Leatherwood
honeycomb
Honestly,
you
should
feel
like
a
wizard
after
making
honeycomb.
Shatteringly
crisp
bubbles
formed
by
the
perfectly
timed
addition
of
bicarbonate
of
soda
into
perfectly
cooked
dark
amber
caramel – it’s
seriously
sweet
sorcery!
I’m
not
gonna
lie
to
you
though – it
has
taken
me
a
lot
of
burnt
honeycomb
to
learn
how
to
get
it
right.
This
recipe
is
for
my
18-year-old
pastry
chef
self,
standing
in
front
of
a
tray
(after
tray)
of
acrid
failure.
You
can
make
this
with
a
standard
honey,
but
try
honey
that
has
interesting
spicy,
resiny
or
super
floral
notes,
like
leatherwood,
reflecting
the
bees’
nectaral
noshings.
Water,
air
and
humidity
are
honeycomb’s
kryptonite,
making
it
soften
and
melt,
so
the
freezer
is
the
best
and
driest
place
to
store
it.
Hot
tip:
read
the
Caramel
control
notes
(page 268)
before
making
this.
If
you
understand
caramel,
you’ll
feel
confident
with
honeycomb.
Spray
a
23
cm
(9
in)
shallow
baking
tray
or
cake
tin
with
cooking
oil
spray
and
line
with
a
pie
ce
of
baking
paper.
Don’t
spray
again.
Fat
will
break
down
and
soften
the
caramel,
so
keep
it
away
from
oil,
sprays
and
butter
while
it
sets.
Designate
a
spacious
area
close
by
the
stove
to
mix
later,
and
set
up
your
lined
tray
on
a
cooling
rack.
Weigh
the
bicarb
into
a
small
bowl
and
crush
any
lumps
with
the
back
of
a
spoon.
Grab
a
stiff
plastic
spatula.
Set
both
in
your
designated
honeycomb
area.
Apart
from
the
bicarb,
place
all
the
remaining
ingredients
into
a
20
cm
(8
in)
wide
saucepan.
Ensure
your
saucepan
has
enough
room
to
contain
the
honeycomb
when
the
bicarb
is
added
(it
will
fizz
up
like
a
volcano).
An
overflow
of
molten
honey
caramel
is
messy
at
best,
dangerously
burning
at
worst.
Eek!
The
next
steps
will
happen
fast
and
go
like
this:
Keeps
Up
to
3
months
frozen – it
will
go
sticky
if
kept
at
room
temperature
or
refrigerated.
Makes
Around
190
g
(6½
oz).
Takes
10
minutes
to
cook,
30
minutes
to
cool.
cooking
oil
spray
6
g
(⅛
oz)
bicarbonate
of
soda
(baking
soda)
110
g
(4
oz)
caster
(superfine)
sugar
50
g
(1
¾
oz)
liquid
glucose
(glucose
syrup)
60
g
(2
oz)
leatherwood
honey
10
g/ml
(¼
oz)
cold
water
5
g
(⅛
oz/1¼
teaspoon)
sea
salt
flakes