sugar plum

{{About|the candy|the plants called sugarplums|sugarplum (disambiguation)}}

{{Short description|Hard candy}}

{{Infobox food

| name = Sugar plum

| image = File:Santa Claus Sugar Plums, 1868.png

| caption = Confection label, showing Santa Claus on sleigh with reindeer (1868)

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| course =

| type = Dragée or comfit

| served =

| main_ingredient = fruit, nuts, and sugar

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| no_recipes = True

| no_commons = True

}}

File:Sugar Plum Candy.jpg

Sugar plums are a type of dragée or other hard candy made into small round or oval shapes.Ward, Artimas. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070629090418/http://digital.lib.msu.edu/projects/cookbooks/coldfusion/display.cfm?ID=ency&PageNum=617 The Grocer's Encyclopedia].{{dead link|date=November 2024}} New York: 1911. The plum in the name of these confections does not always mean plum in the sense of the fruit, but rather their small size and spherical or oval shape. Traditional sugar plums often contained no fruit, instead being made mostly of pure sugar.{{cite web |title=Sugar Plums: They're Not What You Think They Are |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2010/12/sugar-plums-theyre-not-what-you-think-they-are/68385/ |date=December 22, 2010 |work= The Atlantic }} These candies were comfits, and often surrounded a seed, nut, or spice.{{cite news| url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/13/sugar-plums_n_2272029.html | work= Huffington Post | title=Sugar Plums: What Are They, Anyway? | date=13 December 2012}}

History

The menu for Henry IV of England's 1403 wedding feast included sugar plums, which were probably fruit preserves or suckets.{{page needed|date=April 2020}}

A cookbook from 1609, Delights for Ladies, describes boiling fruits with sugar as “the most kindly way to preserve plums.”{{cite magazine|url=https://time.com/4606739/history-sugarplums/|title=The History That Explains Those 'Visions of Sugarplums'|date=December 21, 2016|access-date=April 12, 2020|magazine=Time|first=Emelyn|last=Rude}} The term sugar plum was applied to a wide variety of candied fruits, nuts, and roots by the 16th century.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ETluYRHyjKwC|first=Tim|last=Richardson|title=Sweets: A History of Candy|publisher=Bloomsbury|year=2008|isbn=9781596918900}}{{page needed|date=April 2020}} In this period, sugar plums were often made from unripe fruits, often still with their stones, as ripe fruits were more difficult to candy; the name sugar plum may have referred to pieces of wire inserted into the fruit for decoration and ease of handling.{{page needed|date=April 2020}}

The term sugar plum came into general usage in the 17th century. During that time, adding layers of sweet which give sugar plums and comfits their hard shell was done through a slow and labor-intensive process called panning. Before mechanization of the process, it often took several days, and thus the sugar plum was largely a luxury product. In fact, in the 18th century the word plum became British slang for a large pile of moneyc1728: '...those even that had nothing at the Revolution had the reputation after of being worth one hundred, and others two hundred thousand pounds. The first sum was christened one plum, and the last, two...' Thomas, Earl of Ailesbury: Memoirs (1890) volume II, p.499 or a bribe."...sugar-plum makers are as numerous in the Parisian Lombard-street, as are the traffickers in douceurs of a more substantial character in its namesake in London." "New Year's Day In Paris," The Times [London, England] 1 January 1823, p.3.

In his Compleat History of Drugs (1712), Pierre Pomet attributed medical benefits to sugar and provided instructions for making sweets, but dismissed sugar plums as "frivolous".{{page needed|date=April 2020}} By the 1860s manufacturers were using steam heat and mechanized rotating pans, and it was then available for mass consumption.

Today, some candy manufacturers have taken sugar plum literally, creating plum-flavored, plum-shaped candies and marketing them as sugar plum candy.{{cn|date=November 2022}}

Another 21st-century take on the sugar plum instructs home cooks to combine dried fruits and almonds with honey and aromatic seeds (anise, fennel, caraway, cardamom), form this mixture into balls, then coat in sugar or shredded coconut.{{cite web

| last = Brown

| first = Alton

| title = Sugarplums Recipe

| publisher = Good Eats

| year = 2009

| url = http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/sugarplums-recipe/index.html}}

See also

References