Easy Homemade Almond Roca

"I love almond roca!! I found this copycat recipe at massrecipes.com and it tastes exactly like the real thing to me! Mmmmm."
 
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photo by Camzmom photo by Camzmom
photo by Camzmom
photo by Camzmom photo by Camzmom
photo by Juju Bee photo by Juju Bee
photo by Juju Bee photo by Juju Bee
photo by kynaolsen photo by kynaolsen
Ready In:
50mins
Ingredients:
6
Yields:
36 candies
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ingredients

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directions

  • Over Medium heat, melt butter in a large pot.
  • Add corn syrup, water and sugar to pot and cook until temp reaches 290 degrees OR until the mixture becomes the color of a brown paper bag (about 15-20 minutes) stirring constantly with a wooden spoon (mixture will rise and bubble quite a bit).
  • Remove from heat and Stir in 1/2 of the Almonds.
  • Turn mixture onto a greased cookie sheet WITH EDGES!
  • While the mixture is cooling, melt the chocolate over low flame until all the chips are gone, and chocolate is smooth.
  • Score the Almond butter mixture into the shape you desire (I just scored into rectangle shapes).
  • Pour the hot chocolate over the almond mixture and spread evenly.
  • Sprinkle with remaining almonds and allow candy to cool completely and chocolate to harden before breaking apart and serving.
  • Note: I let mine refrigerate over night after breaking the into squares, and they had a better texture this way, we thought.

Questions & Replies

  1. This 50 States of Dessert confuses me. I am aMontanan, and love Almond Roca.......but what does it have to do with Montana? Why not Huckleberry Pie?
     
  2. Do you use salted or non salted butter for this recipe?
     
  3. When you do scorch the sugar, and it happens to even us pros, don’t panic. Take the pot of the heat and let it cool down. Open the windows to let out the smoky air. When the pot is cool, fill it with boiling water to soften the residue. Dump it and repeat until you can scrub the remainder clean. If the pot itself is scorched, pour some water and baking soda into it, and bring to a boil. Let it simmer for a while, and it come clean.
     
  4. I followed this recipe step by step but it came out chewy and some what crunchy on the bottom. Trying to figure out what went wrong? My first time making this. Any advise/tips would be appreciated thank you.
     
  5. This might sound pretty stupid, but is the sugar, white or brown sugar? Thanks.
     
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Reviews

  1. Ok. First, ignore the post about using brown, rather than white sugar. You want the flavor of a slightly "browned sugar." Secondly, buy a candy thermometer, if you don't have one. This is a science. Not an art. Third, brown slightly the almonds. Buy slivers. Keep a keen eye out during this process, as they will go from golden to ruined in an instant. Obviously, this can not be done at the same time you are preparing your candy mixture. Unless, you have six hands and three eyeballs. Do it first. Let the almonds rest for a bit, then put them in the very heaviest duty "ziplock" bag you can find. Grab a hammer. Pound those almonds into submission. The finer the better. Lastly, no need to melt the chocolate simply place them, scatter them, put them all over your toffe, when you pour the mixture into the buttered pan and they will melt on their own. Just spatula to spread the chocolate before adding the remaining toasted almonds. Do refrigerat, or cool. But not too long, no more than two hours, or the chocolate will separate from the toffee. Make four pans. Will take up your evening. But, armed with wax paper and about 10 decorative tins from the dollar store, YOU are now a winner ...
     
  2. I decided to try this recipe after reading all the reviews. It's fantastic!! On my stove it took about 25 minutes for it to turn the right color. Also, to cut one step out of the recipe, once I poured the butter mixture onto the cookie sheet, I just waited for it to harden a bit then poured the bag of choc. chips on top and waited for them to melt. Then I simply just spread it to cover the toffee. Worked great! Thanks for a great recipe!
     
  3. I tried to make fudge once, total disaster, so I've always shied away from making candy. However, my BIL makes almond roca every year for the family at Christmas, he insisted it was easy. So, when I found this recipe, I pushed up my sleeves and decided I'd give it a try. The store didn't have anything but sliced almonds, which I didn't like the looks of, so I bought crushed pecans, otherwise I followed the direction exactly. The mixture took a long time to come to temperature, (I used a candy thermometer), the better part of 45 minutes, but I have a new electric stove, and I was increasing the heat by one increment at a time. This really does need a med or better heat level, it really does turn the color of a paper bag. I used salted butter and white sugar, and poured the mixture into a lasagna sized, buttered, disposable aluminum pan. This worked perfectly, as I don't think the recipe said what size of vessel to use. I melted the chocolate chips in a bowl over boiling water. Once everything was in the pan, we set it out in the garage over night, 40 degrees or so. This morning, we had roca to rival my BIL"s! It came out easily, and is perfect in every way! I can't believe I did it!! Thank you so much! Now, I don't have to spend grossly over inflated prices at craft fairs to get my fix!
     
  4. I just started to look through these as I am from Montana I did not know our state candy was home made almond rocha
     
  5. I have made this Roca many times and everyone loves it! White sugar works fine and browns without burning, though I am curious how brown sugar would change the flavor. I plan on trying it with cashews next time.
     
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