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If you love those Butterscotch Squares from your favorite candy shop…this recipe is for you! It’s a copycat recipe – a soft brown sugar candy covered in chocolate. The perfect candy recipe!
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I’ve mentioned before about my See’s Candy addiction. Growing up, a pound lasted less than a day. The chocolate factory is in my hometown, so that whenever I smell the inside of See’s store, I think I’m home.
If I had to pick one kind of See’s Candy to eat for the rest of my life it would be the Butterscotch Square (or the maple truffles). There would be no deliberation, hesitation, or hemming and hawing. Butterscotch Squares: they’re my favorite!
The boxes of See’s we’d get when I was a kid came with one butterscotch square. And it was mine – always. Everyone knew to back away from the square. My mom got the divinity, my dad the bordeaux. Me? I got the butterscotch square.
Of course, in true Dorothy fashion (and since I didn’t know the name for the longest time), called them brown sugar squares. I’d polish it off and then tell everyone I knew how much I hated butterscotch. Yes, I’ve learned the error of my ways. Butterscotch and me, we’re BFFs. And now I’ve made a copy cat of my favorite candy. So you can make it at home.
Ingredients Needed
The base of the recipe is a cooked mixture of unsalted butter, brown sugar and heavy whipping cream. When that trifecta boils together, you get a rich butterscotch candy.
Have you ever heard of penuche? This recipe is very similar to penuche candy/fudge. The difference is the amount of powdered sugar used at the end.
How to make Butterscotch Squares
I did a lot of searching online for a copycat recipe and kept coming up with the same base recipe (some with just a few changes or additions) over and over. I finally traced it back to the oldest one I could find, but I’m not sure where that one came from.
I do recommend using a candy thermometer for this recipe. The recipe I used as a guideline just gave times, and the first time I made this it really did not turn out. The candy has to cook to 236°F for it to set up properly and it’s too hard to gauge that without a thermometer.
Once the candy is cooked you let it set in a 9-inch square pan lined with foil or parchment paper. Once it’s set you cut it into 64 squares and coat them with chocolate.
Tip From Dorothy
Expert Tips
- Use a large kitchen knife to cut the candy.
- Remove the candy from the pan using the foil. Cut it in quarters.
- Cut each quarter into slices, then cut each slice into squares. Make small cuts to avoid breaking the candy.
- I prefer using Ghiradelli candy melts – they taste the best. If you can’t find them, use Candiquik.
- Store these in an airtight container for up to a week in the refrigerator or freeze for up to a month.
Butterscotch Squares Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 cups (400g) packed brown sugar
- ¾ cup (177ml) heavy whipping cream
- 6 tablespoons (84g) unsalted butter
- ½ teaspoon vanilla
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 1 cup (113g) powdered sugar
- 16 ounces chocolate melts
Instructions
- Line a 9×9” pan with foil and spray with nonstick cooking spray.
- Place brown sugar, cream, and butter in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Stir until melted. Bring to a rolling boil, then reduce heat to low and place a candy thermometer in the pot.
- Stir occasionally and simmer until the mixture reaches 236º, about 7-8 minutes. Turn off heat and stir in vanilla and salt. Whisk in powdered sugar. Pour into prepared pan and allow to set at room temperature (a few hours, but this can be done the day ahead).
- When ready to cut, remove from pan. Use a large kitchen knife and cut the square into quarters. From here, use small cuts to cut them into small squares (about 16 squares per quarter).
- Melt chocolate according to package directions and dip each square, tapping off excess. Place on a wax paper lined cookie sheet and chill to set.
Recipe Video
Recipe Notes
- Be sure to use small but swift cuts. The candy can be fragile and is prone to flaking and breaking, so a quick cut will make the candy stay together.
- Read my post about dipping chocolate easily for tips.
- Store in an airtight container for up to 1 week in the refrigerator.
- You can freeze the candy, but know the chocolate might dull when defrosted.
Recipe Nutrition
Favorite Candy Recipes
I make this regularly to give as gifts. But I cool it in the fridge and when it has set up but still soft-ish, I cut it with a pizza cutter. Then, when it’s fully firmed up it can be removed from the pan and dipped in chocolate.
I want the recipe for butter scotch squares that we used to get in school. There was no chocolate or nuts in it at all. There was no peanut butter either.
There’s no peanut butter in this either, so you can just make it as is, but skip the chocolate.
Great recipe, I followed it with the exception of dark brown sugar instead of light. I also poured the hot mixture into silicone gummy molds instead of a pan, then inserted toothpicks for easy chocolate dipping and not messing up cutting the squares and having them break up. Only thing I want to change is to try to thin out the chocolate a little, so the coating isnโt as thick.
Iโve made these a few times and theyโre delicious! My question is could you pour the hot liquid into silicone molds (like for gummies) instead of a parchment lines pan? Iโm thinking this might cut down on the breakage and crumbling.
Yes you definitely can!
Would this work with half & half or does it need to be whipping cream?
I haven’t tried it with half and half, and I think it needs to be the cream.
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