Rather than using liquid corn syrup, try Cream of Tartar in your hard candy. This is an especially popular ingredient in old-fashioned candy recipes. Cream of Tartar will help prevent sugar crystallization in candy just like corn syrup. No one wants to have large crunchy sugar crystals in their holiday hard candy! Cream of Tartar is the perfect solution to aid in smoother, glassy candies. When it comes to baked goods, Cream of Tartar will be your best friend when it comes to building your best gingerbread houses. Using Cream Tartar in your gingerbread icing helps create the edible glue that holds your strong and sturdy gingerbread house together. That way you don’t have to worry about it falling apart. Plus, use the icing to create cutesy icicles on your house.
Soy Lecithin in Baked Goods, Buttery Candies, Chocolates, and Hard Candy
Lecithin in Baked Goods
Not only does lecithin extend shelf-life, just a touch homogenizes the ingredients in your favorite dough recipes, yielding smoother, more elastic dough, resulting in a lighter, chewier finished product. If you enjoy homemade bread or ooey-gooey cinnamon rolls at brunch, lecithin is a must! The usage for baked goods is just 1 teaspoon per cup of flour. Because lecithin loves fat, you will mix the lecithin into your fat or oil prior to adding to the batch. There is no need to adjust any of your other ingredients, cooking time or temperature. Since such a small amount is used, it won’t alter the flavor of your treats.
Using Lecithin in Buttery Candies or Chocolates
Just like lecithin mixes well in baked goods, it also improves mixability in chocolates which can help improve the texture of buttery candies and chocolates, while protecting the flavor. Lecithin will also keep buttery candies fresher longer because it slows down the oxidation process of the fat.
Using Lecithin in Hard Candy
Not all flavors respond the same when added to cooked sugars. There are many oil-soluble flavors that are a bit heavier and more difficult to fully incorporate. The flavor may pool in the molds or float to the tops of the candy, yielding an uneven flavor throughout. To help these heavier flavors stay mixed, stir a small amount of lecithin into the boiled candy syrup. Since lecithin is an emulsifying agent, it helps keep oils evenly mixed and emulsified throughout the batch.
We recommend adding 1/4 teaspoon of lecithin per cup of sugar.