Honey Drops
Submitted by celticmaster_007
Honey drops candy boils pure honey with butter and a splash of lemon to hard ball stage, then pulls into chewy white taffy with a porous, melt-on-the-tongue texture.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
20 minREADY
60 minPulled honey candy is one of those vintage confections that turns five pantry staples into something almost magical. Boiling honey until it hits hard ball stage, then pulling it like taffy until it lightens from amber to opaque white, creates the porous, chewy texture that makes these drops worth the arm workout.
The pinch of baking soda is key. It reacts with the lemon juice and creates tiny air pockets as you pull, which is what gives the finished candy a tender, melt-on-the-tongue snap instead of the tooth-cracking density of plain boiled honey. Butter keeps the surface from going sticky, and salt sharpens the flavor so it does not read as cloying.
Watch the candy thermometer like a hawk. Honey scorches faster than sugar, so once you near hard ball stage do not look away.
Pro Tips
- Test for hard ball stage by dropping a bit of syrup into ice water; it should form a firm but pliable ball that holds its shape between your fingers.
- Butter your hands lightly before pulling, and let the slab cool just until you can handle it but still bend it.
- Pull for a solid 10 to 15 minutes. The color shift from gold to opaque cream is the signal that enough air has been worked in.
- Wrap pieces individually in wax paper to keep humidity out. The surface turns tacky fast in damp kitchens.
Variations
- Stir in a pinch of cinnamon or ground ginger right before pouring the syrup out to cool for a warm, spiced edge.
- Swap half the honey for sorghum syrup for a deeper, molasses-leaning flavor.
Ingredients
Directions
Heat honey to boiling.
Add baking soda, butter, lemon juice, and salt.
Boil to hard ball stage (265 - 270 F). Pour into well-buttered pan. Cool. Pull until white and porous. Cut in 1 inch pieces.
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