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   » » Wiki: Honeycomb Toffee
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Honeycomb toffee, honeycomb candy, sponge toffee, cinder toffee, seafoam, or hokey pokey is a sugary with a light, rigid, sponge-like texture. Its main ingredients are typically (or , or ) and , sometimes with an acid such as . The baking soda and acid react to form which is trapped in the highly viscous mixture. When acid is not used, thermal decomposition of the baking soda releases carbon dioxide. The sponge-like structure is formed while the sugar is liquid, then the toffee sets hard. The candy goes by a variety of names and regional variants.

Owing to its relatively simple recipe and quick preparation time, in some regions it is often made at home, and is a popular for children. It is also made commercially and sold in small blocks, or covered in , a popular example being the bar of Britain and Canada, or the of Australia.


Regional names
Honeycomb toffee is known by a wide variety of names including:
  • cinder toffee in Britain. Cinder toffee is a variant of honeycomb, created by cooking the sugar longer and often using specific traditional ingredients like golden syrup to produce a richer, more robustly caramelized flavor and a rustic, crunchy-and-chewy texture.
  • fairy food candy or angel food candy in
  • hokey pokey in New Zealand
  • honeycomb in South Africa, Australia, Britain, Ireland, , and , United States
  • old fashioned puff in
  • puff candy in ScotlandS.W.R.I. (1977). S.W.R.I. Jubilee Cookery Book. Edinburgh: Scottish Women's Rural Institutes; Reprint of 8th Edition (1968), p179
  • sponge candy in , , St. Paul, , Northwest Pennsylvania, and Western New York
  • sponge toffee ( "tire éponge") in Canada
  • Turkish honey ("törökméz") in Hungary


In various cultures

China
In China, it is called fēngwōtáng (蜂窩糖; "honeycomb candy"). It is said to be a popular type of confectionery enjoyed during childhood of the post-80s.


Hungary
In Hungary, it is known as törökméz (Turkish honey) and is commonly sold at town fairs.


Japan
The same confection is a traditional sweet in Japan known as karumeyaki, a portmanteau of the Portuguese word caramelo (caramel) and the Japanese word yaki (to bake), and thus can be roughly translated into English as "baked caramel" or '"grilled caramel." It is typically hand-made, and often sold by street vendors.

In Japan, raw egg whites are mixed with the baking soda to make the final product have a puffed up, dome shape.


South Korea
() is a Korean candy made with melted and . It was a popular street snack in the 1970s and 1980s, and is still eaten as a retro food.


New Zealand
Honeycomb toffee is known as hokey pokey (especially in the Kiwi classic Hokey Pokey ice cream) in New Zealand. A very popular ice-cream flavour consisting of plain vanilla ice cream with small, solid lumps of honeycomb toffee is also known as hokey pokey. It is also used to make hokey pokey biscuits.


Taiwan
In Taiwan, it is called swollen sugar (膨糖, péngtáng or 椪糖, pèngtáng).

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