How to make toffee (2024)

Toffee is made from sugar mixed with milk, butter or cream plus an ingredient such as lemon juice or golden syrup to stop it crystallising. The mixture is heated to between 140C and 154C (‘soft crack’ stage and ‘hard crack’ stage), then allowed to cool and set.

Larger amounts of butter or cream can make chewier, softer toffees that are like caramels, while toffee cooked to a higher temperature becomes brittle but is still chewy to eat.

The Maillard reaction, which is caused by heating the dairy and sugar together, is what gives toffee its toasty flavour.

The sugar has to be heated to 'soft crack' or 'hard crack' stage, which means you'll need to use a high-sided heavy-based pan and, ideally, a sugar thermometer. If you don’t have a thermometer, you can test your toffee by dropping small amounts into iced water, then squeezing the ball that forms.

A ball of toffee that feels soft and squeezable will be at 'soft crack' stage. A firmer ball that's harder to shape will be at 'hard crack' stage. Some recipes cook the sugar at a lower temperature in order to make softer toffee.

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There are a few key steps to follow:

  1. Melt the sugar and butter together gently and evenly to avoid the butter separating out. You can stir the mixture while the sugar is dissolving – but once it has started to boil, stop stirring. Instead, tilt and swirl the pan.
  2. Make sure your tin is prepared and sitting on a board or damp cloth before you start. Once you pour the hot toffee into the tin, it will heat up quickly.
  3. Prepare all your ingredients in advance and have all your equipment to hand.
  4. Take care at all times. Molten sugar will cause serious burns if it splashes on you.

Butter toffee recipe

Makes about 500g

  • 300g golden caster sugar
  • 300ml double cream
  • 125g butter, cubed
  1. Line the base and sides of a 20x30cm baking tin with baking parchment and put it on a board.
  2. Tip the sugar, cream and butter into a large, heavy-based, deep saucepan and heat gently, stirring occasionally until all the ingredients have come together and the sugar and butter have melted.
  3. Place a sugar thermometer or digital cooking thermometer in the pan, then turn up the heat and boil everything together vigorously, without stirring, until the temperature reaches 140C. Remove from the heat and leave for a moment to let any bubbles settle, then carefully pour the molten toffee into the prepared tin, swirling the tin until the toffee fully covers the base. Leave for at least 2 hrs to set, or overnight if possible.
  4. Use the baking parchment to lift the set toffee out of the tin, then cut the block into squares. If the toffee is sticking to the knife, lightly oil the blade. Wrap the toffee pieces in waxed paper. Store in a jar for up to two weeks.

Brittle toffee recipe

Makes about 500g

  • Oil, for the tin
  • 450g golden caster sugar
  • ¼ tsp cream of tartar
  • 50g salted butter
  1. Line the base and sides of an A4-sized tin with baking parchment, then oil it really well.
  2. Put the sugar, cream of tartar, butter and 150ml hot water in a heavy-bottomed pan and heat gently until the sugar is dissolved, stirring occasionally.
  3. Once the sugar has dissolved, turn up the heat and put the sugar thermometer in the pan.
  4. Bring to the boil, then continue boiling until you reach 'soft crack' stage on your thermometer (140C). This may take up to 30 minutes, so be patient. Don't leave the pan unattended as the temperature can change quickly. As soon as the mixture reaches 'soft crack' stage, tip it into your tin and leave to cool.
  5. Once cool, remove the toffee from the tin and break up with a toffee hammer or rolling pin. Store in an airtight tin for up to a month.

Storing toffee

Wrap toffees in wax paper or cellophane to stop them sticking to each other. Make sure they're stored in an airtight container in very dry conditions. Moisture will turn the surface of toffee very sticky.

Toffee flavours

How to make toffee (1)

‘English toffee’ is a type of hard, buttery toffee popular in America that usually has a layer of chocolate and nuts on top. Cinder or honeycomb toffee (known as hokey pokey in New Zealand) has baking soda and vinegar added so the toffee froths and makes bubbles as it sets, giving a completely different texture.

Caramel, which is melted, caramelised sugar with nothing added, is sometimes referred to as toffee – for instance, when used in toffee apples or in our bonfire toffee recipe. When mixed with nuts, it's often known as brittle.

