Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (2024)

By Karrie on | Updated | 15 Comments

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (1)

Seriously, this brown sugar fudge is to ah-freaking-amazing. Super rich and smooth. Heaven in a little one-inch cube. I have been making this fudge recipe for a few years now and it’s my favorite holiday treat.

Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe

Ingredients:
1‑1/2 cups white granulated sugar
1‑1/2 cups whipping cream
3/4 cup packed brown sugar
1 1/4 tablespoon light corn syrup
1/4 cup real unsalted butter + a few tablespoons for buttering pans
1/2 cup white chocolate chips
1/2 cup chopped walnuts (optional)

Method:
Butter an 8×8 square pan. Then butter the sides of a heavy large saucepan.Add cream, both sugars and corn syrup in the buttered saucepan. Heat over medium, stirring contsantly until sugar dissolves and comes to a boil. Add candy thermometer. Cook over medium heat until mixture reaches soft ball stage (238°F).

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (2)

While that is cooking slice your butter into thin slices. Once the mixture reaches the soft ball stage take pot off of heat. Add sliced of butter on top of hot mixture and do not stir.

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (3)

Let sit for 10 minutes. Then add in white chocolate chips and nuts (optional). Mix together until white chocolate is melted and mixture is nice, thick and smooth. Pour mixture into 8 inch pan. Cool in refrigerator until firm. Slice into cubes and enjoy. Store in refrigerator.

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (4)

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (5)

This fudge make a great treat to make for neighbors during the holidays. But be prepared, they are going to want your recipe!

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (6)

Recipe Card

3.67 from 3 votes

love it? rate it!

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge

Published By Karrie

Course Dessert

Cuisine American

Keyword brown sugar fudge, fudge

Servings 10

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge isSuper rich and smooth!

Ingredients

  • 1‑1/2 cups white granulated sugar
  • 1‑1/2 cups whipping cream
  • 3/4 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1 1/4 tbsp light corn syrup
  • 1/4 cup real unsalted butter + a few tablespoon
  • 1/2 cup white chocolate chips
  • 1/2 cup chopped walnuts optional

Instructions

  • Butter an 8x8 square pan. Then butter the sides of a heavy large saucepan. Add cream, both sugars and corn syrup in the buttered saucepan. Heat over medium, stirring contsantly until sugar dissolves and comes to a boil. Add candy thermometer. Cook over medium heat until mixture reaches soft ball stage (238°F).

  • While that is cooking slice your butter into thin slices. Once the mixture reaches the soft ball stage take pot off of heat. Add sliced of butter on top of hot mixture and do not stir.

  • Let sit for 10 minutes. Then add in white chocolate chips and nuts (optional). Mix together until white chocolate is melted and mixture is nice, thick and smooth. Pour mixture into 8 inch pan. Cool in refrigerator until firm. Slice into cubes and enjoy. Store in refrigerator.

Nutrition

Serving: 1Piece | Calories: 277kcal | Carbohydrates: 34g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 15g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 30mg | Sodium: 19mg | Potassium: 82mg | Sugar: 33g | Vitamin A: 315IU | Calcium: 46mg | Iron: 0.3mg

Loved this recipe?

Make sure to follow on Instagram @happymoneysaver and on Pinterest @happymoneysaver for more money savin' recipes!

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (7)

About Karrie

Food is my love language. But so is saving money. So I like to combine the two a lot and make thrifty make ahead and freeze meals to save time. Because life is busy, and freezer meals can come to the rescue for all of us. And yes, they actually CAN taste good. Read more...

Reader Interactions

Psssst…

Make sure to follow along with @HappyMoneySaver onInstagram, connect with me onFacebookand pin along with me onPinterest!.

    Leave A Reply!

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Comments & Reviews

  1. Shirley says

    I made this for Christmas. I used regular salted butter and it was just amazing!

    Reply

    • Happy-Money-Saver says

      So glad you liked it!

      Reply

  2. Joanne says

    Fudge was hard before the 10 minutes was up…

    Reply

  3. Brenda T says

    Your recipe sounds fantastic and I can’t wait to try it for my next craft show. Will it still work with using salted butter instead of unsalted? Thank you.

    Reply

    • Karrie says

      no gotta use unsalted…

      Reply

  4. Jessica. Lou Lou Girls says

    THis looks so creamy and delicious!

    Reply

  5. Anastasia says

    Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (8)
    I made this for my dad this past holiday season and he loved it! He’s a total fudge snob and he thought it was great! Everyone that tried it thought it was amazing and couldn’t stop eating it. I think next time of make it I will put chopped toasted walnuts on the bottom just to try that out.

    Reply

    • Happy.MoneySaver says

      Toasted walnuts are a great addition!

      Reply

  6. Gina says

    I just want to confirm that the corn syrup amount is correct. Seems like an odd amount… =)

    Reply

  7. A candy cooker says

    Looks like a great recipe. In the olden days (1970s and farther back) we called it Penuche (pen-OOH-chee) and sometimes added walnuts. Some way-out-there types added crushed candy cane or ground up black licorice to flavor it.

    Reply

  8. Tara says

    Sounds wonderful and like it would be well received by my son, who just left for deployment in the Middle East! Two questions:
    1. Do you think this will travel well if mailed? Any tips on shipping?
    2. I don’t have a candy thermometer, so does “soft ball stage” literally mean that the mixture will be soft and ball-like? (Yes, I realize that might be a kind of silly question, but I have to ask! Lol)

    Thanks!

    Reply

    • Karrie says

      I think it would be okay if you had it in a sealed air-tight container. As for the candy temperature…candy making can be tricky without that thermometer. You should be able to find one at Walmart for around $2. If not then here is how you tell if it’s at the soft ball stage:

      This stage can be determined by dropping a spoonful of hot syrup into a bowl of very cold water. In the water, use your fingers to gather the cooled syrup into a ball. If it has reached soft-ball stage, the syrup easily forms a ball while in the cold water, but flattens once removed from the water.

