Quote:
Originally Posted by lawpaw
I meant that I wanted to caramelized the sugars in the apple cider by boiling off the water until the solution was thick enough to truly caramelize.
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DOES NOT WORK!!!
I tried it today and you can make something usable as a different back sweetener but it is in no way caramel and you have to stop at 240º.
I put the can of 100% natural concentrate in to a pan and turned on the heat about 2/3 The solution quickly heated up until my thermometer read 220º and then it stayed there for about 15 minutes until all the water boiled off. You will know when all the water boils off because the temperature will start to climb and consistency will almost instantly become sort of foamy. At this point the taste was of sweet COOKED apples. The temperature climbed and when it got to 240º I tasted it and it was a really nice apple syrup, something sweet and appley that would have been good on pancakes. At 245º a harsh chemical smell began to come off of the pan as the organic molecules began to break down, but the taste was still a sweet syrup. At 250º it finally started to take on a a caramelized flavor. It was very faint and honestly not very good as the other components in the apple started to break down and the flavor started to be a little off. At 255º it started to smoke slightly and the tastes was defiantly that of something burnt.
Over all the process from concentrate to syrup reduced the volume by about half. I would not recommend this as a back-sweetener unless you do not have access to concentrate and needed to make some syrup from fresh apple juice. keep in mind that when starting with just juice it will take an entire gallon reduced down to get 2 cups of syrup.