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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 Template:Convert. While being prepared, toffee is sometimes mixed with nuts or raisins.
Variants and applicationsEdit
A popular variant in the United States is English toffee, which is a very buttery toffee often made with almonds. It is available in both chewy and hard versions. Heath bars are a brand of confection made with an English toffee core. Although named English toffee, it bears little resemblance to the wide range of confectionery known as toffee currently available in the United Kingdom. However, one can still find this product in the UK under the name "butter crunch".<ref name="Hughes">Template:Cite book</ref>
EtymologyEdit
The origins of the word are unknown. Food writer Harold McGee claims it to be "from the Creole for a mixture of sugar and molasses", but which creole language is not specified.<ref name="McGee">Template:Cite book</ref> The Oxford English Dictionary dates the first publication of the word to 1825 and identifies it as a variation of the word taffy (1817), both of which are first recorded as English dialecticalTemplate:Huh words.<ref>"toffee, n. and a.", Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition 1989</ref><ref>"taffy1", Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition 1989</ref>
The word is similar to the Akan language word "tafere" which can be translated as "to lick (one's fingers)".
See alsoEdit
- Taffy (candy)
- Toffee hammer
- Toffo
- Tablet (confectionery)
- Tameletjie
- Almond Roca
- Babelutte
- Bonfire toffee
- Butterscotch
- Caramel
- Caramel candy
- Coconut toffee
- Dulce de leche
- Fudge
- Knäck
- Krówki
- Moffat toffee
- Peanut brittle
- Russian candy
- Sticky toffee pudding
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