Authors: Christie Matheson
The name says it all: This sauce combines two of the world's most delicious flavors (those would be caramel and hot fudge) into one drool-worthy sauce. Try it over ice cream, if you can resist eating it straight from the jar with a spoon. This one makes a great hostess gift.
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MAKES
ABOUT
1
CUP
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½ | cup sugar |
2 | tablespoons water |
1 | tablespoon dark corn syrup |
½ | cup heavy cream |
6 | ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped |
½ | teaspoon fine sea salt |
1 | teaspoon pure vanilla extract |
Maybe there was a time when blackberry and slightly salty caramel didn't seem like the most obvious combination, but now that I am obsessed with this sauce, I can't remember it. When I make this, I have a hard time not eating it on its own with a spoon. I tell myself it's a healthy habit because blackberries are so loaded with fiber, antioxidants, and other good stuff. (BTW, they are!) This is fantastic served over ice cream and pound cake.
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MAKES ABOUT
2½
CUPS
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½ | cup sugar |
¼ | cup plus 2 tablespoons water |
1 | teaspoon pure vanilla extract |
1 | tablespoon cornstarch |
3 | cups fresh blackberries |
2 | tablespoons brandy |
½ | teaspoon fine sea salt |
A simple strawberry sauce is all you need to take a bowl of ice cream to guest-worthy status. This version is sweet but not cloying. Making it with brown sugar instead of granulated sugar and adding a hint of
fleur de sel
at the end gives it a deeper, mouthwatering flavor. Spoon some over Almond Ice Cream (
[>]
), Butterscotch Ice Cream (
[>]
), or Bittersweet Chocolate Ice Cream (
[>]
), or over a slice of Lemon Cake with Lemon-Brown Sugar Glaze (
[>]
).
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MAKES ABOUT
1½
CUPS
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2 | cups hulled and halved fresh strawberries |
¼ | cup packed light brown sugar |
1 | teaspoon fresh lemon juice |
¼ | teaspoon fleur de sel |
Replace the strawberries with blueberries or raspberries, or try a mix of summer berries.
One of the first salty-sweet combinations I ever remember having was cinnamon-sugar toast at my grandmother's house. She spread lightly salted butter on toasted bread right out of the oven, then sprinkled a mixture of cinnamon and sugar on top of that, which partially dissolved in the warm, gooey butter. Perhaps it wasn't a culinary innovation, but it was a delicious way to start the day. This sauce, which is amazing over vanilla ice cream or fruit, is also yummy drizzled on toast, waffles, or pancakes.
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MAKES ABOUT
1
CUP
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¾ | cup sugar |
2 | teaspoons ground cinnamon |
½ | teaspoon fine sea salt |
1 | cup water |
1 | tablespoon unsalted butter |
This sauce has intense flavor and is nice and gooey. Your friends will beg you for more. (To quote one friend who tried it, "I'd suck it up with a straw.") This is the ideal (read: over-the-top good) companion for Chocolate Chip Bread Pudding (
[>]
), and the recipe makes enough to spoon about 2 tablespoons around and over each serving, which is enough to lend plenty of flavor. But if you don't want fights over who gets more sauce, you may want to double the recipe. You can also try this on ice cream or with just about any apple, pear, or fig dessert.
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MAKES
ABOUT
1
CUP
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½ | cup (1 stick) unsalted butter |
½ | cup packed dark brown sugar |
¼ | teaspoon fine sea salt |
2 | tablespoons dark rum |
2 | teaspoons pure vanilla extract |
During my first year out of college I worked until nine or ten o'clock every night as an analyst at an investment bank in Boston and lived in a tiny apartment (with an even tinier kitchen) on Beacon Hill. I didn't do muchâokay, anyâcooking then, and I missed it. One warm spring night I'd had enough, and I left the office early and invited a few friends over to sneak up to the roof of my apartment building. There was no deck up there, but it had fantastic views of the Charles River. I didn't have much time, but I wanted to make something, so I put together bowls of ice cream with juicy sliced strawberries and this crunchy graham-cracker topping. It was simple, but so tastyâand it was very satisfying to have turned on my oven and filled my little kitchen with the fragrance of something baking, even though the whole thing only took about 10 minutes.
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MAKES ABOUT
1½
CUPS
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8 | whole graham crackers |
5 | tablespoons unsalted butter, melted |
2 | teaspoons sugar |
½ | teaspoon fine sea salt |
Homemade whipped cream is so easy to make, and it's orders of magnitude better than anything from a can. You can play around with the sweetness and the flavoring to mix things up (try rum or bourbon, or just about any flavor of extract, in lieu of the Scotch).
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MAKES ABOUT
1½
CUPS
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1 | cup cold heavy cream |
¼ | cup packed dark brown sugar |
1 | tablespoon Scotch |
¼ | teaspoon fine sea salt |
Combine the cream, brown sugar, Scotch, and salt in a medium-size bowl. Using an electric hand mixer, or in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, whip the mixture until soft peaks form. Serve immediately.
U.S. | METRIC |
1 tsp | 5 ml |
1 tbs | 15 ml |
2 tbs | 30 ml |
3 tbs | 45 ml |
¼ cup | 60 ml |
â
cup | 75 ml |
â
cup + 1 tbs | 90 ml |
â
cup + 2 tbs | 100 ml |
½ cup | 120 ml |
â
cup | 150 ml |
¾ cup | 180 ml |
¾ cup + 2 tbs | 200 ml |
1 cup | 240 ml |
1 cup + 2 tbs | 275 ml |
1¼ cups | 300 ml |
1 â
cups | 325 ml |
1½ cups | 350 ml |
1 â
cups | 375 ml |
1¾ cups | 400 ml |
1¾ cups + 2 tbs | 450 ml |
2 cups (1 pint) | 475 ml |
2½ cups | 600 ml |
3 cups | 720 ml |
4 cups (1 quart) | 945 ml |
(1,000 ml is 1 liter) |