Monday, January 25, 2010

Candy Thermometer

The candy thermometer did not become available to most housekeepers until the early 1900s when appeared in advertisements and recipes. The professional confectioner's thermometers were longer and more expensive. On the left is a patent from 1878 for a glass encased one...

 and on the right from 1874 for rock candy with the thermometer [B] sticking out to read the scale.

"Until the last few years, [1914] for the amateur, the only tests to determine the completion of cooking have been known as " thread," "soft ball," "hard ball," "crack" and " hard crack." The professional confectioner has long been able, by the use of a thermometer, to determine just how hot his candy was and to remove it from the heat at exactly the right moment. His thermometer, however, was not only too expensive for the amateur, but also too long to be used except in a large vat." [Candy-making revolutionized: confectionery from vegetables. Mary Elizabeth Hall NY: 1914]

An interesting line of patents involved combining thermometers and stirrers as in the following two examples from 1880 and 1904. In the first, BF Adams stated that..."In the manufacture of confectionery... it is necessary for the attendant to stir the liquid continually to prevent it from burning, and also to observe the temperature of the same. It was heretofore been customary to use one hand for holding the stirring spoon or spatual, and the other hand for holding a Fahrenheit thermometer in the liquid."


"There are now on the market, however, thermometers that the amateur confectioner or small manufacturer can use to advantage. Even when hardware dealers do not keep the thermometers in stock, they can - and will — order them from their jobbers. The instruments, of which there are several makes, are about nine inches long, and sell for from one dollar to two dollars and fifty cents. Most of these instruments register from about eighty degrees to three hundred and eighty degrees Fahrenheit...." [Candy-making revolutionized: confectionery from vegetables. Mary Elizabeth Hall NY: 1914]

The following from: The Art of Candy Making... compiled by Dona MacKenzie Synder. Dayton, Ohio: Helath Pub Co, 1915
"Of all the tools for making candy, the candy thermometer is the most important. ... Candy thermometers cost from one to three dollars, and can usually be purchased at any good candy supply house or at a good hardware store. If it is not possible to secure a good thermometer in your city, one can be secured from The Health Publishing Company, Main and Fourth Streets, Dayton, Ohio.

Before using the thermometer the first time, test it in boiling water. The mercury should stand at exactly 212° when the water boils, unless the altitude is several thousand feet above sea level, which makes the boiling point lower.

Always use a kettle proportionate in size to the amount of sugar being boiled. The syrup must be deep enough in the kettle to cover the bulb of the thermometer; otherwise it will not register correctly. It will not break the thermometer to place it in the syrup just after it begins to boil, unless it has been in a cold room.

When making candy it pays to watch it closely, to read your thermometer correctly, and to remove the syrup from the fire the moment the thermometer registers the correct degree."
Small thread 230°-236°
Long thread 240°-245°
Softball 244°-246°
Hardball 250°
Very hard ball 280°
Brittle 300°
Coloring point 315°


©2010 Patricia Bixler Reber
hearthcook.com

No comments:

Post a Comment