Butter Toffee Pecans |
These pecans have been a bit of an obsession for me for a few years. I don't really think they're actually like the Savannah's Candy Kitchen glazed pecans that I've missed since the pandemic closed their Atlanta Airport location, but they ARE much like the butter toffee pecans I bought at H.E.B. on our trip to Houston. This is good enough for me.
The sweet candy coating is thick in some spots and barely there in others--just the way I like it. These butter toffee pecans are so flavorful and rich, that just a few satisfy my sweet tooth.
When I made this batch, I used toasted pecans, but next time I will use raw ones because the candying process made these pecans almost a little too well done. Still tasty, but not quite perfection.
I suppose this method of making candied nuts would work on other nuts. The recipe below is sort of a conglomeration of different recipes I found on Pinterest. Since I tweaked and borrowed from so many recipes, though, I'm writing down here what I did so I will be able to recreate these the next time I want to make them, which could be a while. (My memory isn't as sharp as I'd like it to be sometimes.)
So there you go, my rambling preface to these delicious nuts. (Insert sound of a middle school boy giggling.)
Butter Toffee Pecans
Ingredients:- 2-3 tablespoons butter
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1/4 cup water
- 2 cups raw pecan halves
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt (I used Morton's brand)
Instructions:
Prepare a cookie sheet by lining it with parchment paper and set aside.
In a large non-stick pan/skillet set over medium heat (err on the low side here, so as to not burn the sugar), melt butter and then add the sugar and water. Stir gently with a silicone spatula and bring to a simmer.
Once it's simmering and it seems the sugar is melted, add the pecans and stir to coat.
Continue to stir and coat for a while. The water will evaporate and the sugar will get grainy and look terrible.
Sprinkle the salt evenly over the sugary pecans, and continue to stir.
Eventually, the sugar will start to melt and get shiny. Keep stirring until most of the sugar has that shiny appearance and there is only a little bit of grainy-looking sugar left in the crevases of the pecans.
Pour pecans onto the prepared parchment-lined baking sheet and use the silicone spatula to spread the nuts out and separate the ones that are stuck together. At this point you can either use two silicone spatulas, or get two forks out for this job. See what works for you.
When pecans are mostly separated, allow to cool completely before tasting. Serve/eat or store in an airtight container until ready to serve/eat.
Makes a little over 2 cups of butter toffee pecans (honestly, I haven't measured)
.
Prepare a cookie sheet by lining it with parchment paper and set aside.
In a large non-stick pan/skillet set over medium heat (err on the low side here, so as to not burn the sugar), melt butter and then add the sugar and water. Stir gently with a silicone spatula and bring to a simmer.
Once it's simmering and it seems the sugar is melted, add the pecans and stir to coat.
Continue to stir and coat for a while. The water will evaporate and the sugar will get grainy and look terrible.
Sprinkle the salt evenly over the sugary pecans, and continue to stir.
Eventually, the sugar will start to melt and get shiny. Keep stirring until most of the sugar has that shiny appearance and there is only a little bit of grainy-looking sugar left in the crevases of the pecans.
Pour pecans onto the prepared parchment-lined baking sheet and use the silicone spatula to spread the nuts out and separate the ones that are stuck together. At this point you can either use two silicone spatulas, or get two forks out for this job. See what works for you.
When pecans are mostly separated, allow to cool completely before tasting. Serve/eat or store in an airtight container until ready to serve/eat.
Makes a little over 2 cups of butter toffee pecans (honestly, I haven't measured)
Butter, sugar, and water |
Add pecans to liquid. |
Stir. |
Sugar will look grainy before it gets shiny |
Nuts start to clump together as sugar melts. |
Stir until all nuts are shiny. |
Pour nuts onto parchment lined pan. |
Nuts are separated and cooling. |
Shiny, crisp, sweet, and delicious |
This recipe is a big hit with our family! Addictive too...we can't stop eating them, they are so good!
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