Page:The candy cook book (IA cu31924090146717).pdf/164
wise to color the syrup before it boils, as stirring color paste into the mixture after it has cooked is liable to make it sugary.
Candy left over from spun sugar or flowers can be warmed by setting the saucepan on an asbestos mat on the range, and then can be poured out in a thin sheet on a warm tin, and broken in pieces when brittle.
- 2 cups sugar
- 1 cup boiling water
- ⅛ teaspoon cream of tartar
Put ingredients in a smooth saucepan, stir, place on range, and heat to boiling point. Wash off sugar which adheres to sides of saucepan with a butter brush dipped in cold water, and boil without stirring to 310° F., or until syrup begins to discolor. Remove saucepan at once from fire, and place in a larger pan of cold water to instantly stop the boiling. Remove from cold water, and place in a saucepan of hot water. Take nuts separately on long pins or steel skewers, or with a small pair of tweezers, dip in syrup to cover, remove from syrup, and place on a tin sheet.
For Glacé Fruits, white grapes, strawberries, sections of oranges or mandarins, kumquats,