Candy apple

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A candy apple
A candy apple

Candy apples, also known as toffee apples, are whole apples covered in a hard sugar candy coating. While the topping varies from place to place, it is almost always served with a stick of sorts in the middle making them easier to eat. Candy apples are a common treat at autumn festivals in Western culture, such as Halloween and Guy Fawkes Night because the holiday comes in the wake of the annual apple harvest. They are a popular dessert throughout the Americas. While in the United States, they are most commonly eaten during the Halloween season, they are quite popular in Latin American countries, especially during their extended holiday season. Caramel apples are more popular in much of the U.S., with candy apples unknown in some regions.

Candy apple is the term used in North American English, whilst toffee apple is used elsewhere in the English speaking world.

The most common "candy" is a hard coating of cooled sugar syrup, usually tinted red and sometimes flavored with cinnamon. The sugar syrup is heated to the "hard crack" stage before coating the apple to make a hard coating when the syrup cools. Other variations include caramel apples, taffy apples and chocolate apples.

Candy apple red inspired Joe Bailon to create an automobile paint of that color.


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