Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (2024)

When it comes to homemade candies, caramels are king. Divinity can be daunting, fudge can be finicky, and nougat is a non-starter for some. But caramels? They’re the entry-level, gateway-drug of candy making, and with good cause. As candies go, they’re delicious, widely appreciated, and easy to make, once you understand what’s happening. As a vehicle for looking at what’s happening in caramel making, we’ll use a recipe that was developed just for us by our friends at The French Pastry School. Get ready, this is going to be sweet.

(For more on the French Pastry School and ThermoWorks, take a look at this video about why they use the Thermapen®.)

How to make homemade caramels

Making caramels is a two-stage thermal process. The first stage is all about flavor and the second is about texture. Let’s break those down.

Caramel flavor

The first step in making caramels is cooking the sugar to create the caramelly flavor we want—we caramelize the sugar.

Caramelization is the name given to the chemical reactions that occur when any sugar is heated to the point that its molecules begin to break apart. This destruction triggers a remarkable cascade of chemical creation. From a single kind of molecule in the form of colorless, odorless, simply sweet crystals, the cook generates hundreds of new and different compounds, some of them small fragments that are sour or bitter, or intensely aromatic, others large aggregates with no flavor but a deep brown color. The more the sugar is cooked, the less sugar and sweetness remain, and the darker and more bitter it gets.

—Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking, pg.656

To achieve caramelization—and flavor—we first have to cook the sugar to a temperature of at least 320°F (160°C). This is best accomplished by cooking the sugar in a pot over medium to medium-high heat and adding either some corn or glucose syrup to your sugar or adding up to 20% of the weight of the sugar in water. Both the glucose and the water will help prevent the sucrose (table sugar) from recrystallizing during the cook. once it is all melted, do not stir it during the caramelization process! If any crystals appear on the walls of the pot during the cooking, brush them down with a wet pastry brush.

Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (5)

How deep a caramel flavor you like will determine to what temperature you cook your sugar. I like a stronger, darker caramel flavor, but some people think my caramels taste a little too strong. There is no exact guideline here, so play around with it, measuring your temps and making notes on flavor. If this batch isn’t strongly flavored enough, increase the temp by a degree or two next time. I recommend something in the range of 330°F (166°C). This is one place where your senses can be a fairly reliable guide. Do you like how the caramel smells? Is it a dark enough color? Record the temperature using your Thermapen® and move on.

Once you get the color and aroma that you want in your caramelized sugar, it’s a good idea to either set the pan on a cool, heatproof surface or dip the bottom of the pot into some water. The caramelization process is exothermic (it gives off heat), so if you just remove your pot from heat, your temperature may continue to climb. Stealing some of the thermal energy from the pot and caramel will stop the reaction.

Chewy textured caramels: what is the firm-ball stage?

Now you have caramelized sugar, isn’t that a caramel? No. If you were to pour the caramelized sugar onto a sheet, it would harden like, well, hard candy. We want chewy, gooey caramels! For that, we need to introduce two things: liquid and interference.

Caramelized sugar is at the “caramel stage” of candy-making, meaning it has no water in it—it is 100% sugar. Chewy caramels, however, are cooked to the “firm-ball” stage.

What is the firm-ball stage? The firm-ball stage is the state wherein the boiling point of the solution reaches a temperature that indicates that the syrup contains 87–91% sugar, 245°–249°F (118–121°C). We’ll add liquid to the caramelized sugar and then cook it to the proper temperature to achieve that percentage. That will give us the firm-yet-gooey texture we want.

CANDY TEMPERATURE CHART

StageTemperatureSugar
concentration
Commonuses
Thread230°-234°F80% sugarthick syrup
Soft-ball235°-240°F85% sugarfudge
Firm-ball245°-249°F87% sugarcaramels
Hard-ball250°-265°F92% sugardivinity, nougat
Soft-crack270°-290°F95% sugarsaltwater taffy
Hard-crack300°-310°F99% sugartoffee, brittles
Caramel320°-350°F100% sugarvarying colors and flavors of caramel

So far so good. But we can further improve the texture, richness, and overall flavor of the caramels by interfering with the crystallization of the sugar.

