This episode currently has no reviews.
Submit ReviewWhat else can we put in our mini-fridge? Maybe 15 million Girl Scout Cookies.
wave-west-wildfires-683ea38d-a691-4306-87c0-bf57292b3e63.html">Long-lasting extreme heat event strains the West’s grid, could spark wildfires
https://twitter.com/princessharold/status/1404346578266173440?s=21
Microsoft Makes the Xbox Series X Mini Fridge Meme a Reality
Google Hangouts Is Now Google Chat, and Good Luck Figuring Out Why
Amazon Prime Day 2021: the latest news, deals, and coverage
Here’s Everything Nintendo Announced at E3, Including a New Zelda Trailer
Luminar is using lidar to help build the ‘uncrashable car’
scouts-cookie-sales-membership.html">Girl Scouts Stuck With Over 15 Million Boxes of Unsold Cookies
Chocolate is probably the most well-known flavor of fudge, simply because chocolate itself is so universally beloved. Besides chocolate and its variations (chocolate peanut-butter, chocolate mint, chocolate cherry, chocolate walnut, German chocolate), you can pig out on pumpkin pie, maple walnut, vanilla, coconut, blueberry, cherry, raspberry cheesecake, cookie dough, gingerbread, amaretto, Kahlua…need we go on? Suffice it to say that unless you had your sweet tooth extracted by the dentist at a very young age, you’re going to find a flavor of fudge that appeals to you.
Perhaps because it’s closer kin to candy than to other treats like cookies or cakes, fudge has a reputation for being finicky and difficult to make. That may well stem from its late-19th-century history, when it often would have been made on a wood-fired stove and without the benefit of candy thermometers. Nowadays, we have precise temperature control, accurate measurement, and ingredients — corn syrup, marshmallow fluff and condensed milk — that make whipping up a batch of fudge a veritable snap.
This episode currently has no reviews.
Submit ReviewThis episode could use a review! Have anything to say about it? Share your thoughts using the button below.
Submit Review