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Monday, October 27, 2025

Mom's Caramel Dip: A Recipe That Skipped a Generation

This recipe is from my mother (c. 1960), my kids' grandmother. One of my daughters makes this for us a few times every fall. She's the caramel dip expert in our house. From grandmother to granddaughter, the best simple, from scratch, caramel dip or sauce recipe, with a few of my daughter's comments.


Caramel Dip or Sauce (suitable for apple wedges, sliced fresh pears, sliced bananas, cooked sweet potato slices, simple baked custard or rice pudding, pumpkin pie, ice cream, or pretzels)

Yields about 1 1/4 cup

"What I really like about this recipe is it takes so few ingredients. It’s exciting to make something fancy without a lot of stuff." 

Just 5 ingredients, and one of them is water.

1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1 cup hot water
1 tablespoon butter
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract


1. In a large, heavy-bottomed skillet, heat the sugar over low to medium flame, stirring constantly moving the sugar all around the skillet. (My daughter prefers to keep the heat on Medium, but stirs vigorously this entire step.)


"When it starts to caramelize I  stir constantly. If I’ve been stirring for a while and it’s not caramelizing, I either turn the heat up, take a break from stirring maybe 30 seconds, or both."


In the meantime, heat your 1 cup of water. (My daughter heats the water in the microwave.)


Larger lumps of sugar eventually melt down. Keep stirring.


Continue stirring until all sugar is melted and caramel is light golden-brown. 


2. Remove from heat. Very gradually (about a teaspoon at a time) stir in the hot water, and stir rapidly as the bubbling subsides.


"If you add too much water at once, it seizes. Stir hard and vigorously. If it becomes very stiff, you might be adding the water too quickly." 


Stir and stir and stir after each addition of water.

When bubbling action after the addition of water has pretty much subsided (fewer bubbles), water can be added in larger amounts, about 1/4 cup at a time. Continue stirring, scraping up hardened bits of the caramelized sugar on the bottom of the skillet. Adding the water and stirring during step 2 is the most time-consuming part of the recipe.

3. When all water is added, return to heat, bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to low and simmer until it thickens slightly and reaches 228 degrees F.


4. Remove from heat and add butter, salt and vanilla extract. Stir well, then allow the caramel to cool. This syrup thickens substantially as it cools, and even more once refrigerated.

The whole process from start to final additions of butter, salt, and vanilla takes a little less than one hour.

Once cooled, pour into a jar and refrigerate. 

This caramel sauce/dip has kept in the fridge for 2 to 3 weeks (then it's gone) with no problems.



My comments: This is true caramel. Its flavor is deep and rich, with a hint of toffee. I love this stuff, and I can actually have some, as it has neither milk nor cream. We enjoy this as a dip for apple wedges this time of year.


Thursday, October 23, 2025

Cheap and Cheerful Suppers for a Busy Harvest Week

I haven't done a Cheap & Cheerful post in a long while. I actually kept track of what we ate this week. So I'll share.

Wednesday's pears and raspberries
I included this photo because I thought you might not believe me
 that we are still harvesting raspberries this late in the season.

Saturday

beef and vegetable (garden Brussel sprout greens and frozen Asian vegetable mix) stir fry 
brown rice
tomato wedges (picked about 3 weeks ago and still ripening indoors)
fresh pears (harvested earlier this month, stored in fridge)


Sunday

bean and cheese burritos on homemade tortillas, with homemade salsa
avocado and tomato slices (our tomatoes, store avocados)
steamed carrots (store carrots, washing garden carrots sounded like too much work)
steamed broccoli (frozen from this last spring purchase)


Monday 
chicken in gravy over scratch biscuits (I used lots of garden celery and sage in the gravy -- it tasted a lot like chicken, stuffing and gravy)
canned green beans (easy night after a long day working)
baked winter squash (garden grown)
fruit compote (our apples, pears, raspberries)


Tuesday
chili con carne topped with avocado chunks
scratch cornbread
stewed prunes (our prunes)


Wednesday (a very busy day and evening, so it needed to be easy)
leftover chili con carne topped with shredded cheese and cilantro
leftover cornbread
fresh pears and raspberries

garden grown squash and pumpkins can sometimes
have thin enough skin to roast with the skin on and eat the skins, too.
And I know they haven't been sprayed with anything harmful.


Thursday
tuna casserole
roasted pumpkin cubes


This was a heavy duty work week for me. I am very close to being done with the harvest and processing. This week I made all of the fruit leather, 120 portions, and 3 last jars of preserved spiced unripe figs. I finished pruning the one fig tree while I was picking the other day, too. 

I took the easy route with vegetables on a couple of days, canned green beans, frozen broccoli, etc. I knew Wednesday was going to be a super busy day with a shortened dinner period, as my husband and I had a Bible study at our church this evening. Wednesday dinners are such a rush for us now. Our daughters are out until 6, but my husband and I have to leave shortly after 6. So my husband and I sit down around 5:15 for dinner, then leave food for the other two to reheat when they're hungry. Anyway, I made enough on Tuesday to mostly just reheat and serve. 

I won't lie, I had many moments this past week when I considered having someone go out and get some burgers or a pizza. But I really don't like fast food burgers and cheap pizza any more. I like my own cooking. And it feels like it's better for me.


What was on your menu this past week? Are you eating many seasonal foods?

Have a wonderful weekend. Anyone doing anything particularly fall-ish this weekend?
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