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Pecan Divinity (photos) Also Millionaires and Amaretto Chocolate pecans

Posted on 11/29/20 at 6:33 pm
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14253 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 6:33 pm
Here is another holiday treat I will skip this year because of my diet. You will love this stuff.

Pecan Divinity

Ingredients

2 1/2 cups sugar
1/2 cup white corn syrup
1/2 cup cold water
2 egg whites
1 teaspoon pure vanilla
1 cup chopped pecans
1/8 teaspoon salt





A Silpat (non stick silicon) sheet, if you have one.



A candy thermometer.



Directions:

In a heavy saucepan over medium heat, stir together the sugar, corn syrup, and water.







Stir only until sugar has mixed into the solution. Do not stir the mixture after this point.



Monitor the temperature with a candy thermometer and cook the syrup mixture until it reaches 260 degrees F on a candy thermometer.




260 F is 10 degrees hotter than the hard ball stage of 250 degrees F. Most recipes call for 250 F syrup (not 260). The extra temperature in this recipe helps prevent humidity in the air from affecting solidification of the divinity. At 250 degrees (standard hard ball stage) divinity success is very dependent on low humidity. The lower (less wet) the humidity of the air, the more solid the divinity will set at 250 F. At high humidity, it may never get above a thick creamy stage. Many cooks will not make divinity on a rainy or overcast day. That might be a wise rule to follow, regardless of temperature.

While the syrup is cooking, beat the egg whites until stiff peaks form.







Once the sugar mixture reaches 260 degrees F, carefully pour a slow steady stream of syrup into the stiffly beaten egg whites, beating constantly at high speed.



BE CAREFUL! THE SYRUP IS VERY HOT! Some will say they make divinity by hand stirring the syrup/egg white mixture. A mixer works netter and is all we would use at our house.

In fact I would say your mixer needs to be a good one to withstand the torque required to mix divinity.


Add the vanilla while the mixture is still very hot and continue to beat until the candy holds its shape, and begins to lose some of its shine (approximately 4-5 minutes of strong mixing). As soon as the shine begins to dull, stir in the pecans and start scooping out the divinity immediately.



Using 2 spoons, drop/spoon scrape the divinity onto silpat sheet or waxed paper, using 1 spoon to push the candy off the other. Size of the scoops is your preference. 1 X 2 or 2 X 2 inches seems like a reasonable size piece. If the divinity becomes too stiff, add a few drops of boiling hot water. You will need to work as fast as possible when scooping the hot candy, because it will set up quickly and you may be left with concrete in your mixer bowl. After you spoon the cooked sugar and nuts onto the waxed paper, you're done. Allow the candy to fully cool and store in a closed/airtight container for up to 2 weeks.







Divinity stores best with wax paper between the layers in the container.

One year, when we were kids, Mom used those red candied Cherries (chopped into bits) when we had no pecans. They were good, too.
This post was edited on 11/30/20 at 1:34 pm
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
78327 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 10:02 pm to


that looks AMAZING.

i tried to do it w/ too much humidity in the air and it never set up. just white globs on parchment paper that looked like a white version of kid's slime.

did you check the indoor humidity levels before starting?

eta i guess i should read as well as look at the purty pics

quote:

The extra temperature in this recipe helps prevent humidity in the air from affecting solidification of the divinity. At 250 degrees (standard hard ball stage) divinity success is very dependent on low humidity. The lower (less wet) the humidity of the air, the more solid the divinity will set at 250 F. At high humidity, it may never get above a thick creamy stage. Many cooks will not make divinity on a rainy or overcast day. That might be a wise rule to follow, regardless of temperature.
This post was edited on 11/29/20 at 10:04 pm
Posted by CnAzInCA
Dallas, Texas
Member since Jan 2014
600 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 11:01 pm to
Salute MD! That is perfection. Brings back wonderful childhood memories of Christmas at my Aunt Helen’s. I used to eat my weight in divinity!
Posted by GoAwayImBaitn
On an island in the marsh
Member since Jul 2018
2159 posts
Posted on 11/30/20 at 5:28 am to
Nice write up

My mom (no pics) makes this stuff every year around this time using a recipe passed down from my Great grandmother (no pics)

It's not easy to make but it is amazing stuff when done right.
Posted by fatboydave
Fat boy land
Member since Aug 2004
17979 posts
Posted on 11/30/20 at 1:23 pm to
Looks great!
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 12/23/20 at 1:22 pm to
Friends,

Has anyone an update on Meridian Dog? He usually posts in the WFDT, but last night he was notably absent. I am concerned because three days ago he said he did not feel well. Two days ago he wrote:

quote:

Feeling about the same. Staying inside, planted in my recliner. Hopefully it will pass. To top things off, I had a coughing fit yesterday and woke up this morning with a Warfarin bleed in my right eyeball, so it looks awful. Has happened before and should clear in a week or so, unless it gets worse


I hope you feel better soon, MD.

Yours,
TulaneLSU
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