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Taffy (candy)
Type of soft candy
Type of soft candy
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Taffy |
| image | Salt water taffy.jpg |
| caption | Salt water taffy with a U.S. quarter for scale |
| alternate_name | Salt water taffy |
| country | United States |
| region | Atlantic City, New Jersey |
| type | Candy |
| main_ingredient | sugar, corn starch, corn syrup, glycerine, water, butter, salt, flavoring, food coloring |
Taffy is a type of candy invented in the United States, made by stretching or pulling a sticky mass of a soft candy base, made of boiled sugar, butter, vegetable oil, flavorings, and colorings, until it becomes aerated (tiny air bubbles produced), resulting in a light, fluffy and chewy candy. When this process is complete, the taffy is rolled, cut into small pieces and wrapped in wax paper to keep it soft. It is usually pastel-colored and fruit-flavored, but other flavors are common as well, including molasses and the "classic" (unflavored) taffy.
Definition and etymology
The word taffy, referring to the boiled candy, is first known to have appeared in the United States circa 1817. The word is also used metaphorically to refer to insincere flattery.
The Oxford English Dictionary dates the first written record of the word toffee in the forms tuffy, toughy to 1825 and identifies it as a southern British dialectal variant of taffy (first recorded use in 1817), whose modern spelling is first recorded from 1843.
Taffy pull
A taffy pull is a social event around the pulling of taffy that was popular in the 1840s through at least 1870s. The host would prepare the taffy recipe by melting molasses and sorghum or sugar with a mixture of water. Participants would coat their hands with butter and working with a partner pull the hot mixture apart, and then fold it back together and repeat. This process would add air to the candy, resulting in a soft chewable texture.
United States
Salt water taffy
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Salt water taffy is a variety of soft taffy originally produced and marketed in the Atlantic City, New Jersey area of the Jersey Shore starting in the 1880s. Its late 19th century appellation most likely originated in New Jersey. nearby Ocean City, elsewhere at the Jersey Shore, and other beaches throughout the US like Cape Cod. It is also popular in Atlantic Canada and Salt Lake City, Utah.
Modern commercial taffy is made primarily from corn syrup, glycerin and butter. The pulling process, which makes the candy lighter and chewier, consists of stretching out the mixture, folding it over, and stretching it again. Although it is called "salt water" taffy, it does not include any seawater, though it does contain both salt and water.
The original invention of the candy has several different stories circulating, likely all apocryphal. One relates to an assistant who substituted fresh water with seawater—either through laziness or accident. Another cites a storm which caused seawater to wash over the candy, which was consequently (and successfully) marketed with the appropriate name.
Joseph Fralinger popularized the candy by boxing it and selling it in Atlantic City. Fralinger's first major competition came from candy maker Enoch James, who refined the recipe, making it less sticky and easier to unwrap. James also cut the candy into bite-sized pieces, and is credited with mechanizing the "pulling" process. The candy was also sold mail order; in 1926 sheet music was commissioned by James with the title "Send Home Some Taffy Today!" The Glaser family acquired James' stores in 1947, and Fralinger's stores in 1992. Stores under each brand still operate on the Atlantic City boardwalk.
On August 21, 1923, John Edmiston obtained a trademark for the name "salt water taffy" (number 172,016), then demanded royalties from companies using his newly acquired name. He was sued over this demand, and in 1925, the trademark was invalidated as being in common use.
Caramel candies are sometimes referred to as taffy (taffy apples), but the caramel is very different from common salt water taffy, though they share a similar tensile quality.
Ingredients
Salt water taffy is composed of sugar, cornstarch, corn syrup, glycerine, water, butter, salt, natural or artificial flavor, and food color. Some examples of flavoring include vanilla, lemon, maple, banana, red licorice, watermelon, raspberry, or mint extracts.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, taffy pieces are known as "chewy sweets", "chews" or "fruit chews"—the term "taffy" is not used.
Canada
In Canada, a form of molasses taffy candy, known as "halloween kisses", is produced in time for Halloween. The candy was first offered by the Kerr's Canadian candy company in the 1940s. At the time, a molasses candy was made by Stewart and Young in Glasgow.
References
References
- "Science of Candy: Why Do You Pull Taffy? - Exploratorium". Exploratorium: the museum of science, art and human perception.
- "[https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/taffy ''Merriam-Webster Dictionary'']
- [https://www.etymonline.com/word/taffy toffee. Etymology, origin and meaning of toffee] by Etymonline.com
- "[http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50253829 toffee, n. and a.]", ''Oxford English Dictionary'' Second Edition 1989
- "[http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50246098 taffy1]", ''Oxford English Dictionary'' Second Edition 1989
- "Let's Have a Taffy Pull!".
- (August 15, 2011). "Creative Hospitality: HOW TO HOST a TAFFY PULLING PARTY".
- (August 19, 2013). "Chew on this: 125 years later, Jersey Shore still daffy over salt water taffy". NJ Advance Media.
- Sharkey, Joe. (November 11, 2001). "Traces of the place at high tide". The New York Times.
- "Recipe: Saltwater Taffy".
- "The Origin of Salt Water Taffy (according to Mother Stearns)".
- (13 February 2016). "Joseph F. Fralinger, the History of Salt Water Taffy, and the Gager Family". ahg3rd.
- "Send Some Taffy - James Salt WaterTaffy Advertisement Sheet Music". eBay.
- "Shop Fralinger's Candy – James Candy Company".
- (2 March 2018). "What is taffy? Let's make some sense of this oddly confounding chewy sweet.". Mr Dach.
- (October 29, 2017). "A Trick or a Treat: The story of Canada's Cursed Candy Kiss". ottawarewind.com.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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