(re-post)
Thanks to Lindsay, Lisa, Stephanie, Olga, Google and this recipe
Recipe Ingredients:
Aluminum foil
40 saltine crackers
1 cup butter
1 cup firmly packed brown sugar
3/4 cup semisweet or milk chocolate chips
1 cup nuts, chopped
Cooking Directions:
- Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
- Place a layer of aluminum foil on a 1-inch deep cookie sheet or jelly roll pan and arrange a single layer of saltine crackers on top of the foil.
- Combine butter and brown sugar in a saucepan. Bring to a boil and cook for 3 minutes. Pour over the crackers.
- Bake for 5 minutes, or until the crackers float to the top.
- Remove from the oven and sprinkle chocolate chips on top. After the chips melt, spread evenly, and sprinkle chopped nuts on top.
- Cool; cut into 2-inch bars.
Makes 30 servings.
. It evolved! And continues to do so.........
Oven to 350 degrees
Line a cookie sheet that has a lip with foil making sure the foil comes at least 1/2 inch up the sides.
Lay 40 soda crackers (I used whole wheat; Breton are another option) on the foil, (5 x 8 fit my sheet)
In saucepan put l cup butter and l cup firmly packed brown sugar, bring to boil, cook for three minutes. (I plan to make the next batch just bringing to boil as suggested in one recipe - for a more butter tart rather than toffee result)
Pour evenly over crackers. Bake for five minutes or until crackers start floating around. Remove from oven. Coax crackers back into the rectangular shape with a spatula and then sprinkle 3/4 cup of choc chips over top, let melt, spread evenly. Sprinkle a cup of chopped nuts over top. Cool and cut into squares (remove foil first!). Or put entire sheet into freezer for thirty minutes (once it has cooled), take out, peel off foil, break candy into pieces.
Store somehow - I have mine presently in frig -when they are not out being 'tested'. (Hey, maybe they go stale and one would need to know this before giving to company or as a gift.) An airtight container seems another option but I am wondering if the pieces would stick together at room temperature.
They are delicious!
Posted on December 11, 2006 at 09:57 AM | Permalink
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