Fondant
Fondant is a confection used as a filling or coating for cakes, pastries, and candies or sweets. In its simplest form, it is sugar and water cooked to a point where, upon cooling, it can be worked into an opaque mass of creamy consistency. Typically, glucose is added to prevent the syrup from graining while cooking. Corn syrup is probably the most common form of glucose used.
Related Topics:
Confection - Cakes - Pastries - Candies - Sweets - Sugar - Water - Glucose - Syrup - Corn syrup
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The finished product solidifies and may be stored until needed, when reheating returns it to a liquid state. As a liquid it may be poured into molds, or over cakes and pastries as a form of icing. The word fondant comes from the Old French fondre and Latin fundere, meaning "to melt."
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In an intermediate temperature between liquid and firmly solid, fondant may be rolled or molded. In this state it is often used for making "cream"-filled chocolates, and elaborate cake decoration.
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Cherries or other fruits preserved in liqueurs or syrups are dipped in liquid fondant, which is then allowed to solidify. When the fruits are subsequently dipped in chocolate for an outer hard shell, the fondant liquifies again inside the chocolate.
Related Topics:
Cherries - Fruits - Liqueurs
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Fondant may be used as a substitute for chocolate in coatings for candies, either as mock white chocolate, or with chocolate added to the fondant, as a chocolate-like covering.
Related Topics:
Chocolate - White chocolate
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When used as an icing for cakes, petit fours, and certain pastries, fondant is often put over a base layer of marzipan.
Related Topics:
Petit fours - Marzipan
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