T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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569.1 | MIGHT I ADD... | JUNIOR::PRESTO | | Wed Apr 01 1987 13:02 | 2 |
| I FORGOT TO MENTION THE CHOCOLATE PUDDING!
|
569.2 | {HOPE THIS HELPS} | FRSBEE::TRUMPOLT | | Fri Apr 03 1987 11:50 | 5 |
| THERE IS A RECIPE FOR FANTASY FUDGE ON THE LABEL OF KRAFT
MARSHMALLOW FLUFF. THE ONLY THING IT DOES NOT CALL FOR
CHOCOLATE PUDDING, BUT IT IS VERY EASY AND HARDNES IN
ABOUT 2 HOURS. I MAKE THIS ALL THE TIME AND IT HAS A
VERY CREAMY TEXTURE TO IT WHEN SOLID.
|
569.3 | | BUFFER::MILLER | Silents, Please... | Fri Apr 03 1987 18:34 | 9 |
| Most food companies offer recipe books - check the labels on some
pudding, marshmallow fluff and evaporated milk products for a mailing
address. If you don't find what you're looking for there you may
want to contact Jello pudding directly (chances are they're the
ones that promoted the recipe). I used to work in the food industry
and most companies have customer service departments that chase
down just such requests.
|
569.4 | toll free # at JELL-O (tm) | GENRAL::KILGORE | Utah Desert Rat | Sat Jan 02 1988 23:38 | 10 |
| While at the grocery store today, I bought a pkg of JELL-O (tm) instant
pudding and on it was a toll free number for questions or comments.
You might want to try this number to see if they might have such
a recipe available.
Call: 1-800-431-1001 9-4 EST during weekdays (Cont US only)
Good Luck!
Judy
|
569.11 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Tue Feb 07 1989 18:27 | 2 |
| In some foreign parts it's called marshmallow creme.
|
569.12 | Other Uses of Marshmallow Creme | PENPAL::CLEMINSHAW | | Tue Feb 14 1989 13:15 | 57 |
| One of the commercial products is called "Fluff" and can usually
be found with the peanut butter in a supermarket. Now you want
to know why in the world it's with the peanut butter, right?
Well, if you are unfamiliar with the concept of marshmellow fluff in the
first place, this may come as a shock, but one of the most popular
applications ever discovered for the use of marshmellow fluff is
to put it on a peanut butter sandwich. (I imagine that this was
a marketing ploy thought up by the advertisers of Fluff, trying
to find something to do with their product other than put it inside
of e-z fudge.)
The sandwich is called a "Fluffernutter," and is
one of life's great guilty pleasures. As a kid in school, I was always
tremendously jealous of the kid whose mother ALLOWED him to eat
those things, would even let him be seen publicly in the lunchroom
with a nicely wax-paper wrapped Fluffernutter. In my household,
you had to hit my mother at a very vulnerable moment in the grocery
store, persuading her to let you have it just this once, or sneak
it into the cart and onto the counter without her noticing, and
then you had to pretty much eat it on the sly since Mom did not
consider Fluffernutters to be actual food, which of course they
aren't.
Because getting to eat a peanut-butter sandwich with
marshmellow creme on it represented such a triumph of childhood wiliness
over parental judgement, it remains an emotionally-charged food
for many of us. I have a friend who was going to a local college
and living at home, when his parents (professors) went on a sabbatical.
He was left to his own culinary devices.
His lunches for that entire semester consisted of not one but TWO
fluffernutters, made with not only the forbidden marshmellow creme
but the VERBOTEN smooth peanut-butter made with vast amounts of
dextrose that comes in a plastic tub with the little elephants dancing
around the side. I can somehow imagine him on the day before his
mother came back, scraping out the last of the Teddy Smooth from
the plastic tub and trying to get one more sandwich's worth of goo
out of the Fluff jar, grinning, but knowing this was his last chance.
