But the thing is if you give me the opportunity to appear in fancy dress, I plan and dream for weeks. It could be one of my foofy tafetta gowns for a swanky doo or it could be an opportunity to don my red sequinned devil horns, striped leggings or even kitten ears, the chance to wear something a bit out of the ordinary just gets me giddy.
This Hallowe'en saw me in shades of black and gold, with glittery deelybopper antennae and glittery wings.
Yup. I was a bumble bee. Complete with tiara...which made me a Queen B.
I've always wanted wings...and glittery wings just made it better.
To keep with my sweet dress-up theme I decided to make some honeycomb candy to take into the office. I'm not much of a candy maker--far too finicky for me--but Nigella's hokey pokey recipe seemed so easy not even I could mess it up--simple caramelise sugars, whisk in bicarb and pour onto a greased pan and let cool.
But mess it up I did...the first time. In hopes of a larger surface area of candy, I spread out the foamy goo. The foamy goo deflated to a sheet of sticky sweetness...which later turned into crunchy sweetness.
My second attempt was far more successful. This time I substituted honey for half of the needed golden syrup and increased the amount of baking soda and poured it out and let it sit on its own. Honey definitely improved the flavour, making the candy taste a bit earthier and smokier than purely sweet.
Hokey Pokey
Adapted from Nigella Lawson's recipe in Nigella Express
yield approx. 125g
100g (0.5c) sugar
2Tbsp golden syrup
2Tbps runny honey
1dspn (2tsp) bicarbonate of soda
Grease a tin foil-lined cookie sheet
Mix the sugar, syrup and honey together as best as you can. Put on the hob, over a medium flame and let it sit there--untouched, unswirled and unstirred--until the sugars are melted and are a medium-light amber colour. This happens rather quickly (2-4 minutes, depending upon the strength of your flame), so don't take your eyes off the pot.
Immediately take off the heat and quickly whisk in the bicarb. It will foam and become moussey. Pour onto the prepared pan. Do not spread it out as the bubbles will burst and you'll lose the lovely honeycomb effect. Let cool thoroughly before breaking into pieces.
Store in an air-tight container.
cheers!jasmineWhat I'm reading: I'm a quill for hire!
Honeycomb or hokey pokey is something I have always been meaning to make, yet I never get around to it... I must try. Your version looks delicious!
ReplyDeleteI have actually never heard of this before. It looks very good though. I think your addition of honey sounds like a wise move.
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