Cocoanut caramels deliver a sweet and simple tropical treat

With lightly browned sugar, lemon extract and coconut — or rather cocoanut, as per the original recipe — these sweet and simple treats are decidedly tropical.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 12/12/2022 (697 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

With lightly browned sugar, lemon extract and coconut — or rather cocoanut, as per the original recipe — these sweet and simple treats are decidedly tropical.

This “Christmas cooking recipe” was published on Dec. 14, 1909 and is relatively foolproof. Keep a close eye while the sugar is on the stove to avoid seizing and feel free to increase the cream to your desired texture — the recipe as written called for only a 1/2 cup of cream, which I found too grainy.

Homemade Holidays: 12 days of vintage treats

To cap off the Free Press’s anniversary year, we’re plumbing the archives for holiday recipes of yore. Follow along until Dec. 23 for a sampling of the sweet, strange and trendy desserts to grace our pages and your tables over the last 150 years.

These Cocoanut Caramels were published in the women’s section of the Free Press alongside reports of a bridge party hosted by a Miss Louise Robertson, the opening, at long last, of a men’s social club dubbed The Winnipeg Commons and some handy tips for cleaning silver with kerosene.

There’s also an emphatic letter to the editor from a husband in support of the suffrage movement: “I estimate my wife to be at least my equal, and I am sorry for the men who go around under the impression that their wife or mother is not blessed with as good a sense of right and justice as themselves.” Women — and not all women — would get the vote in Manitoba seven years later.

With only 10 more sleeps until Christmas Day, the page is full of ads for the top presents of the year.

In 1909, “the best gift for boys” was a chest of high-grade tools ($6 to $15) from Ashdown’s, ladies were apparently going gaga for silky French Christmas lingerie (exquisitely embroidered) from Eaton’s and men were looking forward to finding a gold pencil (starting at $8) in their stocking from Henry Birks & Sons. There’s no mention, in this spread at least, of what girls of Winnipeg were pining for.

Day 3 — Cocoanut caramels, 1909

This Cocoanut Caramels recipe ran during the holidays in 1909. (Eva Wasney / Winnipeg Free Press)
This Cocoanut Caramels recipe ran during the holidays in 1909. (Eva Wasney / Winnipeg Free Press)

2 cups (500 ml) granulated sugar
1 cup (250 ml) shredded coconut
3/4 cup (190 ml) heavy cream
1/2 tsp (2.5 ml) lemon extract
1 tbsp (30 ml) butter

Combine sugar, coconut and cream in a saucepan and cook slowly over low to medium heat until sugar is dissolved and mixture browns slightly. Turn off heat and add lemon extract and butter.

Pour into a shallow buttered or parchment-lined dish and let cool. Cut into squares or form into small cakes.

This recipe has been edited for clarity.

eva.wasney@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @evawasney

Eva Wasney

Eva Wasney
Arts Reporter

Eva Wasney is a reporter for the Winnipeg Free Press.

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History

Updated on Tuesday, December 13, 2022 9:17 AM CST: Adds cutline

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