You can plant old-fashioned candy
Associated Press
Friday, October 23, 2009

With harvest season winding down, it's time for dessert. How about some candy, real candy, from the garden?

Marshmallows, anyone?

Of course you can't just pluck a squishy marshmallow from a marshmallow bush or tree. But marshmallows - real marshmallows - were originally made from the candied roots of a plant. And that plant is appropriately called "marsh mallow."

DIGGING FOR MARSHMALLOWS: You can grow marsh mallow, and if you do, now would be a good time to dig up a few pieces of root, candy them, and compare them with the fluffy product sold under the same name in plastic bags.

Those bagged marshmallows, incidentally, are no longer made from marsh mallow roots. They are made from a mixture of sugars, egg whites and gelatin beaten together.

As you scratch into the soil at the base of a marsh mallow plant, the resemblance of marsh mallow roots to marshmallow candy becomes immediately apparent. It doesn't take long for a plant to develop fat white roots. Even after only a couple of years, roots might get as fat as ¾ inches in diameter, radiating out just below the soil surface.

You can chop off a couple of these roots, bring them into the kitchen, scrape them clean, then slice them into marshmallow-size rounds ... well, miniature marshmallow-size rounds. Back in the garden, the plant hardly knows it's had a few roots removed.

CANDY TIME: The candying process, which is described in old cookbooks for things such as citron peels and angelica roots, works well for marsh mallow roots. The process begins with boiling the root pieces to soften them. This step takes about ½ hour.

The next step is to pour off the water and cover the marshmallows-to-be with a syrup made by heating a mixture of 2 parts sugar to 1 part water. If nothing else, homemade marshmallows rival the commercial ones for sweetness.

Finally, root pieces are boiled in the syrup until almost all the liquid evaporates. Once everything cools and hardens a bit, why not assemble a taste panel to see how these old-fashioned, real marshmallows sit on modern palates?

Besides being super sweet, these old-fashioned marshmallows will probably be a bit tough, but they should have a squishiness that bears a vague resemblance to the store-bought product.

From the Friday, October 23, 2009 edition of the Augusta Chronicle
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