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I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:12 am
by Snooz
They sell them at the grocery store around this time of year and I always pick some up when I go shopping.
Look at this beauty, doesn't it make your mouth water?
I called the store and suggested they start putting dates on their apples. The girl on the phone asked where they sold them, the bakery?
Anyone ever see Idiocracy? :yh_rotfl
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:23 am
by Bruv
Are they Toffee apples in English ?
They look bad to me.
I much prefer caramelised onions, or fried as we call them over here.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:30 am
by Betty Boop
Is the brown the apple, or do they inject the caramel in or something

That one would end up in the bin here :wah:
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:35 am
by Snooz
"Caramelization (British English: also caramelisation) is the browning of sugar, a process used extensively in cooking for the resulting nutty flavor and brown color. As the process occurs, volatile chemicals are released, producing the characteristic caramel flavor." Why add another word to the mix when "caramel" should be readily understood? Jesus, you Brits and your high-falutin' words. Toffee sounds like some effete flavored coffee that leaves a bad taste in your mouth, like hazelnut. Blech.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:45 am
by Betty Boop
I don't think your kind of apples have made it here, we only see toffee or chocolate coated apples.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:50 am
by Snooz
Betty Boop;1372593 wrote: Is the brown the apple, or do they inject the caramel in or something

That one would end up in the bin here :wah:
I believe the brown part is rot and the green is mold. I guess I could have nibbled around the edges.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 9:56 am
by Betty Boop
SnoozeAgain;1372597 wrote: I believe the brown part is rot and the green is mold. I guess I could have nibbled around the edges.
That'll teach me to go with my first gut instinct that you were being sarcastic :wah:
I wouldn't nibble round the edges, I'd just lick the caramel off

