The word caramel appeared in
the English language for the first time in 1725, derived from the Spanish
caramelo. The original Spanish term most likely did not relate to the chewy
caramel candy we know today, but rather to caramelized sugar. Caramelo's origins
are uncertain, although some academics believe it is linked to the late Latin
calamellus, a smaller version of calamus, reed, or cane an inferred allusion to
sugar cane.
Researchers know soft caramel
candy is an American innovation, but we don't know when it was created.
Americans were heating water and sugar in deep kettles in their fireplaces to
produce hard candies from around 1650. Someone added butter and milk to the saucepan
at some point and created the caramel. By the mid-1800s, approximately 400
American candy factories were creating hard candies as well as caramels,
caramel recipes abound in period cookbooks. Milton Hershey's initial company
was the Lancaster Caramel Company, and he learned to produce chocolate while
looking for a covering for his caramels.
Whereas the British
originated toffee, the "soft toffee," or caramel, invented by
Americans crossed the
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