy14

Today’s Food History

  • 1676 Charles II of England revoked his previous proclamation suppressing Coffee Houses due to public response.
  • 1800 The first soup kitchens in London were opened to serve the poor.
  • 1823 Alfred Russel Wallace was born. Wallace was a British naturalist who developed a theory of natural selection independently of Charles Darwin. He sent his conclusions to Darwin, and their findings were both presented to the Linnaean Society in 1858.
  • 1825 Eli Whitney died. Inventor of the cotton gin, but more important he developed the concept of mass producing interchangeable parts.
  • 1872 African American inventor Thomas Elkins received his second patent. It was for a ‘Chamber Commode’ – a combination “bureau, mirror, book-rack, washstand, table, easy chair, and earth-closet or chamber-stool.”
  • 1894 Pierre Joseph van Beneden died. A Belgian parasitologist, he discovered the life cycle of tapeworms.
  • 1926 Comedian ‘Soupy Sales’ was born. Most of his routines ended with Soupy receiving a pie in the face.
  • 1992 President George H.W. Bush becomes ill on a trip to Japan and vomits on Japanese Prime Minister Miyazawa Kiichi.
  • 1998 Walter E. Diemer died. While working for the Fleer Chewing Gum Company, he experimented with recipes for chewing gum as a hobby. (He really liked his gum!). He invented bubble gum in 1928.
  • 2002 Dave Thomas, founder of Wendy’s Hamburger chain, died.

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Categories: Food Holidays, January Food Holidays, Uncategorized

Tagged: national toffee day

January 8th is National Toffee Day!

John-Bryan Hopkins

High-res version

Here are today’s five thing to know about English Toffee:

Toffee and Caramel are sometimes interchangeable.

toffee_8771

Toffees consist of mainly sugar and water, while caramels use dairy products in their production, making them softer

almond-toffee-bark-31

Almond butter treats are toffee from England.

giphy13

Michigan toffee comes in varies styles, some hard and some chewy, some chocolate covered with nut sprinkles.

wpid-wp-1429969448892

Tafia, a West Indian rum of molasses or sugarcane juice, is theorized to be the source of the word “toffee.”

giphy14

Today’s Food History

  • 1676 Charles II of England revoked his previous proclamation suppressing Coffee Houses due to public response.
  • 1800 The first soup kitchens in London were opened to serve the poor.
  • 1823 Alfred Russel Wallace was born. Wallace was a British naturalist who developed a theory of natural selection independently of Charles Darwin. He sent his conclusions to Darwin, and their findings were both presented to the Linnaean Society in 1858.
  • 1825 Eli Whitney died. Inventor of the cotton gin, but more important he developed the concept of mass producing interchangeable parts.
  • 1872 African American inventor Thomas Elkins received his second patent. It was for a ‘Chamber Commode’ – a combination “bureau, mirror, book-rack, washstand, table, easy chair, and earth-closet or chamber-stool.”
  • 1894 Pierre Joseph van Beneden died. A Belgian parasitologist, he discovered the life cycle of tapeworms.
  • 1926 Comedian ‘Soupy Sales’ was born. Most of his routines ended with Soupy receiving a pie in the face.
  • 1992 President George H.W. Bush becomes ill on a trip to Japan and vomits on Japanese Prime Minister Miyazawa Kiichi.
  • 1998 Walter E. Diemer died. While working for the Fleer Chewing Gum Company, he experimented with recipes for chewing gum as a hobby. (He really liked his gum!). He invented bubble gum in 1928.
  • 2002 Dave Thomas, founder of Wendy’s Hamburger chain, died.

Check out My Book!

L.jpeg

Share Me:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
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Categories: Food Holidays, January Food Holidays, Uncategorized

Tagged: national toffee day

January 8th is National Toffee Day!