Now that he's on his own, I doubt he keeps a steady supply of Fluff
around; it was just the concept of having 6 months worth of Fluff
marching through his mother's kitchen that was the point of eating
all those sandwiches.
If you decide to try one yourself, be aware that it probably does
not taste as good as it would when accompanied by a memory of your
mother saying "NO YOU MAY NOT" in a loud voice about 2 feet over
your head. And a warning -- Fluff made a product a few years ago
called RASPBERRY Fluff, which was, I assume, Fluff's attempt to
make itself more like a jam (jam being acceptable to mothers because
it contains a natural ingredient buried in the sugar). It was as
pink and viscous as masticated Bazooka gum and tasted horrible.
Guess how I found out. :)
P.
|
569.13 | How to creme - become a boxer! | GIDDAY::KOTWAL | Ain't no flies of us - Mate! | Tue Feb 14 1989 18:37 | 8 |
| As I've already mentioned to Peigi, (.12), marshmellow creme doesn't
seem to be readily available here. Cultural differences and all
that jazz...
So, given the fact that you can get normal marshmellow balls in
a packet - how does one creme them.... On a stove ????
Rashid.
|
569.14 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Wed Feb 15 1989 08:56 | 9 |
|
Rep .13
If I remember right there is a recipe for "marshmallow fluff"
somewhere in this conference. Why don't you do a search for the
word "fluff" and see if you can find it.
-mike
|
569.15 | Or a stiff meringue? | GIVEME::JOY | Gotta get back to Greece! | Wed Feb 15 1989 13:52 | 5 |
| In an emergency you could always try making a VERY stiff meringue.
It seems to be the closest thing I've ever made to Fluff.
Debbie
|
569.16 | | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Wed Feb 15 1989 14:16 | 18 |
| Re .12
You really brought back some childhood memories. I'm sitting in
my assigned workstation right now absolutely craving a Fluffernutter
sandwich. An important point I seem to remember from the good
ol' days. My mom used to keep the stuff on hand in the winter so
that we could put 1/4 teaspoon of the stuff into our hot chocolate.
Every now and then though, you could convince mom to let you have
a Fluffernutter sandwich for lunch. And I remember sitting in the
kitchen putting about an inch of fluff on one piece of bread, and
then spreading the peanut butter on the other slice of bread so
thin that it was near almost invisible. Us kids would have preferred
a straight Fluff sandwich (only made on Wonder Bread, has to be
fresh) but we could never have gotten mom to agree to that.
And as a final point, I _Liked_ Raspberry fluff.
-Nancy
|
569.17 | | BOEHM::C_SANDSTROM | | Wed Feb 15 1989 16:06 | 6 |
| True confession time....
I *like* the pink fluff - and you can still get it at
Victory market in Ayer!
Conni
|
569.18 | Just what is in this stuff, anyhow? | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Feb 17 1989 12:22 | 6 |
| Maybe I don't really want to know the answer, but...
Just what (besides SUGAR) are marshmallows, not to mention gooey
marshmallow fluff, made out of, anyhow? I never was much of an eater
of these gooey suagr things, except toasted over the campfire at Girl
Scouts.
|
569.19 | The kind of thing you try *once*. | BOOKIE::AITEL | Everyone's entitled to my opinion. | Fri Feb 17 1989 13:24 | 14 |
| Cornstarch. There's a recipe for them in Joy of Cooking (of course),
if you really want the lowdown. I made it once. In my mother's
kitchen. She went overseas for a year after that. (no, not really,
but she must've wanted to!) I made the mistake of taking the wooden
spoon out of the pot and walking across the kitchen to the sink
with spoon in hand, not noticing that there was a string of sticky
glop following me all the way. *I* had to wash that floor!
And the pot wasn't fun either.
And the marshmallows turned out tasting like marshmallows, but
the texture was more like well aged salt water taffy.
