Homemade Milk Duds Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Cooking over medium heat ensures that the sugar completely dissolves before the water boils off.
  • Minimal caramelization matches the flavor of real Milk Duds.
  • A generous dose of cream makes the caramels soft but chewy.
  • Coating the caramels by hand is super fast and keeps the shell thin.

So far as I'm concerned, there's only one candy at the movie theater concession stand: Milk Duds. From their unassuming name to their humble appearance (best described as a brownish blob), Milk Duds are a study in simplicity. No geometric shape, no logo, no colorful candy shell, no nuts, no smarmy mascot. Just chewy caramel and chocolate; the end. A straightforward story, perhaps, but one that reminds us it's what's inside that counts.

Making the Caramels

Now, there are plenty of recipes in this world for chocolate-covered caramels, but a Milk Dud is unique. Its caramel core is chewy and mild, without any bitterness at all. To make a caramel like that, I keep things simple, with sugar, salt, and cream. The technique itself is exactly like the one for myeasy caramel sauce, but with the ratios and temperatures adjusted to make a chewy candy instead.

Where my sauce is cooked to just 225°F (107°C), my candy goes all the way up to 260°F (127°C). That drives off more water, making it thick enough to slice. It also has less cream, so it's not as tender as my sauce would be if cooked to the same stage (giving your jaw a real workout, a hallmark of the Milk Dud experience). Finally, my candy hinges on a much lower degree of caramelization, so the flavor stays light and dairy-centric, not dark and bitter.

The real difference between the sauce and the candy, though, is in how they're handled. Caramel candy is poured into a parchment-lined pan, then chopped into bite-size pieces with a knife. I also like to squish each one by hand because a) it's super fun, and b) Milk Duds are delightfully amorphous.

Coating the Caramels

The next step is to temper the chocolate, which you can read about in Kenji's excellent and incredibly thoroughguide. Without that crucial step, the chocolate coating would be tacky and soft at room temperature. Fortunately, Kenji's outlined several different methods for tempering chocolate, which means you can be sure to find a technique that suits your style.

With the chocolate properly tempered, the dipping phase is childishly simple: Mix all the caramels into the chocolate, then fish 'em out by hand.

I know you neat freaks are probably climbing the walls now, but it's all for the best. For starters, individually dipping 50 caramels would take forever, and it can be challenging to keep chocolate in temper for that length of time. Plus, traditional dipping methods make it hard to get a sufficiently thin shell, since tempered chocolate tends to drape itself over the caramel like a thick blanket. That ruins the caramel-to-chocolate ratio, which screws up the balance of texture and flavor on the whole.

It may be messy, but actually handling the caramels helps everything move much faster; you can dip all 50 pieces in about two minutes. By gathering up a handful of caramels and then gently pressing each one between your thumb and forefinger, you'll squeeze off the excess chocolate, leaving only a thin coat behind.

Besides, there are worse fates than being covered in chocolate. Like not having a giant pile of homemade Milk Duds to call your own.

October 2016

Recipe Details

Homemade Milk Duds Recipe

Active60 mins

Total3 hrs 30 mins

Ingredients

For the Caramel:

  • 4 ounces water(1/2 cup; 115g)

  • 8 1/2 ounces sugar(1 1/4 cups; 240g)

  • 3/4 teaspoon (3g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt; for table salt, use half as much by volume or use the same weight

  • 6 ounces heavy cream(3/4 cup; 170g)

For the Chocolate Coating:

  • 8 ounces finely chopped dark or milk chocolate (1 1/3 cups; 225g), such as Callebaut or Valrhona; do not use chips

Directions

  1. For the Caramel: Nestle a large sheet of parchment paper into an 8-inch cake pan to roughly cover the bottom and sides. In a 2-quart stainless steel saucier, combine water, sugar, and salt over medium heat. Stir with a fork until sugar is fully dissolved and syrup comes to a rolling boil, about 4 minutes. Simmer, without stirring, until syrup is honey-gold, roughly 7 minutes. Immediately add cream and reduce heat to medium-low, adjusting the heat lower if needed to keep caramel from foaming too high. (This is more likely on an electric stove due to residual heat.) Stirring constantly with a heat-resistant spatula, simmer until caramel registers 260°F (127°C) on a digital thermometer, about 7 minutes. Immediately pour into prepared pan, cover tightly with foil, and cool to room temperature, about 2 hours.

  2. Peel caramel from parchment, transfer to a cutting board, and cut into 50 pieces (approximately 1/4 ounce or 7g each) with a sharp knife; don't worry about being too precise with their shape or size. If you like, use your fingers to mold the pieces into a more oval, Milk Dud–like shape.

    Homemade Milk Duds Recipe (2)

  3. For the Chocolate Coating: Line a baking sheet with parchment. Temper chocolate according to one of the methods described here. Fold all caramel pieces into tempered chocolate. With a clean hand, scoop up pieces like handfuls of marbles, then slide each one over your index finger with your thumb into your other hand (think of how you'd dole out a handful of M&M's) and arrange on prepared baking sheet. Let stand at room temperature until fully set, about 15 minutes, then transfer to an airtight container.

    Homemade Milk Duds Recipe (3)

Special Equipment

8-inch anodized aluminum cake pan (round or square), 2-quart stainless steel saucier, heat-resistant spatula, digital thermometer with clip-on attachment

Notes

For the most authentic flavor, choose a dark chocolate with 65 to 72% cocoa solids. Brands like Callebaut or Valrhona are easiest to temper, but any high-quality chocolate made with real cocoa butter will do.

