FabulousFusionFood's Sweets and Candies Recipes Home Page

A range of sweets: toffee, fudge, chocolates and brittles. A range of sweets: toffee, fudge, chocolates and brittles. Including to original
hard candy, Manus Christi (top right).
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Sweets and Candies Recipes Page — Sweets, alternatively called candies or lollies, are confections that features sugar as a principal ingredient. The category, also called sugar confectionery, encompasses any sweet confection, including chocolate, chewing gum, and sugar candy. Vegetables, fruit, flowers or nuts which have been glazed and coated with sugar are said to be candied.


Physically, candy is characterized by the use of a significant amount of sugar or sugar substitutes. Unlike a cake or loaf of bread that would be shared among many people, candies are usually made in smaller pieces. However, the definition of candy also depends upon how people treat the food. Unlike sweet pastries served for a dessert course at the end of a meal, candies are normally eaten casually, often with the fingers, as a snack between meals. Each culture has its own ideas of what constitutes candy rather than dessert. The same food may be a candy in one culture and a dessert in another.

The word candy entered the English language from the Old French çucre candi ("sugar candy"). The French term probably has earlier roots in the Arabic qandi, Persian qand and Sanskrit khanda, all words for sugar.

Before sugar was readily available, candy was based on honey. Honey was used in Ancient China, the Middle East, Egypt, Greece and the Roman Empire to coat fruits and flowers to preserve them or to create forms of candy. Candy is still served in this form today, though now it is more typically seen as a type of garnish.

In ancient India, pieces of sugar were produced by boiling sugarcane juice in ancient India and consumed as khanda. Persian contact with India meant the westwards spread of sugarcane, which entered the Arab world and became a key component of the Arabic agricultural system. The spread vof Islam across the mediterranean and Arabic conquests in the Mediterranean brought sugarcane to Cyprus, Sicily, Malta and the Iberian peninsula.

Before the Industrial Revolution, candy was often considered a form of medicine, either used to calm the digestive system or cool a sore throat. In the Middle Ages candy appeared on the tables of only the most wealthy at first. At that time, it began as a combination of spices and sugar used as an aid to digestion. Banquet hosts typically served these types of 'candies' at banquets for their guests. One of these candies, sometimes called chamber spice, was made with cloves, ginger, aniseed, juniper berries, almonds and pine kernels dipped in melted sugar. The Middle English word candy began to be used in the late 13th century.

However, it was not until the Elizabethan period that sugarcane-derived sugar became cheap and sufficiently cheap for a confectioner to become a culinary profession. Previous to this candy was often considered a form of medicine, either used to calm the digestive system or cool a sore throat. In the Middle Ages candy appeared on the tables of only the most wealthy at first. At that time, it began as a combination of spices and sugar used as an aid to digestion. Banquet hosts typically served these types of 'candies' at banquets for their guests. One of these candies, sometimes called chamber spice, was made with cloves, ginger, aniseed, juniper berries, almonds and pine kernels dipped in melted sugar. Elizabethan Manus Christi seems to have evolved as a medicinal confection in the Middle ages, hence the rosewater with ambergris and ground pearls. Later, in Elizabethan times Manus Christi became sugar confections coated in gold leaf.

Sugar candies include hard candies, soft candies, caramels, marshmallows, toffee, and other candies whose principal ingredient is sugar. Commercially, sugar candies are often divided into groups according to the amount of sugar they contain and their chemical structure. Hard-boiled candies made by the vacuum cooking process include stick candy, lemon drops and horehound drops. Open-fire candy, like molasses toffee and cream toffee, is cooked in open kettles and then pulled. Pan work candies include nuts and other candies like jelly beans and sugar-coated almonds, made by coating with sugar in revolving copper kettles. Gum work candy is cooked in large kettles fashioned for melting and moulded, dried and sugared like gum drops. They are soaked for a time in sugar syrup to allow crystals to form.

Chocolate is sometimes treated as a separate branch of confectionery. In this model, chocolate candies like chocolate candy bars and chocolate truffles are included. Hot chocolate or other cocoa-based drinks are excluded, as is candy made from white chocolate. When chocolate is treated as a separate branch, it also includes confections whose classification is otherwise difficult, being neither exactly candies nor exactly baked goods, like chocolate-dipped foods, tarts with chocolate shells, and chocolate-coated biscuits.