John-Bryan Hopkins

High-res version

Here are today’s five thing to know about English Toffee:

Toffee and Caramel are sometimes interchangeable.

toffee_8771

Toffees consist of mainly sugar and water, while caramels use dairy products in their production, making them softer

almond-toffee-bark-31

Almond butter treats are toffee from England.

giphy13

Michigan toffee comes in varies styles, some hard and some chewy, some chocolate covered with nut sprinkles.

wpid-wp-1429969448892

Tafia, a West Indian rum of molasses or sugarcane juice, is theorized to be the source of the word “toffee.”

giphy14

 

Today’s Food History

  • 1676 Charles II of England revoked his previous proclamation suppressing Coffee Houses due to public response.
  • 1800 The first soup kitchens in London were opened to serve the poor.
  • 1823 Alfred Russel Wallace was born. Wallace was a British naturalist who developed a theory of natural selection independently of Charles Darwin. He sent his conclusions to Darwin, and their findings were both presented to the Linnaean Society in 1858.
  • 1825 Eli Whitney died. Inventor of the cotton gin, but more important he developed the concept of mass producing interchangeable parts.
  • 1872 African American inventor Thomas Elkins received his second patent. It was for a ‘Chamber Commode’ – a combination “bureau, mirror, book-rack, washstand, table, easy chair, and earth-closet or chamber-stool.”
  • 1894 Pierre Joseph van Beneden died. A Belgian parasitologist, he discovered the life cycle of tapeworms.
  • 1926 Comedian ‘Soupy Sales’ was born. Most of his routines ended with Soupy receiving a pie in the face.
  • 1992 President George H.W. Bush becomes ill on a trip to Japan and vomits on Japanese Prime Minister Miyazawa Kiichi.
  • 1998 Walter E. Diemer died. While working for the Fleer Chewing Gum Company, he experimented with recipes for chewing gum as a hobby. (He really liked his gum!). He invented bubble gum in 1928.
  • 2002 Dave Thomas, founder of Wendy’s Hamburger chain, died.

Check out My Book!

L.jpeg

Share Me:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • More
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  • Click to share on Like (Opens in new window)
Categories: Food Holidays, January Food Holidays, Uncategorized

Tagged: national toffee day

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Toffee

John-Bryan Hopkins

Toffee is a confection made by caramelizing sugar or molasses (creating inverted sugar) along with butter, and occasionally flour. The mixture is heated until its temperature reaches the hard crack stage of 300 to 310 °F (150 to 160 °C). While being prepared, toffee is sometimes mixed with nuts or raisins.

The process of making toffee involves boiling the ingredients until the mix is stiff enough to be pulled into a shape which holds and has a glossy surface. The resulting mixture will typically be poured into a shallow tray and allowed to cool to form a sheet. Different mixes, processes, and (most importantly) temperatures of toffee making will result in different textures and hardnesses, from soft and often sticky to a hard brittle material.

A popular variant in the US is English toffee, which is a very buttery toffee often made with almonds. It is available in both chewy and hard versions. Heath bars are a type of candy made with an English toffee core.

Although named English toffee it bears little resemblance to the wide range of confectionery known as toffee currently available in the UK.

Another variant is Cinder toffee, also called honeycomb or sponge toffee, which is an aerated version with bubbles introduced by adding baking soda and vinegar while mixing. The baking soda and vinegar react to form carbon dioxide, which is trapped in the highly viscous mixture. In the UK the most well known honeycomb candy is the Crunchie bar. In New Zealand this is called hokey pokey.

A particular application of toffee is in toffee apples, which are apples on sticks which are coated with toffee. Toffee apples are similar to taffy apples and caramel apples (both names for apples which are covered in caramel).

In the UK, toffee apples, sometimes called candy apples, are coated with brittle candy similar to boiled sweets.

Toffee used in confectionery has many different forms and is mixed with many different ingredients. Rum & Butter Toffee, Chocolate Covered, Vanilla & Chocolate, Rum & Raisin, Honeycomb.

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Categories: Food Facts

Tagged: english toffee, national toffee day, toffee

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