Although the flavour is popular in all sorts of dishes, lots of 'toffee' recipes don’t actually contain toffee; sticky toffee pudding, for example, has a toffee-flavoured sauce but doesn't require you to make toffee first. Shards of toffee work well in cakes, biscuits and other bakes and can be stirred into ice cream. Toffee can also have flavours added, from salt (salted caramel) to alcohols (such as Baileys) and spices, nuts and dried fruit.

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Five toffee recipes to try next:

Chewy toffees
Bonfire toffee
Toffee apples
Sticky toffee pudding
Toffee apple cake

How to make toffee (2024)

FAQs

What is toffee made of? ›

Toffee is an English confection made by caramelizing sugar or molasses (creating inverted sugar) along with butter, and occasionally flour. The mixture is heated until its temperature reaches the hard crack stage of 149 to 154 °C (300 to 310 °F). While being prepared, toffee is sometimes mixed with nuts or raisins.

What is the difference between caramel and toffee? ›

The difference between caramel and toffee is greater, as caramel has a more liquid consistency and is usually pure sugar (it doesn't contain butter or flour). Still, the taste of caramel, fudge, and toffee is relatively similar, as they are all made from mostly sugar (as well as butter in the case of fudge and toffee).

What is the difference between American toffee and English toffee? ›

What's the difference between English and American toffee? The main difference is that traditional English toffee is created without nuts, while American toffee is created with a variety of nuts. The most common nuts being the almond.

Why is my toffee chewy and not crunchy? ›

Don't hurry this gradual transformation; syrup that doesn't reach 300°F, or close to it, will make candy with timid flavor and chewy (not crunchy) texture. Think you can save time by bringing the syrup to a full rolling, popping boil in order for it to darken more quickly? Think again.

What do Americans call toffee? ›

Taffy is considered an earlier rendition of the word toffee, but the word taffy continued to be used in America while toffee was used in Great Britain.

Is taffy just toffee? ›

Is toffee the same as taffy? Taffy is in no way, shape, or form toffee. Taffy describes chewy fruit candies, whereas toffee is closer to caramel.

Which is the famous toffee in the world? ›

World Famous English Toffee – Cora Lee Candies.

Are toffee bits and butterscotch the same? ›

Toffee vs Butterscotch

While butterscotch is cooked to a soft-crack stage, toffee is produced by allowing that same butter and brown sugar mixture to reach the hard-crack stage. Butterscotch tends to be chewy and pliable; toffee is brittle and more breakable.

What is the American word for toffee? ›

synonyms: brittle, toffy. types: peanut brittle. brittle containing peanuts. type of: candy, confect. a rich sweet made of flavored sugar and often combined with fruit or nuts.

Why put baking soda in toffee? ›

Brittles and toffees accumulate small amounts of acid from the browning reactions that occur during cooking. This is one reason why the baking soda is added at the end of cooking. The soda reacts with the acid to make bubbles, and the syrup foams.

What can go wrong when making toffee? ›

Stirring too quickly or too often can cause the toffee to separate. Moderate the heat as needed – turn it down if the toffee is boiling or cooking too fast so it doesn't burn.

Do you stir toffee constantly? ›

Once boiling, cook, stirring only 2 to 3 times, until it turns a dark amber color and the temperature reaches 285 degrees F (137 degrees C) on a candy thermometer, 20 to 30 minutes. Immediately pour toffee into the prepared baking dish.

Is toffee just crunchy caramel? ›

Toffee vs Caramel

The difference between toffee and caramel is that caramel is made with white granulated sugar and cooked to 340 degrees Fahrenheit, whereas toffee is made with butter and brown sugar and cooked to 295 - 309 degrees Fahrenheit.

What the heck is toffee? ›

Toffee is just sugar, butter, water, and vanilla cooked to a hard crack stage and caramel has added heavy whipping cream and cooked to a firm ball stage. While I like toffee, I think that if it's not done right it takes on a burned sugar flavor and I really prefer a richer flavor of caramel!

Is toffee the same as honeycomb? ›

Honeycomb is a sweet confectionery also known as cinder toffee. Discover how to make honeycomb at home, how to store it and what to make with it.

What is toffee supposed to taste like? ›

There is something wonderful about the absolutely shattering crunch of toffee. The high-volume bite alone is enough to keep you snacking on a bowl of this confection, but when it's combined with buttery, caramelly flavor with just a tinge of salt and bitterness it becomes positively irresistible.

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