Bucket Head
10-21-2007, 10:14 PM
Here is a question from an extremly inexperienced candy maker.
I made some candy the other night from some of the lightest syrup I had. No machine here, just a sauce pot and an electric stove. I was filling 2 ounce pumpkin (jack-o-lantern) mold's.
The candy has a very coarse grain to it and they have large white (dried out?) area's on both the back and the face of the pumpkin. When I removed them from the mold's, they were "wet" and there was wetness still in the mold. I laid a few of them on a piece of paper towell and they appeared to "bleed" out a little.
I also filled 1/3 ounce pumpkin's and they were better than the large one's, but still showed sign's of the dried out area's but were sticky to the touch.
How can they be dry looking when they were "wet" out of the mold's? What did I do wrong here? Has anyone else experienced this sort of thing?
They tasted good, but the look's of them has turned me away from making any more. Any advice would be appreciated.
Steve
I made some candy the other night from some of the lightest syrup I had. No machine here, just a sauce pot and an electric stove. I was filling 2 ounce pumpkin (jack-o-lantern) mold's.
The candy has a very coarse grain to it and they have large white (dried out?) area's on both the back and the face of the pumpkin. When I removed them from the mold's, they were "wet" and there was wetness still in the mold. I laid a few of them on a piece of paper towell and they appeared to "bleed" out a little.
I also filled 1/3 ounce pumpkin's and they were better than the large one's, but still showed sign's of the dried out area's but were sticky to the touch.
How can they be dry looking when they were "wet" out of the mold's? What did I do wrong here? Has anyone else experienced this sort of thing?
They tasted good, but the look's of them has turned me away from making any more. Any advice would be appreciated.
Steve