Last week during our usual walk around South Austin, Todd and I stumbled upon a pecan tree that had just dropped some pecans. We picked up a few and kept walking until we hit another tree...then another, and another. Each tree seemed to have dropped more nuts than the next! We picked up as many as we could, then spent a few hours trying to remove their shells with a wrench because we didn't own a nutcracker.
A few days later we returned to the same area and found enough pecans to justify spending $4.00 on a nutcracker. Even with an actual nutcracker, shelling pecans is a lot of work, but a few tricks we found on the Internet such as cracking near the tip first and storing the pecans overnight before shelling were helpful. Eventually, we had enough pecans to make this caramel corn.
Pecan Caramel Corn
I was going to call this Pecan Pie Caramel Corn, but it doesn't really taste like pecan pie at all, so I added pretzels and gave it this highly imaginative name. The recipe is the perfect size because it fills one roasting pan, but still leaves enough room for stirring. Most recipes say to boil caramel corn coating for 5 minutes, but I've made this one several times now using a three minute boil, so I feel safe recommending that.
Recipe
Pecan Pretzel Caramel Corn
Ingredients
- 8 cups popped popcorn I popped mine in a brown bag in the microwave
- ¾ cup pecan halves
- 8 large pretzels (or use some minis) broken into chunks
- 4 tablespoons unsalted butter cut into chunks, softened
- ¼ cup packed dark brown sugar
- ¼ cup granulated sugar
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 2 tablespoons corn syrup
- ¼ to ½ teaspoon vanilla extract**
- ¼ teaspoon baking soda
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 250 degrees F. and grease a large roasting pan.
- Put the popcorn, pecans and pretzels in the roasting pan.
- Combine the softened butter, both sugars, salt and corn syrup in a 2 quart saucepan and bring to a steady boil. Allow the mixture to boil for 3 minutes.
- Remove from heat and stir in the soda and vanilla. Pour the mixture evenly over the popcorn mixture and stir to coat.
- Bake at 250 for 1 hour, stirring every 20 minutes. Let the corn cool completely (it will crisp as it cools)
Sue says
That looks delicious. I cannot even imagine how good a pecan that fresh must taste.
Anna says
I'll have to try that with some of the softer nuts. These little guys are pretty tough, but they do seem to be softening somewhat with age. I need to study up on my pecan harvesting techniques ;).
RunnerGirl says
Looks great! I visited family in TX several years ago & on their property there were several pecan trees that were dropping nuts everywhere! Our uncle showed us how to crack them by holding one in each palm and then pushing them hard together - some were easier than others to crack, but it worked pretty reliably.
Anna says
It's addictive! I just found another fun recipe for caramel corn that uses melted Bits o' Brickle. Might try it right now since it's Christmas Even and I'm afraid to leave the house ;).
Baby June says
Mmm, that looks awesome! Love the addition of pretzels, salty sweet heaven right there 🙂