Below is the recipe I use for making Russian fudge. I have a much simpler recipe that I use for making chocolate fudge...but I generally only make this when I'm staying in a fairly crude hut at a place I stay at often...and the recipe is written on the wall! (If I find a copy of this recipe, or something similar, I'll post it later).
Russian fudge tastes better to me - and it makes a nice gift, but it is a bit more time-consuming and expensive to make. Constant stirring is required with this, whereas with a plain fudge you can leave it alone when it is boiling.
Russian Fudge (dunno why it is 'Russian').
Ingredients:
-
Three and a half cups of white sugar-
Half a cup of whole milk-
125 grams of butter-
Two heaped tablespoons of golden syrup. (Maybe this is known as something else in your part of the world. Its a sugar related thing that probably is not essential to the recipe anyway. If you don't use it, I suggest that you add a tad more milk to the initial mix to make it more fluid and less likely to overheat).
-
Quarter of a teaspoon of salt-
Just over half a cup of sweetened condensed milk (i.e: half of the standard 395 gram can sold here. I recommend that you do not use the cheap type that contains vegetable oil. Yuk. I use the Nestle 'Highlander' brand made from fresh whole milk. If you can't get this, then you could experiment using a good brand of evaporated whole milk.)
-
One teaspoon of vanilla essence (or more or less to suit you)
Method:
Have everything ready before you start, and be aware that any fudge mix is sticky and very hot...so keep your body and your children safe. One of the first things to do is to prepare a dish to pour the mix into to set. I generally rub butter over the surface of the dish to stop the fudge sticking to it, but you may prefer to use something else. The vanilla is added right at the end of the process.
Mix everything, except the vanilla, in a heavy-bottomed saucepan and place over a low to moderate heat until the sugar has completely melted into the mix. Stir constantly as this mix will easily burn on the bottom. When it starts to boil steadily keep the heat at just the right level to maintain a gentle boil. Note the time and keep stirring. Keep boiling and stirring until the mix reaches the soft to firm ball stage (around 118 degrees C or thereabouts). This might take from 15 to 30 minutes. Remove from the heat and let the mix stand and cool a little for maybe one to four minutes. Add the vanilla, then beat the mix with a wooden spoon until it thickens and looks, well, fudge-like with no glossy surface. Pour it into a dish that has had the surface rubbed with butter or some non-stick compound. I would use a dish that enabled you to keep the fudge about 20 millimetres thick.
If you like fudge, and you've never had the stuff I've described here, then I imagine you will be fairly impressed when you try it