Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (2024)

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Want easy fudge recipes for Christmas? Not only is Grandma's old fashioned fudge candy easy to make, it's wonderfully delicious. Imagine having a trayful of soft and creamy chocolate fudge sitting on the coffee table just waiting to be nibbled on.

This old fashioned Christmas fudge is best enjoyed while playing your family's favorite board game or watching a classic Christmas movie on television. Be sure to have lots of creamy homemade fudge available to nibble on this Holiday Season.

Grandma's Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas

Mom's Recipe Scrapbooks (1920s)

Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (1)Chocolate Candy Cane Fudge Variation for Christmas
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The Secret to Making Great Fudge

Perhaps the favorite Christmas candy of all is fudge, when it's soft and creamy, and sometimes made very interesting with bits of candied fruit and nuts.

The SECRET to getting a good fudge texture is to allow the candy to cool before you beat it and add the extras — so many people think it should be beaten as soon as it is removed from the heat. Wrong. Let it cool.

Favorite Chocolate Christmas Fudge

Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (2)Enjoy Homemade Chocolate Christmas Fudge
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2 cups sugar, 2/3 cup rich milk, 2 squares chocolate, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Grate the chocolate.

Put the sugar and milk in a saucepan and stir until dissolved; then cook without stirring until a little syrup dropped into cold water will form a soft ball (cook until thermometer shows 238°F, if you have one.

Add the grated chocolate and the butter, stir enough to mix, and let the candy cool.

When cool, pour it out onto a marble slab or a clean counter-top or a big ceramic platter, and let it become quite cold. Then work it with a spatula, backward and forward, or you can use a small butter paddle or other convenient tool.

When creamy and stiff, spread out at once and cut into squares with a sharp knife.

Fudge Flavor Variations

You can use any kind of chopped nuts in the above recipe — about 1/2 cupful to this quantity of candy; or 1/3 cup raisins may be added; or 3/4 cup chopped dates; or 1/3 cup shredded coconut.

Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (3)Homemade Chocolate Fudge With Candy Cane Topping
(Source: © TeriVirbickis/Depositphotos.com)

For a Christmassy-looking chocolate candy cane fudge that tastes every bit as delicious as it looks, just add 1/4 cup crushed candy cane to the mixture or sprinkle the crushed pieces onto the warm fudge to decorate.

Or,you can leave out the chocolate and make a delicate white cream candy,adding coconut to it, if you like; or some candied cherries, or tinybits of cranberry, or preserved ginger.

And, of course, you can tint the white candy any color you like, if you have some pure food coloring.

Chocolate Walnut Fudge

Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (4)Chocolate Walnut Fudge for Gift Giving
(Source: © mcgphoto/Depositphotos.com)

Two cups granulated sugar, one cup cream, two ounces unsweetened chocolate. Cook until it forms a soft ball when dropped in cold water.

Take from fire and add piece of butter as large as two walnuts, beat until nearly cold, then pour in buttered dish, and when cold cut in squares.

Chopped walnuts, dates or marshmallows may be added before beating. This candy must be stirred constantly while cooking to obtain best results. —Neighborhood Cook Book

Enjoy Grandma's Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas

When I had been a small boy growing in the early 1950s, televisions were few and far between, but during the Holiday Season we all gathered around our old GE console radio for the special Christmas broadcasts.

As we sat and listened to our favorite programs, Mom passed a plateful of her still-warm chocolate fudge that was so creamy smooth, it melted in our mouths.

I can still recall laughing as Fibber McGee painted the pine tree in his front yard white by mistake, instead of Molly's Christmas tree. And who could ever forget the crazy antics of Abbott and Costello?

Ah, those were the days! The taste of warm homemade fudge always brings back fond memories offun-filled family occasions.

With Grandma's easy fudge recipes for Christmas, you can create your own family memories this holiday time, memories that you'll talk about for years to come. Enjoy!


Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (5)

Enjoy a LAUGH to brighten your day! Listen to Bud Abbott and Lou Costello's hilarious "Who's On First?" skit from the World War 2 Special Services Division V-Disk.


(6 min.)