Fats and proteins that are added to the caramels get between the sugar molecules, preventing them from clumping and crystallizing. These fats and proteins most commonly come from butter and cream. These ingredients bring both the liquid we need to get to firm-ball stage and the fats and proteins we need to interfere with the sugar crystals.

Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (6)

When you add these enrichening agents and start to cook the mixture down to the correct stage, the caramel will foam up a great deal, reaching 3 or more times its original volume. Make sure you are working in a pan that is large enough to accommodate the increased volume.

Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (7)

On baking soda in caramel recipes

If you have a recipe without baking soda for which you’ve found the perfect temperature for the perfect chew, you may want to cook these caramels 2-4°F (1-2°C) hotter. The inclusion of baking soda in caramels raises the temperature of a given final water content by up to 2°C—the soda reacts with proteins in the milk and butter to make them hold onto water more tightly. Two recipes of caramels that are identical except for the addition of baking soda will have different outcomes if cooked to the same temperature.

Thermal by-ways on the road to caramels

The French Pastry School included a few thermal tricks that help speed and ease the cooking of these caramels. One trick is to use softened butter instead of cold butter. The softened butter melts in more readily, obviously, and that reduces the need for more stirring. They also suggest warming the cream until it is hot but not boiling, 122-140°F (50-60ºC). Increasing the cream’s temperature means a shorter cook time and will also lessen the chance of the caramel clumping as you add it. So warm the cream either in the microwave or in a separate pot, checking the temp with your Thermapen, until it is hot.

Note on elevation in candy making

All candy recipes are written at sea level. As discussed above, syrup boiling temperatures equate to sugar concentrations. But at higher elevations, water boils at lower temperatures, meaning water exits the solution sooner. Andthatmeans that candy temperatures need to be lowered. For every 1,000 ft above sea level at which you are cooking, reduce the boiling temperature by2°F[1.1°C].

Buttery Salted Caramels Recipe

Created for us by The French Pastry School. Because of the school’s rigorous standards, all units are given in grams, which is a much more exacting way of measuring.

Ingredients:

  • 225 g Granulated sugar
  • 50 g Glucose or corn syrup
  • 135 g Unsalted butter (soft)
  • 225 g Heavy cream, 35% fat
  • 0.5 g Baking soda
  • 1 g Sea salt (plus more for sprinkling)
  • 10 g Vanilla paste
Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (8)

Instructions:

  • Bring all ingredients to room temperature.
  • Slightly oil a 7” X 7” shallow pan. Line the bottom with a square of parchment paper. Or layout some candy-making bars on a sheet of parchment on a surface that can handle high heat.
  • In a medium saucepan on medium heat, slowly caramelize the sugar with the glucose while stirring with a high-heat spatula.
  • Once the caramel is golden brown in color, turn off the heat and stir in the soft butter.
  • Warm the cream to 122-140°F (50-60ºC) with the baking soda, salt, and vanilla paste. Use a Thermapen® to check the temperature.
Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (9)
  • Place the caramel on low heat and slowly add the warm cream to the caramel mixture in 3 additions while stirring with a whisk.
Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (10)
  • Bring the mixture to 248°F (120ºC) while stirring continuously in all areas of the sauce pan.
  • Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (11)
  • Remove the pan from the heat and stir for 30 seconds to allow the mixture to cool.
  • Pour the caramel into the shallow pan or onto the parchment, and let set overnight in a cool place, but not in the refrigerator.
Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (12)
  • The next day, run a knife along the edges of the shallow pan.
Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (13)
  • Take the caramel out of the pan and place it onto a cutting board, sprinkle the top with coarse salt.
  • Cut the caramel into squares and wrap in cellophane or waxed paper.
  • Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (14)

With thermal knowledge on your side, you can make caramels as good as Grandma’s were. It a fun project and one that you’ll be glad you tried. Have a sweet Holiday!

If you’d like to learn more, read our post on how to make chocolate-dipped caramels.

