Peanut Butter Balls & Peanut Brittle

peanut butter balls (Note the foot on the one at the front where the chocolate was too hot)

The Christmas that Judson and I were engaged (2011), we gave everyone we knew homemade Christmas gifts. For the most part, these gifts took the form of festively-decorated jars full of peanut butter balls, bourbon balls, buttercream truffles and peppermint bark, all made in huge batches in my tiny flat's kitchen over the preceding weeks.

In the six years since, I've never wanted to face another bourbon ball or peanut butter ball. Actually, I had quite forgotten the existence of bourbon balls (a Kentucky delicacy made of large amounts of bourbon mixed with melted butter, ground pecans and powdered sugar, coated in chocolate and topped with a pecan half) until yesterday, when Judson caught me making peanut butter balls and said 'I'm really surprised after five Christmases in Scotland that you still haven't made bourbon balls.'

'True, but where would I get the bourbon?' I said without thinking, since bourbon here is way more expensive than stateside.

Peanut butter balls

But then when I started thinking about it, I realised that the truth is I can't stomach the idea of bourbon balls just yet. Homemade peanut butter balls, though? These are given an exemption because they're basically higher-quality Reese's Cups, which, as we've discussed, are my favourite candy. And this recipe, with the exception of the Rice Krispies involved, is exactly how they should be made.

The recipe, with the exception of 'one box of powdered sugar,' is possibly the most concise recipe I've found in the Recipe Box to date. One 'box' of powdered sugar, though? Really? I did some googling- you know, standard Google searches like 'how many ounces in a standard size box of powdered sugar in 1975', and between those results and my own best estimations, figured it out pretty easily. The Rice Krispies, honestly, are not really necessary- I think I prefer my peanut butter candy without them (an added bonus: without the Rice Krispies, these are gluten-free), but adding the Rice Krispies definitely helps stretch the batch to be a little bigger, and keeps the candies from being quite as rich as they otherwise would be.

Some Peanut Butter Ball Tips:

  • If your chocolate gets too warm, it will puddle in a 'foot' around the base of the candy. Keep an eye on your finished candies as you go and if you notice this happening, turn down the heat or turn it off temporarily to allow it to cool off.
  • Made as per the below WITH Rice Krispies, you'll have approximately 50 balls. WITHOUT Rice Krispies, plan for about 40. Recipe can easily be doubled to make 80-100 balls.
  • Balls will keep for 2 weeks in the fridge or 4 days at room temperature.

peanut brittle getting ready to boil

As for the peanut brittle... well, it was really tasty. Weirdly, there are two recipes for this exact peanut brittle in the box, one hand-written and one typed, both clearly well used. Technically, it should have been made with 'raw spanish peanuts,' but, as ever, when it comes to nuts my supermarket is always foiling me, so mine was instead made with pecans, back when I could find pecans in my supermarket. I made it without a candy thermometer (I used my meat thermometer instead like some kind of heathen) and it came out just right anyway. Except for the fact that my tin wasn't big enough and so the molten brittle was so deep in the pan that the finished product was practically impossible to break. I'm including directions below for a half-batch of what I made, so that you can use a standard 11x13 pan to pour it into. I strongly recommend using a single pan for this recipe and not trying to split the molten brittle into different pans, as you'll inevitably end up with all the nuts in one pan and the other pan full of only praline. The pictures included here are of my far-too-thick version, so yours will be roughly half this thickness.

peanut brittle

Some Peanut Brittle Tips:

  • Measure and prepare ALL ingredients and equipment before you begin.
  • Lock any animals or small children or distracting husbands out of the kitchen before you start- this recipe requires no distractions and can't really be 'paused' in the middle. Plus, the molten caramel is really hot and if it spills or splashes, will really hurt.
  • If you don't have a candy thermometer, make sure you know how to tell when your mixture 'spins a thread.'
  • This can be adjusted with other flavourings as you wish: pecans, almonds or hazelnuts work just as well as peanuts, or go the Italian route and make it with pine nuts. You can also add other herbal/spice flavours by blending them with the sugar before you begin or sprinkling them in at the end (I really love a few spoonfuls of minced rosemary, muddled with the sugar or sprinkled in at the end, but cinnamon, ginger, or nutmeg are all also lovely, as is a heaping pinch of smoked salt sprinkled on after the mixture is poured into the pan).

