tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (2024)

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (1) Recipe: tahini-date salted caramels

I’m no vegan. I’m not vegetarian. I eat gluten. I eat (some) dairy. I eat nuts, shellfish, seafood, soy, meat, fats, sugar. I try to avoid processed foods although I can’t help a little treat every now and again in moderation (hey, I’m a child of the 70s). I also enjoy dishes that are vegan, vegetarian, gluten-free, dairy-free… as long as the ingredients are wholesome and real. Crazy ingredient substitutions with substances that are unnatural make me wince. Fake butter, fake sugar, fake gluten. Heebie jeebies. It isn’t often that I seek out vegan recipes, but I really do like the idea of vegan snacks as long as they use real whole foods. So when I saw this recipe for vegan caramels pop up in my feed, I began scribbling down the short list of ingredients to pick up from the store.


dates, tahini, coconut oil, cardamom, flake salt

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (2)

pit the dates

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (3)

I love me some caramels. Call it a weakness. Thankfully, I only need nibble on one to satisfy any craving. This recipe fascinated me. Really? Vegan caramels? It’s mostly based on dates, of which I am a fan. They are the vegan glue that binds my favorite homemade blueberry muffin LÄRABAR together. I had to procure coconut oil, which I’ve never used before. Coconut oil implies a liquid, so it was quite a surprise when I scooped it and it was solid and somewhat brittle.


just a little coconut oil

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (4)

tahini

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (5)

cardamom

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (6)


Although the recipe highly recommends Barhi dates, I could not find them anywhere. I settled for Medjool dates from the bulk section of Whole Foods. Choose the moist, mooshy ones rather than the hard, drier ones. And I think Deglet dates are too dry for this recipe. When I put the ingredients through the food processor, it seemed to remain clumpy, so I let it run a while. That resulted in a good deal of the tahini oil warming and separating somewhat. I just poured the excess oil off and proceeded from there. It was not a smooth, creamy, thick paste. It was a smooth, chewy, thick paste. Tasted pretty good.


process it into a paste

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (7)

press the mix into a parchment-lined baking pan

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (8)

sprinkle with finishing salt

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (9)

Thick, chunky caramels appeal to me because I like to bite into something substantial. Rather than spreading such a small amount of paste into the bottom of a wide pan, I used a mini loaf pan to get a 1-inch thickness. The “caramels” were tossed into the freezer for an hour to set up. Once out of the freezer, I gave the paste a minute to warm up so I could remove it from the pan and cut it into cubes.


slice the “caramels” with a sharp knife

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (10)

cute bites

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (11)

they almost look like caramels

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (12)

How did they taste? Great! Did they taste like caramels? No! But the texture is nice and chewy, albeit a little on the grainy side (because of the dates and tahini) compared to the sublime smoothness of real caramels. As a healthy snack, they are lovely little nuggets of goodness and so very very VERY easy to make compared to traditional caramels. Jeremy said not to call them caramels because it caused him significant cognitive dissonance when he bit into one. Call them what you will, but these are tasty, easy, healthy snacks worth giving a try.


delicious, chewy treats

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (13)

Tahini-Date Salted Caramels
[print recipe]
from The Kitchn

1 cup dates, pitted (I used Medjool dates, but the original recipe calls for Barhi)
1/2 cup tahini
2 tbsps coconut oil
1/2 tsp ground cardamom (optional, but good)
1/8 tsp finishing salt (I used Maldon)

Place the dates, tahini, coconut oil, and if using, the ground cardamom in the bowl of a food processor. Run the processor until the contents transform into a thick, creamy paste. Press the paste into a parchment-lined loaf pan (I used a mini loaf pan) and smooth the top out until it is even. Sprinkle the salt over the paste. Freeze until firm (I let it go for an hour). Remove from the freezer and lift the paste out of the pan. Cut into bite-size pieces. Store in an airtight container in the freezer for up to one month. Makes 12-18 pieces.


tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (14)

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tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (19)

October 18th, 2013: 12:06 am
filed under confections, fruit, gluten-free, recipes, sweet

tahini-date salted caramels recipe – use real butter (2024)

FAQs

What is the purpose of butter in caramel? ›

Some form of dairy — typically butter and/or heavy cream — is usually added to the mixture at either the beginning or the end of cooking. This addition makes the caramel richer, thicker, and lighter in color, lending more viscosity and rounder flavor.

Can you substitute tahini for butter? ›

Its texture and flavor alone makes tahini a versatile and delicious butter substitute. Fun Fact: If you want to use tahini instead of butter in baking, try replacing every ½ cup of butter with a ½ cup of tahini and 1 tablespoon of water.

Can I substitute butter for oil in caramel? ›

For caramel, it's best to use highly saturated oils like coconut or palm oil just as you would butter. However, any recipe that calls for creaming butter with sugar will not work well with oil, mainly because oil will not allow the sugar to caramelize the same way butter would. Not even coconut oil.

Why is my caramel not mixing with butter? ›

If the heat is too high, but butter might melt too quickly and can separate from the sugar. Toffee and caramel can also separate if the recipe calls for constant stirring and the candy isn't stirred often enough.

What if I forgot to put butter in my caramel sauce? ›

Yes, you can make a caramel sauce without butter, but you have to add either water or... something else. If you use water, you'll get a pure caramel syrup that looks like honey.

What thickens caramel? ›

For each cup (240 mL) of caramel sauce that you need to thicken, run 1 tbsp (14.7 mL) of cold water into a measuring cup, and slowly stir in 1 tbsp of cornstarch. Pour the cornstarch mixture into your pot caramel sauce, and stir constantly. Keep the sauce on low heat until it begins to thicken.

What causes caramel to harden? ›

The water evaporates, leaving sugar crystals behind. If even one sugar crystal falls back into the pan of cooking caramel, it starts a chain reaction of sugar crystals and the entire pan will harden. The result? Gross, grainy caramel that is unusable in most recipes.

What is the role of butter in toffee? ›

Butter is added in the final stages to add flavor and smoothness and inhibit large crystal formation. Use unsalted butter so you can add a small amount of salt (¼ teaspoon per stick of butter) to the sugar/liquid mixture. Salt tends to stabilize the mixture and keep it from foaming as much.

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