Sweets, bon-bons, sugarplums, sweetmeats. Candy is known by many names the world around and it has delighted people for millennia. The ancient Turks were said to be the first candy makers, using honey and rosewater as their favored ingredients. Later, candy making and selling was the bailiwick of European pharmacists, an occupation that they guarded fiercely. In 1581, Nuremburg pharmacists protested against sugar dealers making candy, and took their case to court. Today pharmacies carry on this tradition of selling candy.
Eventually, novices got into the game and began making sweets at home to sell. In 1920, Ellye Howell Glover, author of Dame Curtsey’s Book of Candy Making, stated that “the genteel art of candy making may well be classed among the fine arts, for it is an accomplishment of which anyone may be proud.”
Writing this post almost a hundred years later, I have to agree with Mrs. Glover. Even though most candy is inexpensive, there’s something so romantic about creating your own confections. Even the word confection sounds charming. You almost want to don a frilly dress and lace gloves before you say it. Handing around a box of homemade chocolate-enrobed bon-bons after a dinner party is truly an old fashioned delight.
The word “confection” comes from Latin word conficere, which means to compound. This is essentially what all candy is: a compound of sugar with other ingredients. There are countless varieties of confections, but one of the easiest (and in my mind most enjoyable) places to start is with bon-bons, which is the French for “goodies.” Bon-bons are easy to make and lend themselves to a myriad of flavors, recipes, and presentations. You can makes several flavors at the same time using different types of chocolate for dipping, or roll them in sprinkles, flavorings, nuts, coconut, or preserved fruit.
Bon-bons are traditionally coated with or made of fondant. Fondant is made of granulated sugar, cream of tartar, and water all boiled together and kneaded until smooth. Purchased fondant often includes gelatin and glycerin to keep the mixture pliable, which is very important when using as cake icing. Poured fondant has more of syrupy texture—the filling inside a chocolate covered cherry, for example—and is made with granulated sugar, water, glycerin and cream of tartar. I’m not the biggest fan of cooked fondant, so I was heartened to find another choice called “French Cream Fondant,” which is uncooked. Mrs. Glover heaps praise on this fondant in her book, saying “when time is at a premium and candy must be forthcoming, try making the uncooked French cream. It is really delicious and if eaten soon after making (within a few days), the bonbons are very satisfactory.” Here is her recipe:
Rule for French Vanilla Creams
Break into a bowl the white of one or more eggs, according to the quantity you wish to make, and add to it and equal quantity of cold water; then stir in powdered or confectioners’ sugar until you have it stiff enough to mold into shape with the fingers. Flavor with vanilla to taste. After it is formed into balls, cubes or lozenge shapes, place upon plates or waxed paper and put aside to dry. This cream is the foundation of all the French creams.
Mrs. Glover wrote her book to assist the “housewife, college girl, and very inexperienced person” to learn to make a profit at candy-making. “At a bazaar, confections that are home-made always find a ready sale, and many a woman is making her living, and a generous one, too, by manufacturing bonbons that are know to be pure.” I’m not sure I’m ready to take my bon-bons to market just yet, but as Mrs. Glover says, with a little practice, candy-making will soon be “plain sailing!”
I wasn’t overly enamored with the idea of Mrs. Glover’s recipe, so I looked for a different approach. I found one in a 1953 edition of Irma S. Rombauer’s The Joy of Cooking, which Rombauer assures the reader is “nothing short of seditious.” I’ve simplified the recipe just a bit. The result is absolutely delicious, and really quite simple. What flavor would you like best– chocolate? Sprinkles? Chopped nuts?
Food Photography and Styling by Tori Avey
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Bon Bons
Ingredients
Uncooked Fondant
- 1/2 cup very good quality unsalted butter
- 1 pound confectioner's sugar, sifted
- 1/4 cup whipping cream
- 3/4 teaspoon vanilla
Optional Toppings and Flavorings
- Coconut, chopped nuts, chopped dried cherries, or sprinkles. Any flavoring, such as maple, mint, coconut or cherry.
NOTES
Instructions
- In a standing mixer fit with the paddle attachment, beat the butter until soft.
- Slowly add the confectioner’s sugar a little at a time to give the butter time to absorb it. You'll also avoid blowing a big mess of sugar all over your kitchen.
- Once the butter and sugar are combined (the mixture will have a somewhat crumbly appearance), add the whipping cream and the vanilla and beat until the mixture comes together.
- Divide the fondant into four bowls and mix in any additional flavorings you'd like. I mixed some chopped hazelnuts into one bowl of fondant, and about 1/8 tsp of coconut flavoring in another. You can even get creative by adding a small amount of rum or any other liquid flavoring-- just make sure that you don't add too much liquid, or you'll change the texture.Cover the bowls and refrigerate for at least 2 hours.
- After the fondant has had time to chill, scoop into little balls using a small disher or rounded tablespoon. I lightly sprayed the tablespoon with a cooking spray so that the fondant wouldn't stick.
- Quickly roll the ball of fondant between your palms so that you get a nice round shape (don't roll too long, though, or they'll melt!).
- Roll the fondant balls in a bowl filled with your choice of additional toppings and place on parchment or waxed paper. Serve immediately or store in the refrigerator.
If want to dip your creations in chocolate:
- Pour a pound of chocolate chips (dark or milk) into the top of a double boiler or a heat-proof bowl set over a saucepan of simmering water.
- Once the chocolate is melted and glossy, carefully and quickly dip your cold fondant balls into the melted chocolate using a spoon. Be sure your fondant balls are very chilled when you dip them, and that the water under the bowl of chocolate remains at a simmer, otherwise you’ll have a sticky mess on your hands.
- Stand the freshly dipped bonbons on a draining tray or on wax/parchment paper until hardened. Chill before serving.
- Note: if you are gluten free, choose toppings and confectioner's sugar that are certified GF.
Nutrition
tried this recipe?
Let us know in the comments!
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Mary Jackson says
(I didn’t see my answer in the existing comments. I hope I didn’t miss it.)
1. Every other chocolate dipping mix that I’ve seen has butter, shortening, or paraffin wax in addition to the chocolate chips. Please comment on texture and how it sets with only chocolate chips, and whether you tried with one of the other additions. Perhaps you’ve simply always used this recipe and it works. I’d like to know how it compares. I’m new to the world of making bon bons and am excited to try it! 🙂
2. If adding anything liquid to the fondant, how much? How much rum? How much vanilla? I think I can guess on the chopped nuts, but I don’t trust myself on the liquids (no experience with fondant) and too much could really be too strong and off-putting. Your guidance may prevent me from wasting a batch. A rough estimate is fine.
I’m thinking of trying crushed candy canes or peppermints. 🙂
Thank you so much for any advice and guidance on my questions! Feel free to email separately if needed.
Tish says
I am not practiced at fondant. But I can speak to the paraffin wax, which in my opinion, is unnecessary. I’ll give an example.
I had a recipe for peanut butter balls that everyone asks for—personally I hate ‘em, but give the people what they love, I guess.
Anyway, year-after-year, I mixed paraffin into the chocolate, because the recipe calls for it. In the back of my mind, I’m thinking—disgusting! Yes, it’s edible, but who aims to eat wax?
First—yes, the wax adds a shine. But if you temper the chocolate properly it shines anyhow.
Second—that shit burns. Maybe the wax has a lower melting point or maybe it retains heat more than the chocolate. In short—get ready to burn your fingers. (I’m convinced this is half the reason the older generation of my family asks us younger ones to bake, but won’t let us cook—burning them fingers is so annoying lol.)
Basically, skip the wax.
BrownBiteChocolate says
Super Great..
My mom used to make bon bons !