Christmas time means fudge, lots and lots of fudge. I make many pounds of fudge every year for friends, family, and work. I was given a very good base recipe many years ago and it has never failed me. Its time consuming but it turns out perfect every time. The cooking is exactly the same for each flavor of fudge the variations are the flavor of chips you use and any nuts or mix-in's that you might want (booze, bacon, dried fruits).
Here is the base recipe
2 Cans Sweetened Condensed Milk (room temp) 2 Cups Light Brown Sugar 2 Tablespoons Light Corn Syrup 1 Bag (11.5 oz) White Chocolate Chips
Pinch Of Salt
For the Maple Bacon Fudge you will also need:
6-8 strips of Maple Cured Bacon
3 Tablespoons Pure Maple Syrup (Not pancake syrup)
Here's how you make the fudge:
Prepare your dish to cool and shape the fudge. Don’t use anything bigger than 7x12 or your fudge will be really thin unless you double the batch and that will increase the time it takes for the initial boil. Whatever you use, line it with plastic wrap.. Not wax paper. I tried wax paper several times and it stuck every single time.
Cook the bacon until just crisp. I always cook my bacon on a rack in a sheet pan lined with foil for easy clean up. Using the oven I feel cooks more evenly and is way less mess than frying in a skillet. Cook at 400 degrees until it gets to where you like it. For the fudge you want it almost crispy. It will continue to cook when you pull it from the oven so "almost crispy" will turn out just right. Drain and pat with paper towel too get as much grease off as you can. Set aside to cool. Once its cook chop into small pieces. Like bacon bits only a little bigger.
Next, in a heavy, medium size sauce pan add the butter, condensed milk, corn syrup, brown sugar, salt and 2 tablespoons of the maple syrup.
Turn the heat on to medium high.
Whisk the mixture constantly, scraping the sides and corners, until it comes to a full boil. Takes about 10 minutes depending on your pot. Once it comes to a boil turn the heat down to low and continue whisking over low heat for 10 minutes. Set a timer and don’t guess. Its important.
After 10 minutes take it off the heat and let it sit for 2 minutes. Again, set a timer.
Once the 2 minutes are up pour in the chips and mix with a big spoon until the chocolate is all melted and the mixture is smooth.
Mix in the remaining maple syrup.
Mix in the chopped bacon a handful at a time. Save about 2 tablespoons to sprinkle on top.
Pour the fudge into your prepared dish and scrape out as much as you can. Sprinkle the remaining bacon on top and refrigerate for at least 2 hours before cutting.
Use the longest knife you have and cut 1-1.5 inch wide strips along the entire length. Cutting across the shortest length first is easiest. Then take about 3-4 of those strips and cut the pieces as big as you want. This is very rich so I'd suggest smaller portions. You can get really fancy and trim off the rounded rough edges so that all your pieces are square but that kind of takes away from the homemade look.
Use the longest knife you have and cut 1-1.5 inch wide strips along the entire length. Cutting across the shortest length first is easiest. Then take about 3-4 of those strips and cut the pieces as big as you want. This is very rich so I'd suggest smaller portions. You can get really fancy and trim off the rounded rough edges so that all your pieces are square but that kind of takes away from the homemade look.
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