My mom graduated from the University of Dayton (Ohio) in 1967 with a B.S. in Home Economics. She then moved to White Plains, NY where she worked in the test kitchens of General Foods. She developed and tested many recipes including popular brand name general recipes such as Jello. My brother used to tell his friends that my mother invented Jello.
This chocolate fudge recipe comes from her typed notes from working at General Foods. It was originally developed for use in a leaflet (for Baker's Chocolate) but have never found it in print/web anywhere. It was made using Baker's Chocolate (which I have altered for better quality) and use butter (not margarine) as the recipe first indicated. Relatives and friends received boxes of these for the holidays. Stories of hoarding and hiding were common. My mother kept a tight lid on them as well and they were painstakingly doled out to my normally sugar deprived siblings and myself. I'm pretty sure my Uncle Bill, grandfather, and neighbor Dennis counted the pieces and kept close track of how many were in the box. Dense and chocolatey without any sweetened condensed milk they were my first introduction to candy making and the use of a candy thermometer. The whole process would go smoothly and at a relaxed pace until it was time to pour the fudge from the pot into the prepared pan. My mother would furiously scrape the fudge out and smooth it before it started to set up. We waited impatiently to scrape the leftover fudge out of the pot and into our mouths. We also saved all the little crumbles from the very small pieces my mother cut to spoon over our ice cream. This is the small batch recipe but it can be doubled. —testkitchenette
I've had my hand in more than a few bouts of caramel-making, but I'd never tackled a fudge recipe before so I was pleased to find it to be not difficult at all! Testkitchenette's directions were clear, concise, and accurate; and the fudge I turned out tasted just like the old fashioned morsels found only in the best candy shops. Next time, I think I'd play with the salt level (I think it'd be wonderful sprinkled with sea salt), and maybe try adding some of my homemade caramel. This fudge will certainly be gracing the snack table when I host Thanksgiving in a couple of weeks. —Kate Williams
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