Peanut Brittle (2024)


Peanut Brittle (1)

Peanut brittle is an old-fashion candy that is still popular today. According The Food Timeline, a real authoritative source for a change, recipes for candy made with groundnuts (as peanuts were then called) first appeared in 1847. The term brittle, however, wasn't used until almost 50 years later.

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I have been using this peanut brittle recipe for almost 10 years. It's more peanut than brittle. If you want something resembling the boxed stuff made who-knows-how-long-ago that you find at the supermarket, reduce the amount of peanuts by a half-cup.

Many recipes call for buttering a foil-lined baking sheet, which can result in a tasty but greasy brittle. That is, unless you missed a spot while buttering. In which case you have peanut-and-foil brittle. Or as Snidely Whiplash puts it, "Curses! Foiled Again!".

Some recipes suggest blotting the brittle with paper towels to remove all that grease, but I have an even better suggestion (TIP ALERT!): invest in a silicone baking mat. No greasing, yet nothing, NUH-thing sticks to it. Cleanup is easy too. The only time I don't use a baking mat for heat-related candy is when it's in use for another heat-related candy.

Another important item is a candy thermometer. The exact temperature necessary to achieve proper consistency from soft caramel up to brittle ... brittle, can be easily guesstimated by expert candy-makers who know how a few drops of boiling sugar react when dropped into cold water. I am not an expert candy-maker, and I bet you are not one either.

Old-Fashioned Peanut Brittle

based on: Bon Appetit

yield: about 1 pound

1 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup water
3/8 cup light corn syrup
3/8 cup dark corn syrup
1 Tbl. unsalted butter
2 cups salted roasted peanuts
1/2 Tbl. baking soda
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract

Place a silicone baking mat on a large rimmed baking sheet (or line large rimmed baking sheet with foil; grease foil with an additional tablespoon of butter). Set aside.

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Stir sugar, water and both corn syrups together in a 2-quart saucepan over medium heat until sugar dissolves.

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Increase heat to high, insert candy thermometer and boil without stirring until thermometer reaches 260F, about 30-40 minutes, depending upon your stovetop's definition of "high heat."

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Reduce heat to medium-low. Stir in butter and peanuts.

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Continue to cook, stirring constantly, until temperature reaches 295F, about 10-15 minutes.

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Turn off heat and remove thermometer. Stir in baking soda and vanilla. Mixture will lighten and start to foam up.

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Immediately pour onto prepared baking sheet. Mixture will continue to foam a bit; spread it out as best you can before it starts to harden.

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Allow brittle to cool completely to room temperature. No cheating, unless you prefer folding your brittle.

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Break brittle into pieces, sizes up to you (and the brittle). Store in airtight container at room temperature, up to 1 month.

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May I please have some?

Peanut Brittle (2024)
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