Homemade Caramels: A Candy Temperature Guide (2024)

FAQs

What temperature should caramel be cooked at? ›

Let the caramel come to a boil without stirring. It will start off as a soft buttery yellow and eventually darken to reddish-brown caramel. Remove from the heat when the caramel reaches 245°F to 250°F.

What temperature is hard crack caramel? ›

Finally, if the candy forms hard, brittle strands that easily break, the candy is at the hard crack stage, between 300°—310°F. Butter toffee and peanut brittle are examples of candies cooked to this temperature.

Why are my homemade caramels hard? ›

If caramels are too hard, you can try placing them back in a saucepan, adding a couple tablespoons of water and stirring until the thermometer reads 242°F. Pour back into a prepared buttered pan. If caramels are too soft, that means the temperature didn't get high enough.

At what temperature does sugar caramelize? ›

Caramelization is what happens to pure sugar when it reaches 338° F. A few tablespoons of sugar put in a pan and heated will eventually melt and, at 338° F, start to turn brown. At this temperature, the sugar compounds begin to break down and new compounds form.

Should you make caramel on low or high heat? ›

“It's best to start a wet caramel over low heat until the sugar has dissolved, then increase the heat to medium for caramelization,” says Mel. “As the water evaporates, the sugar eventually caramelizes.”

Should you stir sugar when making caramel? ›

Do not stir, but instead swirl and shake the pan to distribute the caramelized sugar in and around the unmelted sugar and to promote even browning. Watch it carefully to make sure it doesn't burn. The caramel is done when it's a deep amber color and all sugar lumps have dissolved.

What happens if you stir caramel too much? ›

Stirring the sugar

If the melting sugar splashes up onto the sides of the pan, it quickly loses its moisture content and forms back into crystals. That can set off a chain reaction that can cause caramel to seize up, ruining the entire batch.

How to tell when caramel is done? ›

You can test to see whether your caramel is done by having a bowl of cold water (we recommend adding ice cubes if you have them to hand) and then using a spoon, remove some of the mixture from the pan, immerse the spoon into the cold water, moving the spoon and then remove from the water and test the caramel with your ...

Why add water to caramel? ›

According to Fine Cooking, caramel can be made using either a dry or wet method: Dry: White granulated sugar is placed over a medium-high heat and cooked until it turns liquid and becomes golden brown. Wet: Water is added to the pan, which allows the sugar to cook longer and develop better flavors.

Do you caramelize on low or high heat? ›

While you can start the cooking process at medium heat, low and slow is the name of the game when it comes to caramelizing onions. Once your onions begin to soften and take on a golden hue, you'll want to reduce the heat from medium to medium-low or even low for the remainder of the cooking process.

Why does my caramel keep burning? ›

Once the sugar has melted, continue cooking it until it turns into a rich amber color. It should be removed from the heat source when it begins to smoke and foam a little around the edges. Burning most commonly occurs when the caramel is left for too long on the heat source or when the temperature is too high.

How do you know when caramel is done? ›

You can test to see whether your caramel is done by having a bowl of cold water (we recommend adding ice cubes if you have them to hand) and then using a spoon, remove some of the mixture from the pan, immerse the spoon into the cold water, moving the spoon and then remove from the water and test the caramel with your ...

Can you overheat caramel? ›

Overheating the mixture

Follow the recipe carefully, and never melt your caramel on your stove's highest setting—it will cause the caramel to scorch and taste burnt. Once it gets a burnt or bitter flavor, it can't be saved.

How do you measure caramel temperature? ›

Using the Cold Water Method

Immerse your hand in the cold water, try to form the sugar into a ball, and bring it out of the water. By examining the shape and texture of the resulting candy blob, you can determine the approximate temperature of your sugar.

How do you know when caramel is done without a thermometer? ›

For the Cold Water Test: 1/2 to 1 teaspoon of the syrup (candy mixture) is dropped from a clean spoon into a small bowl of very cold water (not ice cold). Quickly examine and/or carefully pick up the sugar from the cold water. The firmness of the sugar indicates the highest temperature the syrup reached.

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