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5 Ingredients + Accessories to Make the Holidays Sweeter

Posted By RCI, Tuesday, October 1, 2024
Updated: Friday, December 13, 2024

 

The holiday season seems to sneak up on us faster each year, especially for candy makers. If you’re looking to elevate your confections this year, RCI member LorAnn Oils shares five ingredients and accessories that can make your holiday candy-making even sweeter.

1. Desiccant Packs

Shipping delays can be a headache during the busy holiday rush, but desiccant packs are a simple solution. These food-grade packs absorb moisture, ensuring your confections remain fresh during storage and transit. By protecting your sweet creations from humidity, you can avoid spoilage and maintain that delicious flavor.

2. Invertase

For those rich, creamy treats we all love—think mint patties, truffles, and chocolate-covered cherries—invertase can be a game changer. This natural enzyme, derived from yeast, transforms table sugar (sucrose) into a liquid form by splitting it into glucose and fructose. This “invert sugar” not only enhances flavor but also keeps your candies fresh longer.

3. Dipping Tool Set

Creating eye-catching, sweet treats this holiday season is a breeze when you have a dipping tool set on hand. With dipping tools, like a fork or a spiral tool, you can easily dip and decorate fruits, candies, nuts and more with melted chocolate and other coatings.

4. Cream of Tartar

Rather than using liquid corn syrup, opt for cream of tartar when making hard candy. This age-old ingredient prevents sugar crystallization, ensuring your candies have that smooth, glassy finish everyone craves. Nobody wants large, crunchy sugar crystals ruining their holiday treats, and cream of tartar is your secret weapon for achieving the perfect smoother, glassy candies.

5. Soy Lecithin

Not all flavors respond the same when added into cooked sugars, particularly heavier, oil-soluble ones that can be more difficult to fully incorporate. The flavor may pool in moulds or float to the tops of candy, yielding uneven flavor throughout. To ensure an even distribution of flavors in your candies, add a small amount of soy lecithin to your boiled candy syrup. This emulsifying agent helps keep oils evenly mixed and emulsified throughout the batch. A quarter teaspoon of lecithin per cup of sugar will do the trick.

With the hustle and bustle of the holiday season, these “not-so-secret” ingredients and tools can take your confections to the next level of perfection. By incorporating these tips, you’ll create candies that are consistently longer lasting, fresher tasting, but also deliciously smooth and creamy. This holiday season, make your sweet creations the highlight of the festivities! Happy candy-making!

Crave more?Click here to subscribe and start receiving weekly tips, like this, delivered straight to your email inbox. RCI's blog is just one of the many resources we offer to help candy makers refine their craft and build upon their business and marketing practices. Follow us on Facebook for even more sweet inspiration.

 

Not a member? Click here to learn how RCI can help you build your sweet business.

Tags:  Holidays  Ingredients  Invertase  Soy Lecithin 

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Using Honey in Confections: The Benefits & Drawbacks

Posted By RCI, Tuesday, August 29, 2023
Updated: Tuesday, September 5, 2023

 

While honey has been used as a natural sweetener for centuries, it has recently been gaining popularity as a trend to watch in a number of categories, including the confectionery industry. Candy & Snack named honey as a naturally occurring sweetener flavor trend in 2023 and a real food ingredient that fulfills a sweet craving in a pure form. And according to Prepared Foods, candy that is naturally sweetened is a “key growth area” for 2023. 

If this leads you to question whether or not to add honey to your confections and chocolates, RCI member Hector Camargo Jr. with ChocolatesU, LLC helps shed some light on the query. Keep reading for an overview of the benefits of using honey in your confectionery creations, as well as some potential drawbacks to keep in mind.

Drawbacks to Using Honey

Cost
Honey is expensive. You can expect to pay between four to 10 times more per pound for honey compared to other sweeteners like glucose syrup and refined sugar.

Variability
Honey is a natural product, which means variability is the name of the game. Physical properties (color, moisture), chemical properties (pH, mineral content, impurities) and most importantly taste, can all vary with the seasons and flowers the bees choose to visit. Your perfect honey ganache can suddenly have an off, bitter note or your prized honey caramel could go grainy and gritty at random intervals leaving you guessing at the cause. Mineral content changed? Is the pH off?

Temperature Sensitivity
Honey is also temperature sensitive. Too hot and it flows everywhere; too cold and you might as well take a nap and wait for the spring thaw. Crystallization can occur during storage, especially if your storeroom is cold. And while the crystallization is easily reversible with gentle heating, it could put a kink in your production plans for that day.

Risk of Counterfeit
All this is assuming you are using real honey. That’s right, counterfeit honey is a real thing. Without a reliable, trusted source, you could be paying a premium for pricy sugar syrup.

Not Vegan Friendly
And finally remember, honey is NOT vegan ( unless you know a fair-trade bee colony that accepts purchase orders).

Benefits of Using Honey

Shelf-Life
Honey does not go bad. The oldest known sample of honey was found in an ancient Egyptian tomb dated at 3,000 years old and is supposedly still edible. Honey’s low water activity and low pH (around 4) makes it, and the items made with it, resistant to spoilage and mold.

Invert Sugar
Honey is an amazing invert sugar syrup and can be used directly as a confectionery ingredient. Like other invert sugars, honey helps control crystallization and creates a smooth mouth feel. Honey is hygroscopic, so it reduces the water content in confections while prolonging shelf life. Honey’s humectant properties also keep chocolate fillings and fudge supple and baked goods tender.

