Rocky Road Fudge is milk chocolate and marshmallow fudge studded with biscuit pieces and decorated with more marshmallows and chocolate chips – simply heavenly!
Today I’m sharing Rocky Road Fudge! My last dalliance with fudge was over a year ago and was a resounding flop.
I didn’t own a digital thermometer back then so when I boiled my fudge to the “soft ball” stage I was testing by hand. I got it completely wrong so the resulting fudge never set and was more like thick wet fondant icing – a very sorry state of affairs!
So when the makers of the Thermapen 4 Digital Thermometer asked if I’d like to come up with a recipe to put it through its paces I knew exactly what I had to make – fudge!
But then came the next big question, what sort of fudge should I make, the possibilities were endless.
I didn’t have to wait long for inspiration as a trip up the sweet aisle in my local supermarket led me to the chocolate bars. One of them was a Rocky Road one covered in mini marshmallows plus plain and white chocolate chips!
Back home I devised my fudge recipe which I wanted to be creamy and slightly soft ie not crumbly so to help with this most of my marshmallows were going to be melted into the fudge along with the milk chocolate.
The result was my kids coming in from school with the first one (my daughter) giving my Rocky Road Fudge 10 out of 10 and then my son came in and gave it 11 out of 10!
So a resounding success, the only trouble is it’s so very moreish, you really have to be strict with yourself (and your hubby)! This fudge would be great for handing out at a Bonfire Night Party, Halloween, or wrapped in cellophane with a bow for Christmas presents.
But how did the Thermapen 4 perform I hear you cry!
Well what can I say, it’s little wonder that it’s the UK’s number-selling food thermometer! I had a digital thermometer which was just a stick so could never have used it for testing hot sugar but with the Thermapen 4, the design allows you to pivot the probe at an angle or fully extend it.
Hence to keep my fingers away from the extremely hot bubbling fudge I angled the Thermapen 4 to 90º so that my hand was on the outside of the pan while the probe was quickly measuring the temperature inside the pan (3 seconds is all it takes which is super fast).
Best of all the temperature reading lights up in dark conditions and flips to the correct way up whichever way you hold it (a bit like a mobile phone only it covers 4 ways up rather than just 2).
I put the Thermapen 4 down without closing it back up and later went back to it worrying that I’d drained the battery.
I needn’t have worried though as it has a built-in sleep function and wakes up as soon as you pick it up again!
And if all this wasn’t enough it’s also waterproof so getting splashed in the kitchen isn’t going to be a problem and it comes in a whole range of funky colours so you’ll never lose it!
All in all, I’d give the Thermapen 4 10 out of 10 as it ticks all the boxes for functionality and is incredibly user-friendly.
Would you believe that as I sit here writing this post I just looked up to see the Thermapen 4 being used on the Great British Bake Off to help with tempering chocolate!
More recipes using a thermometer!
- Christmas Coffee Truffles – Fab Food 4 All
- Morello Cherry & Raspberry Jam – The Veg Space
- Rum & Sultana Fudge – United Cakedom
- Damson & Redcurrant Jam – BakingQueen74
- Baileys, Pistachio and Cranberry Fudge – Foodie Quine
- Double Raspberry Macarons – Supergolden Bakes
As this fudge contains three types of chocolate I am entering it into this month’s We Should Cocoa where the theme is USA which is run by Tin & Thyme and hosted this month by It’s Not Easy Being Greedy.
NB: This is a commissioned post for Electronic Temperature Instruments, all opinions are my own.
Rocky Road Fudge
Ingredients
- For the fudge:
- 450 g Granulated sugar
- 150 g Unsalted butter
- 150 mls Semi-skimmed milk
- 100 g Good quality milk or dark chocolate broken up
- 50 g Golden syrup
- 100 g Digestive biscuits or any other, chopped into mini marshmallow sized pieces
- 50 g Mini marshmallows
- For the decoration:
- Handful plain chocolate chips
- Handful white chocolate chips
- Handful mini marshmallows
Instructions
- Grease a 20 x 24.5cm tin with butter and line it with a single sheet of greased parchment allowing a few centimetres of overhang (to use as handles when removing the fudge).
- Place the sugar, butter, milk, chocolate and golden syrup into a large heavy based saucepan.
- Heat gently and stir until all the sugar has dissolved (you will hear it scratching against the bottom of the pan with your wooden spoon if it hasn't).
- Bring the mixture to the boil and then boil gently for 10 minutes or until it reaches the “soft ball” stage of 116ºC on your food thermometer (has to be suitable for sugar).
- Once this stage is reached remove the pan from the heat and set aside to cool for 5 minutes.
- Add the biscuit pieces and the marshmallows and beat until the mixture starts to look thick and almost grainy.
- Pour the fudge into the greased tin and even out the surface with a plastic spatula.
- Scatter mini marshmallows over the top pressing down with your hand.
- Then scatter the plain and white chocolate chips over the top and allow to cool.
- Once cool remove the fudge from the tin using the parchment “handles” and cut into even sized pieces. (I made 30 but you could make more by cutting smaller).
- Then store in an airtight container where it should keep for at least 2 weeks.
christine
This looks heavenly. Thanks for letting me know about this thermometer- I really need to get something like this.
Camilla
Thanks Christine, it’s just too heavenly LOL! Yes I couldn’t recommend a better one;-)
Lucy @ BakingQueen74
excellent recipe, must try fudge at home as handily I also have a Thermapen!
Camilla
Thanks Lucy, excellent such a great gadget:-)
Roz
I think I could do with one of these! that fudge looks gorgeous!
Camilla
Thanks Roz, yes so many things I want to make, macarons are next on the list:-)
Anne
Oh oh oh Camilla you are spoiling us!
I love rocky road… and I love fudge, together looks and sounds a lot like heaven!!
Camilla
LOL Anne, this is definitely a recipe for you then:-)
peter @feedyoursoultoo
The recipe looks delicious and having a really good thermometer for baking can be so important. Thx for sharing.
Camilla
Thanks Peter, the fudge has been a huge hit here as well as the thermometer;-)
kate @veggie desserts
Oooh, that thermapen sounds great. Candy can be such a faff, but this looks so useful to make it easier. And the rocky road bars sound goooooood!
Camilla
It really is a genius product Kate. The fudge is a winner too:-)
Kate | The Veg Space
Gorgeous! That looks rather naughty but nice. I’ve just heard about some great veggie/vegan marshmallows so know what I’ll be using them on now! I’ve just recently got a proper digital thermometer and wish I had bought one ages ago, they are so handy!
Camilla
Thanks Kate they are very naughty but very nice:-) I’ve had 2 digital thermometers before, one very simple small one not suitable for sugar and the other so complicated that it never got used!
Sally - My Custard Pie
I would never have thought of using a digital thermometer for fudge. On my Christmas list.
Camilla
I made fudge as a kid with condensed milk which didn’t need a thermometer so maybe it depends on the recipe.
Jacqueline Meldrum
This looks like a really naughty treat Camilla. Who could resist? What a handy thermometer to have in the kitchen.
Camilla
Thanks Jacs:-) Tell me about it, it’s taking much self control to not eat too much of it!
Helen at Casa Costello
Wow this fudge looks incredible – My last attempt at fudge making was a soggy mess too. Really put me off. That thermometer looks just the ticket – Mine is a old relic that just about manages to reach high temperatures. Thanks so much for the mention x
Camilla
Thanks Helen:-) Glad I’m not the only fudge failure in town! No more failures for me now with the Thermapen thank goodness:-)