Hi, I made lollies for a living for nearly 15 years. The recipe is 1 cups granulated sugar
1/3 c. white corn syrup
1/2 c. water (Cook to 305 degrees) , remove from heat and
add 1/4 to 1 teas OIL-BASED FLAVORING and food color
to match flavor, such as red for strawberry, yellow for lemon, and white with pink or blue streaks for cotton candy. Be sure to stir only until sugar is disolved, then keep track of thermometer. Mixture will be light yellow as all moisture has been cooked out. While mixture is cooking prepare lolly molds by putting in sticks and spraying lightly with Pam. Pour hot mixture into molds that are layed out on marble slab or very heavy griddle. Allow to cool before removing molds ,bag, seal, and label This recipe makes 10 one ounce lollies. May be frozen or left at room temperature and will keep for months, but do not refrigerate. If you have no molds, mixture may be poured onto heavy cookie sheet, cooled and broken into hard candy pieces simply by banging it on table or counter or tapping it with metal spatula or knife. We often use this process for peppermint, spearmint, hot cinnamon at Christmastime. When mixture will no longer pour, do not try to make it come out of pan. The only way to get it out is to reheat slightly (It will burn easily) or run lots of water in the pan. We used cheap aluminum 2 quart sauce pans for our production and would have 4 pans cooking at all times all day long, often making 600-750 lollies per day. If you get into them this big, I suggest that you do not make too many different flavors in a day, as your home becomes very scented. Also, never , never make more than a triple batch--use 3 qt. saucepan if you make triple batch) They bubble up high when first cooking and also you cannot pour out into molds more than this before they set and without your arms hurting. Be very careful as this is very hot and can burn deeply.
I purchased the flavorings from a Utah supplier and the flavoring was the most expensive part of the candy, running $4.00 to $30.00 an ounce, however an ounce goes a long way, making at least 100 lollies. (I actually bought in pints in later years.)
I don't know how old your little girl is, but be sure she keeps her distance. My children made them themselves at 8 to 10 years old, but they had grown up around them.
evelyns helper:
I have been looking for the recipe for candy lollipops that I used to have in an old Betty Crocker cookbook. It has been at least 30 years since I had that particular edition and I cannot find the recipe in any new editions. The lollipops were made using light corn syrup and a candy thermometer and other ingredients that I cannot remember.Your help locating this recipe would be greatly appreciated as I would love to make them with my little girl. Thank you
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