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Miso Caramels

Soon after posting a picture of my freezer over on Instagram (@SusanJaneKitchen) there was a steady stampede of kitchen nymphs demanding to know (a) what were miso caramels? (b) why the hell had I ANY left in my freezer?

I hear you.

These healthyassed caramels fill my toes with magic and pinball me around the house with happiness. No white sugar, butter or thermometers required. Instead we use licky-sticky Medjools and roasted cashew butter, whipped into submission.

And if you’re vegan? This could be a transcendental moment. Dating a vegan? Jackpot.

The secret to creating miso caramels is in pouring just enough hot water (or try coffee!) into the mix, facilitating a creamy, luscious whip that doesn’t set when frozen. Then we store them in the freezer behind the fish fingers where no one will find them. You can choose a white cacao shell to coat, with dehydrated strawberry powder (as pictured). Or just plain dark chocolate. Often they go straight into our mouths from frozen, no shell or rolling necessary.

Makes 50-60

25 Medjool dates

1x 185g jar of roasted cashew nut butter

100ml-125ml boiling hot water from the kettle

Squeeze of lemon

2 tablespoons sweet white miso paste

150g dark chocolate

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Soak the dates in boiling hot water for 4-5 minutes. While the dates soak, warm the jar of cashew nut butter by carefully placing the sealed jar in a bowl of hot water.

Drain the soaked dates, discarding the soaking liquid. Remove and compost the date stones. Blitz the fleshy dates with your warmed cashew butter, hot water, a squeeze of lemon and miso paste in a food processor or blender until smooth. If your kitchen is cold, the mixture might seize up. You can fix this by adding a little extra hot water.

Scrape the sticky ball of caramel into silicone ice cube molds to set (unless you feel you added a lot of water, in which case it’s best to use teaspoons as outlined below). I do this in several batches because I have only one silicone tray. You could also use two teaspoons and lots of patience, rolling the mixture into beautiful little bonbons and dropping on a lined tray to freeze until set (as pictured below, which is my preferred method).

When the caramels are frozen, collect them in a ziplock freezer bag.

As soon as all the caramels have been formed, frozen and collected, melt the chocolate over a bain marie. This is basically a pot of simmering water, 2.5cm in depth, with a heatproof bowl sitting on top where a lid might otherwise have gone. The contents of the bowl will gently melt from the steam of the water underneath. The trick is not to let the water violently boil or let the bottom of the bowl touch the water underneath. Sometimes I add cacao butter shavings if I have them, to help the coating behave better.

Briefly and briskly tumble each caramel into the melted chocolate directly from their frozen state. I find a fork handy for this step. Let the chocolate-coated caramels set on non-stick baking paper in the freezer before popping back into your reusable freezer bag or glass jar. Store them in the freezer, ready to plunder at will. You can eat these straight from frozen. Alternatively, they will last for 90 minutes outside the freezer to serve at parties.

In other news, I’ve been nominated for The Irish Book Awards for cookbook of the year.

If you are feeling generous (maybe have a batch of miso caramels in your belly first!) I’d be so grateful if you would consider clicking this link and ticking the box beside my name for your vote. Every vote counts, and I’m in way over my head beside some stellar cooks like beloved Donal Skehan, Diana Henry and the Ballymaloe empire. Wish me luck!

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4 Comments

  • Reply Petrea Walsh November 9, 2019 at 9:43 pm

    Best of luck in the book awards 👍

    • Reply Susan Jane December 5, 2019 at 5:23 pm

      Thank you! It was a gorgeous night, and a glorious win for Cornucopia

  • Reply J Reece December 14, 2019 at 9:54 am

    Thank you so much for sharing! I’d love to make these, they sound delicious! Please could you let us know if normal white miso is ok for this ? I’ve not found the sweet version. Thank you 🙂

    • Reply Susan Jane December 20, 2019 at 3:47 pm

      Any miso will do – 1 tablespoon will be loads. You can do up to 3 tablespoons with sweet white miso as it’s not as pungent 😉 Happy Christmas! SJ

    Leave a Reply to Petrea Walsh Cancel Reply

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