Tablet (confectionery)

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Tablet

A tablet (often also butter tablet , Scottish : Taiblet ) is a Scottish confectionery .

For the production, sugar, milk or condensed milk and butter are heated to approx. 115 ° C so that a crystallization process begins. The viscous mass is then poured into a flat container and, after cooling, cut into mostly square pieces. The result is similar to fudge , but has a brittle, grainy texture. Vanilla, whiskey or nuts can be added as flavoring ingredients. In industrial production, dairy products are often replaced by fondant for reasons of cost .

The dessert tablet has been known since at least the 18th century. The confectionery is first mentioned by name in the household book of Grizel Baillie, a Scottish nobleman whose book, which was kept between 1692 and 1746, was published in 1911. The original recipe used egg white or cream instead of milk and butter.

Individual evidence

  1. Scottish specialties - really delicious! In: schottland-guide.com. Retrieved July 24, 2016 .
  2. Felicity Cloake: How to make the perfect tablet. In: The Guardian . January 22, 2014, accessed July 24, 2016 .
  3. Grizel Baillie: Lady Grisell Baillie's Household Book . Scottish History Society, Edinburgh 1911, p. 88 .
  4. Tablet. Dictionary of the Scots Language, accessed July 24, 2016 .