The verdict:
the peanut butter balls:

5 spoons out of five. These are easy, delicious and have far fewer preservatives in them than store-bought candy. Pretty much they are the perfect addition to your holiday dessert collection, and, if nothing else, you should make a batch for yourself and keep them in the fridge for stressful moments over the next week.

the Peanut brittle:

4 spoons out of five. Knocking off a spoon because candy making is a bit of a faff and the cleanup is a nightmare- prepare for your counter to be covered in hardened caramel anywhere you set your mixing spoon, pan or prep dish. But as long as you follow the directions below so that your brittle is more brittle and less brick, you'll be good to go.

one year ago: crazy crust apple pie
two years ago: Holiday almanac: Cream Cheese Nut bread 

The recipe:

Peanut Butter Balls

the directions:

Melt butter and peanut butter together and pour into mixing bowl.
Beat in powdered sugar.
If adding Rice Krispies, fold them in gently until well-blended.
Chill at least 1 hour until very cold.
Shape into balls between 1/2-inch and 1-inch wide. (I prefer smaller candies so there is a more even balance of chocolate and peanut butter, but you can make them as big or small as you please, and they do not have to be even since you're not baking them).
Chill balls until ready to use.
Place a large sheet of parchment or waxed paper near your double-boiler.
Melt chocolate in a double boiler over very low heat.
One at a time, drop chilled balls into chocolate, flip over with a fork until completely covered.
Lift the ball out on the fork, scraping off any excess on the edge of the pot.
Place the coated ball on the parchment paper and continue with remaining balls.

the ingredients:

85g (3/8 c) butter
8 oz peanut butter
1 ¾ c powdered sugar
2 ½ c Rice Krispies cereal (optional)
8 oz cooking chocolate (milk, dark or a mix)


the recipe:

Peanut Brittle

the directions:

Butter an 11x13 tin very heavily, especially in the corners.
If you do not have a candy thermometer, place a bowl of VERY cold water next to the stove with a small teaspoon for testing the temperature.
Combine sugar, golden syrup or corn syrup and water.
Boil mixture until it 'spins a thread,' 223-235F on a candy thermometer, stirring constantly.*
Add nuts and continue cooking until mixture is very golden brown and hits 295-300 on a candy thermometer (approx. 5 more minutes without a candy thermometer).
Remove from heat and add butter, baking soda and salt.
Stir well and quickly (baking soda will make mixture 'foam').
IMMEDIATELY pour into prepared tin, using your mixing spoon to even out the top.
Allow to cool completely before using the flat side of a meat tenderiser to shatter the brittle.

Store in a very tightly sealed container at room temperature; best served within a day or two in case it gets humid and sticky, but can be stored up to a week.

*This occurs when a very small amount of the mixture, dropped from a small spoon into the bowl of cold water, creates very thin threads behind it as it falls into the water.

the ingredients:

1 ½ c sugar
½ c golden syrup or corn syrup
¼ c water
1 ½ c nuts (plain peanuts, pecans, hazelnuts or almonds)
½ tbs butter
1 tsp baking soda
½ tsp salt

Chocolate Leaves

Halloween is my favourite holiday. I'm sure we've discussed in years past that this is probably to do with the fact that my birthday follows Halloween by less than a week, but regardless of why, Halloween is my jam. This year we decided to host our first Scottish Halloween party, and it was great. After years of throwing Halloween parties in Atlanta (nearly 10 years straight by the time we moved to Scotland, starting long before I met Judson!), it was a sad shift to stop doing so when we moved here- but Halloween isn't a big deal in Scotland, and it took a couple of years to get a decent enough group of friends who we could convince to dress up.

Also there were a couple of years in there where we were traveling for my birthday on the 31st- once in Paris, where, together with friends, we sipped glowing shots spiked with dry ice and served to us by a bartender dressed as Frankenstein, and once in Portugal, where Judson and I sat alone together on the southwesternmost tip of Europe, watching the sun set over the Atlantic Ocean while sipping ice cold beer bought from an enterprising guy with a cooler.