Flavor
Honey has a unique flavor, but that can be as prominent or as muted as you wish depending on the type of confection you are creating. 

All-Natural Sweetener
Honey is a customer delight. Sweeten with cane, coconut, or palm sugar and patrons will respond with a yawn. Honey, however, connotes the idea of “natural” to consumers. Even if honey is not the exclusive sweetener in your products, it will hold a certain cache with your customers and differentiate you from competitors.

Honey is costly and can be a challenging ingredient. It requires some patience and experimentation to use successfully. Whether or not you opt to start using a spoonful of honey in your confections, we hope this week’s blog post was insightful.

 

Crave more?Click here  to subscribe and start receiving weekly tips, like this, delivered straight to your email inbox. RCI's blog is just one of the many resources we offer to help candy makers refine their craft and build upon their business and marketing practices.  Follow us on Facebook for even more sweet inspiration.

Not a member? Click here to learn how RCI can help you build your sweet business .

Tags:  Honey  Ingredients  Trends 

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Soy Lecithin: The Secret to Your Best Candies Yet

Posted By RCI, Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Updated: Tuesday, September 5, 2023

 

 

The sun is shining (hopefully), temperatures are rising, and the smell of spring is in the air—and certainly in your candy kitchen—as you create your delectable springtime confections. RCI member, LorAnn Oils, shares how you can take your chocolates and confections to the next level of perfection with a favorite secret ingredient—soy lecithin!

What Is Soy Lecithin?
Lecithin is an emulsifier used in foods to stabilize other recipe ingredients that do not inherently mix well. This naturally thick extract comes from soybeans and has super-charged emulsification abilities that produce perfectly blended gravies, dressings and sauces. For candy lovers, it’s the qualities lecithin adds to confections that are the cause for excitement!

Benefits of Using Soy Lecithin in Confections
When it comes to the confectionery world, lecithin is used as a natural emulsifier, preservative, antioxidant and flavor protector in chocolates and candies. Two ingredients we know do not live in perfect harmony: oil and water. The ability to keep oils and fats from separating makes lecithin ideal. Think of lecithin as the requisite sidekick for chocolates and buttery candies. Its emulsifying properties improve mixability, which enhances the texture of buttery candies and chocolates, while protecting the flavor. Lecithin’s emulsification magic also keeps candy from developing an oily residue on the outside, giving confections a beautifully smooth finish customers will appreciate.

The addition of lecithin can also extend shelf life thanks to the presence of antioxidants which help to slow the oxidation of fats and control crystallization. This is great news for professional confectioners, because it reduces the risk of mold developing and keeps chocolates, caramels and other buttery candies fresher longer.

Ask your supplier, as some soy lecithin products may be gluten-free and vegan-friendly, making it a perfect option for customers who have special dietary needs. Keep reading for a variety of ways you can use lecithin in the following candy creations.

Chocolates
Incorporating lecithin into melted chocolate can help it flow more smoothly and consistently. Lecithin acts as a binder in chocolate, helping cocoa solids, sugar and milk better adhere to the cocoa butter. Adding just a small amount of lecithin to melted chocolate keeps the chocolate from spreading too quickly so it doesn’t seize or thicken. Lecithin is also a more cost-effective option than cocoa butter and less is needed. Usage recommendation is 0.25 – 0.50% lecithin per total batch. Too much lecithin can have the reverse effect and cause chocolate to thicken.

Caramels, Toffees and Brittles
A common problem for candy makers is the stickiness of their products, particularly in toffee and brittles where the butter and sugar tend to separate during the cooking process. Luckily, lecithin helps to minimize this issue by allowing the butterfat to mix with the moisture in the batch. Lecithin can also help prevent caramels from sticking to their wrappers or wax papers. Usage should be limited to 0.20-0.40% of the total batch to achieve the best results.

Caramel Popcorn
For caramel popcorn, adding a little lecithin and oil at the very end will help your creamy caramel evenly coat the popcorn and reduce clumping.

Cinnamon Candies
When making hard candy, cinnamon oil is a flavor that may not stay completely mixed into the candy syrup and can float to the top. To help the oil stay mixed, stir a small amount of lecithin into the boiled candy syrup. Since lecithin is an emulsifying agent, it helps keep oils evenly mixed and emulsified throughout the batch. We recommend adding 1/4 teaspoon of lecithin per cup of sugar.

When making hard candy, it can be difficult to keep certain flavors, specifically cinnamon oil, evenly mixed throughout the candy syrup. To prevent cinnamon oil from floating to the top of your hard candy mixture, stir in a small amount of lecithin into the boiled candy syrup. As an emulsifying agent, lecithin helps to keep oils evenly distributed throughout the batch. LorAnn Oils recommends adding 1/4 teaspoon of lecithin per cup of sugar.

Now you can see why soy lecithin is a favorite secret ingredient for many candy makers and chocolatiers. Not only does it provide a range of functional benefits, but it also helps to create a smoother, more consistent product with a longer shelf life. With its natural and clean label ingredients, soy lecithin is an easy and cost-effective solution to improve the texture and flavor of chocolates and other confections.

Crave more?Click here to subscribe and start receiving weekly tips, like this, delivered straight to your email inbox. RCI's blog is just one of the many resources we offer to help candy makers refine their craft and build upon their business and marketing practices. Follow us on Facebook for even more sweet inspiration.

Tags:  Brittle  Caramel  Caramel Popcorn  Chocolate  Emulsifier  Ingredients  Lecithin  Popcorn  Shelf Life  Soy Lecithin  Sticky Caramel  Toffee 

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