--Louise
|
569.20 | beware egg whites | VIDEO::BENOIT | | Wed Feb 22 1989 12:42 | 8 |
| marshmellows and marshmellow fluff taste similar but fluff contains
egg whites and would act differently in a recipe. This info also
included for those who are allergic to egg and want to avoid a
late night trip to the emergency room :-) A kid who knows they can
eat marshmellows will think they can eat fluff.( voice of experience)
|
569.21 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Sun Sep 10 1989 22:49 | 7 |
| RE: .18
Marshmallows were originally made out of sugar and the (apparently quite sweet)
flour made from the root of a plant called the marsh mallow. These days,
they're made from processed sugar instead.
--PSW
|
569.22 | CREME vs. FLUFF | CPDW::LALIBERTE | CIS Systems Engineering | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:25 | 6 |
| we have a fudge recipe that calls for marshmallow 'creme'.
is this different from marshmallow 'fluff' ?
-------------------------------------------------------------------
if so, where can i find marshmallow CREME ?
|
569.23 | | BUSY::MANDILE | Hold you, with tears in my eyes.... | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:23 | 1 |
| Same thing....
|
569.24 | Keep Looking - there is a difference! | CPDW::MCCLURE | | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:58 | 14 |
| Keep looking! There is indeed a difference ...
I'm not sure where to find it either, but there is definitely a
difference between marshmellow "creme" and marshmellow "fluff". My mother
makes a Fudge recipe that calls for marshmellow creme. I gave this recipe
out a couple of years ago, and the person I gave it to substituted
marshmellow "fluff" for the "creme", and it did not come out right.
The consistency of the two products is quite different. The "creme" is
indeed very creamy, and the "fluff" is quite airy.
I believe Kraft sells it out West (Idaho to be exact), but I have not
been able to find it sold in New England.
Good Luck!
|
569.25 | with the ice cream stuff? | CUPMK::CLEMINSHAW | Conanne | Tue Dec 01 1992 21:46 | 4 |
| I'll bet marshmallow creme is the topping for ice cream. Maybe you'd
find it in the ice cream toppings section.
Peigi
|
569.26 | Fluff is not creme | POWDML::CORMIER | | Wed Dec 02 1992 08:56 | 4 |
| Yup, I made the same mistake with a fudge recipe. Fluff has more air
in it. I found creme exactly where suggested previously (near the hot
fudge topping), made by Kraft.
Sarah
|
569.27 | BJ's has it | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:08 | 5 |
| I found Marshmallow Creme at BJ's in Westboro, MA.
Bummer, tho, I was going to use it for fugde that called for Fluff....
~beth
|
569.28 | a different perspective... | STUDIO::ROBBINS | | Thu Dec 10 1992 11:59 | 12 |
| I grew up in the west and we always made fudge using Kraft Marshmallow
creme. They have a different product, ice cream topping, which is more
pourable. In fact, the creme bottle used to carry instructions to make
the topping (something complicated like mixing with hot water).
Now that I live in the east, I use the same recipe from childhood and
use the marshmallow fluff that I find in the markets here. I guess I
haven't noticed a difference, and neither has my husband, also a
"westerner". Maybe I haven't been paying attention, but the Kraft
marshmallow creme and eastern "fluff" don't seem all that different to
me. Except now we make lots of fluffernutters.
|
569.29 | | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Thu Dec 10 1992 14:14 | 5 |
| I used the Marshmallow Creme this weekend in Peanut Butter Fudge. It
came out just fine. I normally use the Fluff, but didn't notice any
different in the fudge, texture or flavor wise.
~beth
|
569.30 | Marshmallow Fruit Dip | BAGELS::BAROUD | | Mon Jan 11 1993 14:29 | 12 |
| This dip is really good any any fresh fruit (especially watermelon and
cantaloup).
Marshmallow Fluff
Cream Cheese
Milk
Mix equal parts of Marshmallow Fluff with the cream cheese. Add small
amounts of milk until smooth and creamy. Serve with lots of fresh
fruit.
