The color is slightly different as I cooked my caramel a little longer - I love a good, robust caramel with depth and notes of honey, butterscotch, and hugging the wooden spoon. You might want to cool it down a little bit before you taste. Or you may want to grab an apple and have at it. Whatever you work ethic may be, I'm not ashamed to say my mother and I took turns sampling this food of gods, to "make sure it wasn't burned," or to "see if it was just the right consistency." If you're like us, this caramel will maybe last you a few days. Or if you're really like us, you'll drape irresistible triple chocolate mocha brownies in this golden robe of caramel and then devour the entire three batches you made in seconds.
Comment - It is so unbelievably worth it to make your own caramel. Once you do, you will laugh at the commercial jars that we have all flocked to, you shall reign queen of your home bakery with a jar of caramel in hand as you look down upon others who still buy the stuff in jars. Okay, don't do that. I shouldn't do that either. Oops.
Anyway, while we all drool over these pictures, here's the recipe in case you have some cream, sugar, and butter on hand. And if you don't, file it for later use, or grab some keys and haul off to your nearest grocery store like I did.
Heavenly Salted Caramel Sauce Recipe:
2 cups granulated sugar
6 tablespoons of room temperature butter, cut into cubes
1 cup heavy cream, also at room temperature
1 good tablespoon of fleur de sel or sea salt flakes
edit: I used only half of what Two Peas and Their Pod used for the butter, and I still got that rich and creamy caramel that sugar plums and other magical beings dream of. I have made caramel sauce with their required amount and though the caramel was just as dreamy, but there was that tint of fat coating that made the sauce too much like straight butter.
Preparation:
You must have everything ready and good to go before you start. Making caramel is a slow process at first, but then everything goes into full speed and you do not have time to run to the fridge or dismantle a fire alarm (I did) either. So keep everything on your countertop and get ready to make the dreamiest caramel you will ever make!
To start, heat the sugar over medium high heat (I actually started off with low heat and gradually heated in about five minutes) in a heavy 3 quart pan. The sugar will clump up, but don't worry, keep faith! Your caramel is just beginning to cook. Use a whisk to break up the clumps and keep the sugar moving in the pan. Once it starts to melt, keep whisking, until it has nearly dissolved. Swirl the pan, without stirring with anything until the color turns a deep amber. I am new to making my own caramel and did not use a thermometer, but you have to keep your eye trained on this bubbling pot. Don't even change the channel or feed the dog. One minute this will be white and bubbling, the next, it'll be scorching before you know it. So watch the caramel!
If you are using a thermometer, cook the caramel until it reaches 350 F.
As soon as it hits this temperature or the color is just right, add the butter and whisk with a wooden spoon. Remove the pan from the heat and add the cream. This will bubble up wonderfully, but just keep whisking until everything is combined! Whisk in the salt and allow the caramel to cool down.
If you're patient and very meticulous, let the caramel cool for at least ten minutes in the pan. Or if you're like me, you'll burn your tongue once, then happily burn it again and again. This stuff is that good.
This will keep in the refrigerator for at least a month! And here's what makes me so blissfully happy every time I walk by and see this resting on my countertop:
Happy cooking! :)
-sneha