The alphabetical list of all the sweets and candies recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 234 recipes in total:

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Aano Baraawe
(Somali Caramel Fudge)
     Origin: Somalia
Candied Papaya
     Origin: Jamaica
Čokoládové lanýže
(Czech Chocolate Truffles)
     Origin: Czech
Acidulated Drops
     Origin: Britain
Candied Pointed Grouds
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Cornish Clotted Cream Chocolate Fudge
     Origin: England
Almond Cupcakes with Candied Borage
Flowers

     Origin: Britain
Candied Primrose Flowers
     Origin: Britain
Cornish Clotted Cream Fudge
     Origin: England
Almond Katli with Pistachios
     Origin: India
Candied Rose Hips
     Origin: American
Cornish Salted Fudge
     Origin: England
Almond Nougat
     Origin: Britain
Candied Sweet Potatoes
     Origin: Jamaica
Creamy Peanut Toffee
     Origin: Britain
Anardana goli II
     Origin: India
Candied Tigernuts
     Origin: Fusion
Creamy Rum Balls
     Origin: Australia
Ancient Egyptian Tigernut Sweetmeats
     Origin: Egypt
Candied Violet Flowers
     Origin: Britain
Cremes caramel au beurre sale
(Salted butter caramel candies)
     Origin: France
Angelica Candy
     Origin: Britain
Candy Cane Cheesecake
     Origin: American
Cupid Corn
     Origin: American
Apple and Lemon Fruit Leather
     Origin: British
Caramels
     Origin: Britain
Cyffug Blodau Eithin
(Gorse Flower Fudge)
     Origin: Welsh
Apple Compote
     Origin: Britain
Caraway Comfits
     Origin: Britain
Cyffug Hufen Tolch
(Clotted Cream)
     Origin: Welsh
Apple Juice Caramels
     Origin: Britain
Carnation Flower Spanish Candy Wedges
     Origin: Britain
Cyffug Mêl Sir Benfro
(Pembrokeshire Honey Fudge)
     Origin: Welsh
Apple Peda
     Origin: India
Carob-Chestnut Fudge
     Origin: Britain
Cyffug Siocled Tywyll
(Dark Chocolate Fudge)
     Origin: Welsh
Baileys Truffles
     Origin: American
Carrot Halwa
     Origin: Fusion
Cyflaith
(Treacle Toffee)
     Origin: Welsh
Barfi badam
(Almond Cream Sweetmeats)
     Origin: India
Carrot Halwa Spring Rolls
     Origin: Fusion
Cyflaith Trefaldwyn
(Montgomery Toffee)
     Origin: Welsh
Barley Sugar
     Origin: Britain
Cherry Chocolate Bites with Fuchsia
Flowers

     Origin: Britain
Damson Leather
     Origin: British
Barley Sugar Drops
     Origin: Britain
Cherry Fudge
     Origin: Britain
Dark Chocolate Meringue Kisses
     Origin: American
Basic Honey Toffee
     Origin: Britain
Cherry Nut Easter Eggs
     Origin: American
Date and Nut Laddu
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Bedam ki Burfi
(Almond Toffee)
     Origin: India
Chocolate Cinder Toffee
     Origin: British
Divinity Nut Candy
     Origin: American
Beetroot Halwa
     Origin: India
Chocolate Easter Nests
     Origin: Britain
Doce de Coco
(Cape Verdean Coconut Candy)
     Origin: Cape Verde
Beijino
(Coconut Kisses)
     Origin: Brazil
Chocolate Orange Fudge
     Origin: British
Edinburgh Rock
     Origin: Scotland
Blackberry Leather
     Origin: Britain
Chocolate Tiffin
     Origin: Scotland
Everton Toffee
     Origin: Britain
Bolitas de Pecana
(Pecan Balls)
     Origin: Peru
Chocolate Toadstool Halloween
Decorations

     Origin: America
Fairy Cakes
     Origin: Britain
Bonfire Toffee
     Origin: Britain
Chocolate Toffee
     Origin: Britain
Fferins Cnau Coco
(Coconut Sweets)
     Origin: Welsh
Boondi Laddu
     Origin: India
Chocolate Turtle Cheesecake
     Origin: American
French Toffee
     Origin: France
Brandy Truffles
     Origin: British
Chocolate-dipped Stuffed Dates
     Origin: Fusion
Gajjar Barfi
(Carrot Fudge)
     Origin: India
Bunny Corn
     Origin: American
Christmas Holly Wreath Truffles
     Origin: American
Glessie
     Origin: Scotland
Butterscotch
     Origin: Britain
Christmas Mice
     Origin: American
Gond Panjiri
(Nuts, Seeds and Tree Sap Fudge)
     Origin: India
Cake de Fruta Confitada
(Candied Fruit Cake)
     Origin: Ecuador
Christmas Pudding Truffles
     Origin: Britain
Gumdrop Fruit Cake
     Origin: Canada
Calabaza Confitada
(Candied Pumpkin)
     Origin: Mexico
Clotted Cream Fudge
     Origin: Britain
Gunpowder Plot Toffees
     Origin: Britain
Candied Angelica
     Origin: Britain
Cocadas
(Coconut Bars)
     Origin: Ecuador
Halawa Tahiniya
(Sesame Seed Paste Halva)
     Origin: Egypt
Candied Bananas
     Origin: American
Cocoa Cobnuts
     Origin: Britain
Halawa Yaqtin
(Pumpkin Halwa)
     Origin: Middle East
Candied Borage Flowers
     Origin: Britain
Cocoda
(Aruban Coconut Candy)
     Origin: Aruba
Halloween Candy Corn
     Origin: American
Candied Grapefruit Peel
     Origin: Britain
Coconut Candy
     Origin: Liberia
Candied Orange Peel
     Origin: Britain
Coffee Fudge
     Origin: Britain

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