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Easy Fudge Recipes for Christmas: Make Old Fashioned Chocolate Fudge (2024)

FAQs

Is evaporated milk or condensed milk better for fudge? ›

Evaporated milk doesn't have sugar added. The sweetened condended milk is needed as no extra sugar is added to the fudge. If evaporated milk were used then the fudge would not be sweet enough and also would still be too soft unless the fudge is frozen.

What is traditional fudge made of? ›

Fudge is a dense, rich confection typically made with sugar, milk or cream, butter and chocolate or other flavorings. The base for fudge is boiled until it reaches the soft-ball stage (135 to 140 degrees F), then stirred or beaten as it cools to minimize the formation of sugar crystals.

Why is my old fashioned fudge not hardening? ›

The most common culprit behind unset fudge is inaccurate temperature control. If the sugar mixture hasn't reached the correct temperature, your fudge won't set. Ensure you use a reliable candy thermometer and follow temperature guidelines meticulously to achieve the desired consistency.

What is the secret to smooth fudge that is not gritty? ›

Once a seed crystal forms, it grows bigger and bigger as the fudge cools. A lot of big crystals in fudge makes it grainy. By letting the fudge cool without stirring, you avoid creating seed crystals.

Why is my 3 ingredient fudge not setting? ›

Why won't my 3 ingredient fudge set? This often happens when the condensed milk and chocolate chip mixture isn't hot enough to start.

Can I use heavy whipping cream instead of evaporated milk in fudge? ›

With its very similar consistency, 1 cup of heavy cream can replace 1 cup of evaporated milk in sweet and savory dishes. While the flavor will be blander than evaporated milk's unique caramelized tones, the texture will be noticeably richer.

Is milk chocolate or semi sweet chocolate better for fudge? ›

Chocolate: you may use semi-sweet chocolate or dark chocolate. If you want milk chocolate fudge, I suggest using a combination of milk and semi-sweet, so that it's not overly sweet. But this is up to you! You could also use semi-sweet chocolate chips, but I suggest sticking to high-quality chocolate if possible.

What is the best pan to make fudge in? ›

Saucepan: Choose a heavy, straight-sided metal saucepan that holds about twice the volume of your fudge recipe.

What is American fudge? ›

Fudge is a type of confection that is made by mixing sugar, butter and milk. It has its origins in the 19th century United States, and was popular in the women's colleges of the time.

What makes fudge taste like fudge? ›

Fudge incorporates sugar, milk, butter, and other ingredients such as cocoa for chocolate fudge. The chocolatier then heats these products together until they melt. After this, the mixture is beaten during the cooling process. Think of fudge as a food consisting of crystallized sugar.

What does cream of tartar do in fudge? ›

Cream of tartar is used in caramel sauces and fudge to help prevent the sugar from crystallizing while cooking. It also prevents cooling sugars from forming brittle crystals, this is why it's the secret ingredient in snickerdoodles!

What to do with failed fudge? ›

My advice to you is to just pour it in a jar, call it something else delicious, and pretend you meant for it to be that way. The nice thing about my “failed” fudge is that it tastes absolutely delicious! A spoonful of the delectable treat will make you want for more.

How to make fudge more solid? ›

How do you fix fudge that is too soft? Bring the fudge back to a boil with 1–2 US tbsp (15–30 ml) of cream. If your fudge is soft or runny, it probably didn't come up to a high enough temperature while it was cooking. Put it back into the saucepan and add 1–2 US tbsp (15–30 ml) of 35% fat whipping cream.

Why did my fudge turn out chewy? ›

If the fudge is very soft and slightly chewy then it is possible that it did not quite cook to soft ball stage and next time the mixture should be cooked to a slightly higher temperature (soft ball is 112-116c/235-240F and a sugar or candy thermometer can help).

What makes fudge moist? ›

The amount of time you cook fudge directly affects its firmness. Too little time and the water won't evaporate, causing the fudge to be soft. Conversely, cook it too long and fudge won't contain enough water, making it hard with a dry, crumbly texture.

How do you describe high quality fudge? ›

High-quality fudge tastes smooth and creamy because it contains small sugar crystals. It has a deep brown color and a satiny sheen. Poor-quality fudge tastes grainy because it contains large sugar crystals.

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