Raisin Nougat
Submitted by scheppydog
Old-fashioned raisin nougat made with hard-crack sugar syrup, marshmallow cream, and cocoa butter. A vintage homemade candy with chewy raisins folded throughout.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
25 minREADY
60 minThis is a classic American kitchen-candy version of nougat, the kind grandmothers made before chocolate bars stole the show. Instead of the traditional French nougat’s whipped egg whites and honey, this old-school recipe leans on jarred marshmallow cream for the airy base. The trade-off is dramatic time savings without much loss of texture.
The hard-crack stage (285 to 290°F / 140 to 143°C) is non-negotiable. Underboil the syrup and the candy stays sticky and won’t set. Overboil and you get a brittle that shatters instead of chewing. A reliable candy thermometer earns its keep here.
Cocoa butter is the secret to the silky finish. It melts at body temperature, giving the nougat a slight cool-melting sensation against the tongue that vegetable shortening can’t replicate.
Pro Tips
- Use a heavy-bottomed saucepan, thin pans scorch the sugar before it hits temperature
- Stir constantly until the syrup reaches temperature, then immediately remove from heat
- Work fast once the marshmallow cream goes in, the mixture stiffens within a minute
- Butter your pan and a knife generously, this candy sticks to everything
- Cool completely at room temperature, do not refrigerate or the texture turns grainy
Variations
- Swap raisins for chopped dried cherries or cranberries for tart contrast
- Add a half cup of toasted chopped almonds or pistachios for crunch
- Substitute orange or vanilla extract for the lemon for a different flavor profile
Ingredients
Directions
Boil sugar, salt, sirup, and water to hard crack stage (285 - 290 degrees F).
Stir constantly.
Remove from fire.
Stir marshmallow cream in rapidly.
Add cocoa butter; mix well.
Add coloring, flavoring, and raisins.
Pour into well-buttered pan.
Spread ½ inch thick.
Cut in squares.
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