Those Halloweens abroad were amazing, don't get me wrong, but there's something that I love about throwing a Halloween party at home. Transforming my house into a Candy Land wonderland or a World War II USO building or, this year, a Haunted House is so much fun, and having friends over to eat Jello shots and candy and dance in the living room while shedding bits of costume is just the best. So this year, to keep it lowkey for the Scots who weren't super into the idea of dressing up, we did 'traditional' Halloween costumes. I was a witch, Judson a vampire and Holtzmann, who took home the award for cutest costume, a bat. Judson handled décor, which centred around spiderwebs, spooky old portraits of strangers we picked up years ago in a thrift store and foraged sticks, dried leaves, dead flowers and gourds. I took on the food, going for 'things that are tasty but still look spooky,' so there was tomato jam, beetroot dip, balsamic-roasted grapes and all the sweet things you can imagine, including this cake, which contained over a kilo of chocolate, all in.

Unfortunately, I froze the cake to make it easier to frost, and then frosted it with ganache which was so heavy it compacted the cake into a quite dense crumb, but it still tasted delicious and I think it might take the prize as prettiest cake I've ever decorated. The only portion of the cake that comes from the recipe box is the chocolate leaves, but through trial and error I've learned that these are not as difficult as I assumed, so here are all my best tips for making them, all in one place.

The verdict:

5 spoons out of five. It's just chocolate, ladies- what did you expect?

One year ago: Crazy Crust Apple Pie
Two years ago: Taffy Apples & Popcorn Balls

the recipe:

Chocolate Leaves

the ingredients:

Baking chocolate (dark, milk or white)
CLEAN ivy, laurel, mint or other leaves with a prominent vein pattern

the directions:

Wash leaves carefully in hot water. Our ivy was a little suspect, so I used soap.
Line worktop in wax paper or parchment paper
Melt chocolate carefully over low heat in a double boiler or in 5-second bursts in the microwave.
Use a paintbrush or frosting knife to spread a very thick layer of chocolate over the veined side of the leaf (layer should be completely opaque, as uniform as possible, and should go all the way to the edges of the leaf).
Make sure your chocolate layer is VERY thick- mine was close to 1/4” in thickness. This will help when it's time to remove the leaf.
If you're using a sturdy leaf like ivy, you can lay them chocolate-side up on the paper to firm up or place in the fridge if you don't live in the frigid Scottish climate.
If your leaves are flimsier (mint, etc.), lay them over the handle of a wooden spoon to give them some shape and dimension when they are set.
Once all leaves are set, remove leaf by either tugging gently on stem to peel it away or using the point of a paring knife to get it started, then peeling gently away.
MAKE MORE THAN YOU THINK YOU NEED because you'll definitely break one or two.

Holiday Almanac December 21: Creamy Cider Caramels

For more information on the Holiday Almanac, go hereOr to see what I've been up to on past Holiday Almanac days, check out this page.

Well, here we have another difficult one (I thought). I was dreading Caramel Making Day for most of December, which is why I didn't actually get around to it until yesterday (knowing that I couldn't today). Since I couldn't buy the frosting mix that the Almanac recommended for making the candy, I used this recipe from Smitten Kitchen, my very favourite food blogger.

I had always been kind of on the fence about fruit with caramel, and then this summer at a friend's wedding, I tried an apricot caramel that changed my life. I've had dreams about it since July, wondering if there was ever a way I could make it myself, or if I would simply be doomed to make yearly trips to Saratoga, California, to stock up on their white-chocolate truffles filled with it.

Luckily, these turned out just as good, and just as easy, and now I want to make them all the time.

Cinnamon and Flaky Sea salt.

Cinnamon and Flaky Sea salt.

Seriously, I don't have a candy thermometer (which is probably the main reason I hate making candy), but even without one, these are a cinch. The apple flavour shines through in a way I didn't think would be possible, and the texture is soft, creamy, and rich without being sticky or cloying. I'm taking them to work when I go back on Wednesday because the recipe makes 64 and I can't be trusted around these any longer than necessary.

I won't kid myself and think that you'll have time to make these caramels before Christmas (or even before New Year's Eve), but if you're going to attempt one Holiday Almanac recipe, this is a good one to try on a cold and rainy January night. It'll fill your house with the smell of apples and butter, and you're friends will be so impressed with you that you might start considering candy-making as your own higher calling and quit your job to open up a candy shop. If you do, promise you'll send me some?

DSCF4889.jpg

The verdict:

5 spoons out of five. (It's a Smitten Kitchen recipe, so of course it's amazing). These were super easy and super delicious, and the almanac recommends making them as part of an 'old-fashioned candy-making party,' which sounds like something I wish I would be invited to.