Tag Archive: caramels

Sanders Dark Chocolate Sea Salt Caramels

In 1875, Fred Sanders Schmidt (known as Fred Sanders) opened Sanders Fine Chocolates in Detroit, Michigan. In the 1940’s and 1950’s, Sanders chocolate products and shoppes were all over the Great Lakes region. The shoppes sold not only chocolates and candies, but served light lunches, ice cream sodas, and hot fudge sundaes. Morley Candy Makers, Inc., bought Sanders in 2002.

Every once in a while I like to enjoy a dark chocolate covered caramel. I can get tired of caramels pretty quickly though. (I don’t particularly like how the caramel adheres to my teeth for so long after the chocolate coating melts and the chocolate flavors fade).

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Snicker Bars

If you still don't know what my favorite candy bar is, you obviously haven’t been paying enough attention. Boohoo.

It’s Snickers®. I’m head over heels crazy about the chocolate, peanut, nougat, and caramel combo. I’ve mentioned it a million times, so I’m just gonna dive in head first and make my own homemade Snickers bars.
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White Chocolate Scones

You can pronounce scone in two ways, it’s either "Skon" or "Skoan". These treats are said to have its roots from Scotland and are closely related to the griddle baked flatbread called bannock. Initially, they were whipped up using oats, shaped into a large round, scored into four to six triangles, and then they are cooked on a griddle either over an open fire or on top of the stove.

How the term ‘scone’ was dubbed is as unclear as its precise origins. Some claim that the name can be traced back to where the Kings of Scotland were crowned, the Stone (Scone) of Destiny, while others say the name comes from the Dutch word "schoonbrood" ("schoon" stands for clean, while "brood" for bread), or from the German word "schonbrot", which means 'fine or beautiful bread'. And then there are those who claim it comes from the Gaelic 'sgonn', which is a shapeless mass or large mouthful.
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Soft Chocolate Caramels

What do homemade caramels remind you of? Me, it specifically reminds me of times when my siblings and I gathered around and just ate whatever we wanted. But today, I can eat some any day of the week.

I always go for my mother’s caramel recipe for the most part though. This time, I want my caramels more chocolatey. Little did I know it would be as easy as adding chocolate to the initial caramel mixture. I went with a different recipe and the end result shocked me.
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