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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 20:24:25 +0000, Michelle in WA state wrote:
> Just curious: What kind of texture are pralines supposed to have? > > I have a box of 'em here, "Kate Latter's" brand, that came -- with > attendant regional fanfare -- from New Orleans. Maybe I've never had > pralines before (except in ice cream or something), but for some reason I > was expecting something quite different. These are basically disks of > fairly crystalline light-brown sugar with a few pecan pieces in 'em. > > Actually, apart from the shape, they remind me quite a lot of the "maple > sugar candy" items I tried (once) years ago: Sweet enough to knock you to > your knees, and very little other flavor really. > > I guess I had always thought, for some reason, that pralines were rather > heavy on the pecan, and that the sugar was more or less a firm-to-hard > rather caramelized sort of candy, smoothy/creamy rather than > crystalline/grainy. > > Was I mistaken, or are these "pralines" just exceedingly poor > representatives of their species? > > Thanks for any enlightenment! > Pralines, as known in the southern US, come in two varieties... the firm crystalline candy and the soft and smooth variety. The difference? The care taken to make sure that the sugar/milk/butter mixture is not overcooked. If you cook it too long, you will end up with a more crystalline candy. Some people prefer one kind, some prefer the other. My mom makes the harder, crystalline kind... which was why I always tended to prefer my grandmother's. Turns out, my mom got her recipe from a cookbook and my grandmother received hers from her mother. Me? I like the softer variety. I use heavy cream instead of milk to keep the mixture rich (my own variation), and I lightly roast the pecans (275 at 25) to bring out their flavor. People have gone nuts over these when I make them around Christmastime. Recipe (from memory): * 1.5 cups sugar * .75 cup light brown sugar, packed * .5 cup heavy cream * 2 tsp vanilla * .75 stick butter * 1.5 cups roasted pecans Combine all ingredients and bring to soft ball stage (238-240 degrees F.. yeah, get a candy thermometer), stirring constantly. Remove from heat and stir until mixture thickens, becomes cloudy, and pecans stay suspended in mixture. Place a newspaper down, and place wax paper on top. Spoon out your pralines on the wax paper. GregoryD |
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