Read More

  • Homemade Butterfingers
  • Chocolate-Coated Caramel Honeycomb With Salted Peanuts
  • Pastillas de Leche (Filipino Milk Candies)
  • Smoked Salt Caramels
  • Coffee Toffee
  • Boozy Caramel Bonbons
Homemade Milk Duds Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the process for making Milk Duds? ›

In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, combine the sugar, corn syrup, butter, and 1/2 cup of heavy cream. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture reaches 245°F (118°C) on a candy thermometer. Remove the saucepan from the heat and stir in the remaining 1/2 cup of heavy cream, vanilla extract, and salt.

What is the coating on Milk Duds? ›

The candy, marketed in a yellow-orange theater-style box, is an irregularly shaped caramel disk with a confectionery chocolate coating of cocoa and vegetable oil.

How to make Milk Duds softer? ›

A generous dose of cream makes the caramels soft but chewy.

What's the difference between whoppers and Milk Duds? ›

The basic differences between whoppers and milk duds is that whoppers are basically malted milk balls covered with chocolate that is artificially flavored and have a diameter of 3/4 of an inch. Milk duds are caramel balls covered in confectionery chocolate and are chewy.

What is the white stuff on Milk Duds? ›

Fat bloom is that waxy white coating that forms due to liquid fat like milk fats or cocoa butter moving through the chocolates and crystalizing on the surface.

Were Milk Duds a mistake? ›

How did MILK DUDS Candy get its name? As the story goes, the original manufacturer was trying to make perfectly round chocolate-covered caramels, but was unsuccessful, so they were called "duds." Although, MILK DUDS Candies have been anything but!

What are the bugs in Milk Duds? ›

Shellac is a substance collected from the secretions of the lac bug and is used in many candies to give them a pretty shine, including jelly beans, Whoppers, Milk Duds and candy corn. It is sometimes called confectioners' glaze or resinous glaze.

Are they discontinuing Milk Duds? ›

Hershey's Milk Duds

This product has been discontinued by the manufacturer and is no longer available. Sorry! We only sell this product in a case of 24.

Why did my Milk Duds turn white? ›

It's actually just a scientific process called “chocolate bloom”. There are two types of this bloom: sugar bloom and fat bloom. Sugar bloom happens when moisture comes in contact with the chocolate - it dissolves the sugar crystals on the chocolate's surface, leaving a white, powdery look.

Why do Milk Duds hurt my teeth? ›

Sticky candies like Milk Duds are especially bad because, in addition to the sugar, they tend to stick and stay on your tooth, becoming a reliable food source for the bacteria in your mouth, says Santa Clarita, California dentist Dr. Sean Kutlay, D.D.S. If you eat milk dudes, brush and floss afterwards, he suggests.

Do Milk Duds have shellac? ›

Examples of candies containing shellac include candy corn, Hershey's Whoppers and Milk Duds, Nestlé's Raisinets and Goobers, Tootsie Roll Industries's Junior Mints and Sugar Babies, Jelly Belly's jelly beans and Mint Cremes, Russell Stover's jelly beans, and several candies by Godiva Chocolatier and Gertrude Hawk.

Are you supposed to chew Milk Duds? ›

Duds, on the other hand, just sort of hang out in your mouth, offering a steady drip of sweet awesomeness to accompany the action on-screen. Another upside of their non-chewable nature is that they don't make any distracting sound.

Did Milk Duds change their recipe? ›

They haven't changed much over the years

Back in the day, Milk Duds were made with cocoa butter, which helped give the candy a creamy and rich flavor. But that's no longer the case. According to Today, Hershey changed part of the recipe for Milk Duds, along with several other of its chocolate candies, in 2008.

What did Whoppers used to be called? ›

History. In 1939, the Overland Candy Company introduced the predecessor to Whoppers, a malted milk candy called "Giants". In 1947, Overland merged with Chicago Biscuit Company, Leaf Gum, and Laf Machinery. Two years later, Leaf Brands reintroduced malted milk balls under the name of "Whoppers".

Why are duds called duds? ›

Though experts aren't sure where the word duds came from originally, they know that it was dudde in the 1300s, which meant "cloak or mantle," and later came to be duddes and to mean "ragged clothing." "Duds." Vocabulary.com Dictionary, Vocabulary.com, https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/duds. Accessed 24 May. 2024.

How were Milk Duds created? ›

Milk Duds were created in Chicago in 1928 by Edwin Holloway of F. Hoffman & Co. Holloway couldn't figure out how to make the candies into perfect spheres, so he called them “duds,” which is where the name Milk Duds comes from.

What is the process of processing milk? ›

First, farmers work to ensure their cows are happy and healthy. A cow is milked 2-3 times a day. The milk is cooled down and stored in a refrigerated tank until the milk truck picks it up and takes it to a processing location. The milk is then pasteurized, hom*ogenized, and packaged to be shipped to the grocery store.

What is the process of milk chocolate production? ›

The sugar and milk are first blended together, then they're mixed with chocolate liquor and flavorings and dried to create a substance called "milk chocolate crumb." Next, additional cocoa butter is blended with the crumb, and the mixture is sent through the standard conching and refining processes.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Frankie Dare

Last Updated:

Views: 5445

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Frankie Dare

Birthday: 2000-01-27

Address: Suite 313 45115 Caridad Freeway, Port Barabaraville, MS 66713

Phone: +3769542039359

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Baton twirling, Stand-up comedy, Leather crafting, Rugby, tabletop games, Jigsaw puzzles, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Frankie Dare, I am a funny, beautiful, proud, fair, pleasant, cheerful, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.