Try it--its really good!
|
569.31 | A source in New Hampshire... | CSSSEC::WHITCOMB | | Fri Jan 15 1993 08:43 | 3 |
| For those of you in New Hampshire looking for marshmallow CREME, Walmart on 101A
in Amherst, NH carries it. It's the marshmallow creme that is similar to Fluff,
not the ice cream topping.
|
569.32 | Believe it or not... | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Fri Jan 15 1993 09:08 | 9 |
| you can get Kraft Marshmallow Fluff in the UK.
For those of you who have disgustingly evil sweet and cookie recipes
requiring this disgustingly evil stuff then you can certainly buy it
from the Savacentre at Theale, jsut off J11 of the M4.
As in the US, its buy the peanut butter and jams.
Angus
|
569.33 | Angus, tell us how you REALLY feel! | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Fri Jan 15 1993 15:00 | 6 |
| Ummm, Angus.... would it be fair to assume you don't go for Fluff?
Nothing's better than a PB and Fluff sandwich!! I haven't had one in
ages!!
~Beth
|
569.34 | No not wild about Fluff :-) | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Mon Jan 18 1993 05:01 | 12 |
| Beth,
Its fair to say that I do not have a sweet tooth. My wife does, and was
overjoyed to discover Fluff in the local store. Also the whole close
where we live also seems to have a sweet tooth. She made plates of
cookies and sweets for our neighbours this christmas. I have it on good
authority from all of them that the sweeties made with the Fluff were
disgustingly good.
My son and I stuck to the peanut brittle.
Angus
|
569.35 | LaDonna's sweeties are good | ROCKS::DAVIDSON | | Mon Jan 18 1993 09:29 | 11 |
| Angus,
All the sweeties were excellent! I don't know which ones were made with
fluff but I'll be after some recipes next time I see LaDonna. Maybe
you'd like to include the recipes in this file so everyone here can
enjoy the goodies as well. (pretty please).
Cheers,
Mary
|
569.36 | Marshmallow cream/fluff fudge | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Fri Jan 22 1993 04:40 | 24 |
| Wotcha Mary,
Fancy meeting you here. LaDonna's disgustingly good Marshmallow Fluff
(cream) Fudge.
Combine 1 jar marshmallow fluff, 1 1/2 cups sugar, 2/3 cup evaporated
milk, 1/4 cup butter or margarine and 1/4 teasp. salt. Over moderate
heat, bring to *full boil* stirring all the time. Boil for 5 minutes
over moderate heat and stirring constantly. Remove from heat. Add one
12-oz (2 cups) Nestle semi-sweet chocolate morsels and stir until
melted. Then stir in 1/2 cup chopped nuts, 1 teasp. vanilla. Pour into
greased 8" square pan. Chill till firm.
Notes: Although the recipe called for Marshmallow cream, LaDonna used
Marshmallow Fluff. The recipe says a jar of this stuff weighs in at
5-oz to 10-oz.
She also substituted 1 pkt of Sainsbury's Milk chocolate drops and 1
pkt of Sainsbury's plain chocolate drops for the Nestle semi-sweet
chocolate morsels. She used the cooking chocolate drops, but after last
week's food and drink program we will be looking very carefully at the
cocoa content of cooking chocolate from now on.
Angus
|
569.37 | Any marshmallows recipe ??? | VAXRIO::63463::CAMACHO | Luis Camacho | Thu Aug 31 1995 15:14 | 12 |
| Folks,
Although not being a tradition, down here in Brazil, my son and daughter are
curious of trying marshmallows.
Would any of you have a recipe for traditional marshmallows (the ones thtat
are roasted in a fireplace) ??
Thanks in advance,
Luis Camacho
DLS - Brazil
|
569.38 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Aug 31 1995 16:30 | 6 |
| re: <<< Note 569.37 by VAXRIO::63463::CAMACHO "Luis Camacho" >>>
I tried to send you mail but was unable to reach the above address.
Can you Email me directly so that I can attempt replying?
-Jack
|