      Usually this takes at least 5-10 minutes on medium at least to get to this stage once boiling. Good luck!

      Reply

  9. Heather says

    Looks good! Is it only me, but when I try and print off the recipe all the steps are missing after you get to the soft ball stage?

    Reply

    • Karrie says

      Whoops! Sorry, that was my fault. I didn’t finish typing it in there…just fixed it. Thanks for saying something!

      Reply

  10. evie says

    Sounds DELISH!!! I am so gonna make this!

    Reply

Ah-freaking-mazing Brown Sugar Fudge Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to perfect fudge? ›

The key to creamy, luscious fudge is controlling crystal formation. If the sucrose (table sugar) crystals are small, the fudge will feel creamy and smooth on your tongue. But if the crystals are large, the fudge develops a crumbly, dry, or even coarse texture.

What is the secret to non-grainy fudge? ›

A lot of big crystals in fudge makes it grainy. By letting the fudge cool without stirring, you avoid creating seed crystals.

Why is my 3 ingredient fudge not setting? ›

The main reason is that your Fudge has not reached the optimum temperature. If your mixture only reaches 110 or 112 degrees Celsius it will always be soft. That's why we recommend investing in a sugar thermometer. Another reason your Fudge is not setting is that the ratio of liquid to sugar is too high.

What does cream of tartar do in fudge? ›

Cream of tartar is used in caramel sauces and fudge to help prevent the sugar from crystallizing while cooking. It also prevents cooling sugars from forming brittle crystals, this is why it's the secret ingredient in snickerdoodles!

How do you make fudge creamy and not grainy? ›

Grainy Fudge

To avoid this issue, swirl the pan instead of stirring it with a spoon. You can use a wet pastry brush to wipe down any sugar that sticks to the sides of the pot.

Why shouldn't you stir fudge after it reaches the correct temperature? ›

During cooking, sugar crystals can stick to the sides of the pan. If you stir the mixture, these crystals could fall in and crystallize a part of the sugar again.

Why is my brown sugar fudge grainy? ›

Once the sugar has dissolved and the mixture has come to a boil, do not stir it. If you do, the sugar can crystallize, giving your fudge a gritty texture. As you beat the fudge, pay attention to color and texture. Once the fudge loses its sheen and thickens, put down your spoon.

Should you stir fudge while it's cooking? ›

Don't stir!

Once the fudge reaches soft-ball stage on the candy thermometer, remove from the heat and let the temperature drop to 110°F. Keep that spoon or spatula out of the pot until this happens. If you stir too early in the process, you'll make the sugar crystals too big and end up with grainy fudge.

How long do you boil fudge to get to soft-ball stage? ›

How long does it take to make fudge:
  1. about 18 min to reach boiling.
  2. about 40 minutes to reach soft ball stage.
  3. 60 minutes to cool.
  4. 28 minutes to beat in a KitchenAid (your time for this may vary)
  5. 4 hours to set.

Can I reboil fudge that didn't set? ›

How can you fix soft fudge? Put it in a microwave safe bowl that is large enough that it won't boil over. Reheat it to the boiling point and cook for about 3 more minutes. Then you can beat some powdered sugar into it if this doesn't make it set.

Can I fix fudge that didn't set? ›

OPTION 3) Sieve together some powdered sugar and cocoa powder, and gradually work this into your unset fudge until it reaches the consistency of dough, then roll out and cut into squares, or shape into balls and then roll in powdered sugar (roll the balls in icing sugar, not yourself).

How do you make homemade fudge firmer? ›

​Harden the fudge:​ Place your container or tins in the fridge for 2 hours, which is the time it takes for the fudge to set. Once it's hardened, cut the fudge into 12 pieces or remove it from the muffin tins. Store in the fridge or the freezer (if you don't devour it right away).

What is a good thickener for fudge? ›

How can you fix soft fudge? Put it in a microwave safe bowl that is large enough that it won't boil over. Reheat it to the boiling point and cook for about 3 more minutes. Then you can beat some powdered sugar into it if this doesn't make it set.

What makes fudge firmer? ›

Too cooked

This fudge was cooked to a temperature of 118 °C (244 °F). At this temperature, the sugar is too concentrated and there is not enough water left to form syrup around sugar crystals. The result is hard and brittle fudge.

Why does my fudge crumble when I cut it? ›

The ingredients for fudge are combined and cooked to 234 degrees, cooled to 110 degrees without stirring, then beaten until creamy. Candy that isn't cooked long enough will end up too soft; overcooking makes fudge crumbly or hard.

Can you beat fudge in a stand mixer? ›

Pour the mixture over the chocolate, being sure to shake, not scrape, the mixture from the pot. Set aside to cool for 10 to 12 minutes. (This prevents a grainy consistency.) Using the clean wooden spoon or a standing mixer on low speed, stir or beat the mixture until the chocolate is completely melted and incorporated.

What is the ball method fudge? ›

According to most recipes, the ingredients of fudge are cooked to what is termed in kitchen parlance the soft ball stage, that point between 234 and 240 °F (112 and 115 °C) at which a small ball of the candy dropped in ice water neither disintegrates nor flattens when picked up with the fingers.

How do you cut fudge so it doesn't crumble? ›

Put both knives into a large measuring cup, add boiling water onto the knives, and before cutting the chocolate or the dessert into pieces, wipe the knife with a towel. The warm knife will easily cut through without cracking.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanial Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 5833

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanial Hackett

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

Phone: +9752624861224

Job: Forward Technology Assistant

Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.