I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 10:01 am
by Bruv
SnoozeAgain;1372595 wrote: "Caramelization (British English: also caramelisation) is the browning of sugar, a process used extensively in cooking for the resulting nutty flavor and brown color. As the process occurs, volatile chemicals are released, producing the characteristic caramel flavor." Why add another word to the mix when "caramel" should be readily understood? Jesus, you Brits and your high-falutin' words. Toffee sounds like some effete flavored coffee that leaves a bad taste in your mouth, like hazelnut. Blech.
I resemble that Brit remark.
Anything with sugar content can be caramelised
The picture you have shown is not what I would know as either a caramelised or toffee apple. I would see caramilised apples as apple cooked in their own juices with the addition of sugar so they have a soft sticky toffee like coating.
Caramel is a confection along the lines of toffee but with a softer chewable texture rather than the brittle texture of the toffee used in toffee apples.
Toffee apples linky
Toffee linky
Caramelised onions linky
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 10:28 am
by Snooz
Now, THIS is a lovely caramel apple:
Gourmet Caramel Apples - Chocolate Dunked and Candy Coated Gifts, Set of 2 White Chocolate with Cinnamon Pecans: Amazon.com: Grocery & Gourmet Food
And my apologies, I didn't realize there was a difference between toffee and caramel until I looked it up:
Toffee and caramel are similar in color and flavor, but are different in two main ways—butter content and final cooking temperature—explain Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough, creators of the “Ultimate” cookbook series, which includes The Ultimate Candy Book.
“Toffee is basically sugar and butter,” they write in an email. “Caramel is sugar and cream or milk, with butter occasionally in the mix.” To make toffee crunchy, it is cooked to 300 degrees Fahrenheit, while caramel stays smooth when cooked to about 248 degrees Fahrenheit (but hardens at around 270 degrees).
“To get that chewy, gooey texture of caramel, you have to add a liquid, like milk, cream, or condensed milk,” says Christina McCoy Cohn, co-owner of the Nashville Toffee Company in Tennessee. Because caramel is cooked to a lower temperature, it retains some of the moisture from these liquids, creating a softer texture, says Doug Simons, president of the Enstrom’s candy company.
On a microscopic level, Simons says, you’re creating two types of sugar crystals by cooking the candies differently. In toffee, you get short-grain crystals, which make the candy break easily, whereas caramel’s long-grain crystals enable it to bend.
Source
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 11:37 am
by Oscar Namechange
SnoozeAgain;1372590 wrote: They sell them at the grocery store around this time of year and I always pick some up when I go shopping.
Look at this beauty, doesn't it make your mouth water?
I called the store and suggested they start putting dates on their apples. The girl on the phone asked where they sold them, the bakery?
Anyone ever see Idiocracy? :yh_rotfl
NO
It looks like something has crawled In there and died.
Sorry Shrug
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 11:39 am
by ellieR
I remember buying caramels wrapped in paper and then unwrapping them, putting them in a sauce pan on the stove until they melted together. I bought apples and little sticks to put into the apple and then dip them into the caramel. Then you place them on waxed paper until they were cool. They are sticky but the children seem to like them a lot.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 12:12 pm
by Snooz
I'm a child at heart.
That's what these are but the nuts on the bottom make them less of a mess to eat. I could make them myself but I'm basically a very lazy person.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 12:32 pm
by along-for-the-ride
I used to love 'em.
How to Make Delicious Caramel Apples
Attached files
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 12:33 pm
by chonsigirl
Yes, make them yourself!
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 12:47 pm
by Snooz
along-for-the-ride;1372632 wrote: I used to love 'em.
How to Make Delicious Caramel Apples
Man, those look GOOD! Double dipped in caramel and chocolate with sea salt topping. That sounds really interesting.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 12:57 pm
by Oscar Namechange
along-for-the-ride;1372632 wrote: I used to love 'em.
How to Make Delicious Caramel Apples
We'll have none of that American Malarky here In England thank you very much. We have laws about the misuse of apples and I am sure these breach Article 8, section 4 of the misuse of apples law.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 12:59 pm
by Snooz
You should see what we do with carrots.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 1:09 pm
by Oscar Namechange
SnoozeAgain;1372640 wrote: You should see what we do with carrots.
English law states that carrots must only be peeled and boiled as a side vegetable with roast beef. To use a carrot In any other manner carries a fine of £60. Carrots must not be displayed In the street and when purchasing, must be wrapped In a brown paper bag.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 4:39 pm
by Bruv
SnoozeAgain;1372640 wrote: You should see what we do with carrots.
I have heard.........
My Mum used to make real Toffee apples, ordinary granulated sugar in a saucepan with a little water, boiled until a golden brown. Then dipped the apples attached to whittled sticks supplied by my Dad from kindling wood, allowed to cool on grease paper.
None of that caramel, chocolate or nut nonsense.............real toffee apples they are.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 1:17 am
by theia
I looked at the photo and read the OP. I thought the apple looked quite unappetizing but then I decided that the green bits in the middle must be sprigs of sage. To make matters worse I thought that you meant "dates" as in the fruit, Snooze. Unsurprisingly the rest of the thread made little sense to me.
I'll get my coat...
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 3:51 pm
by fuzzywuzzy
umm after seeing that first pick ....eeewwhhhhhh!!!! grosse . that's not how we make carameled apples . wha the heck is the black bit in the centre of them?
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 4:00 pm
by Oscar Namechange
fuzzywuzzy;1372737 wrote: umm after seeing that first pick ....eeewwhhhhhh!!!! grosse . that's not how we make carameled apples . wha the heck is the black bit in the centre of them? Dead cockroaches.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 4:19 pm
by fuzzywuzzy
ooowwwhhhhh...OSCAR!!!!!
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 4:39 pm
by Oscar Namechange
fuzzywuzzy;1372745 wrote: ooowwwhhhhh...OSCAR!!!!!
WHAT ???
Could be worse... I could have said live cockroaches.
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 5:13 pm
by fuzzywuzzy
yeah good point . We make our apples into desserts (except for toffee apples....my children have had about three in their life time. )
I love caramel apples, don't you?
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 5:29 pm
by ButterflyPrincess
ahhh that is gross! =/ ohh i would have bitched to no end!
I've never cut open the apple before eating it... now I will start doing that...