The Morning Call

Butterscot­ch is the star of this treat

- By JeanMarie Brownson

Long before we fell in love with salted caramel, butterscot­ch reigned.

Sure, the hard candies in clear, lidded jars on Auntie’s counter tempt. But it’s the sleek, shiny warm butterscot­ch sauce swirled into vanilla ice cream that we adore.

Ditto for luscious whipped butterscot­ch pudding and nut-studded butterscot­ch fudge.

Butterscot­ch typically is made by cooking brown sugar, which contains dark, slightly bitter molasses, with butter. Caramel, on the other hand, starts with white granulated sugar that is melted until golden. Both can contain cream, vanilla and salt.

Butterscot­ch does not always contain scotch, but the bitter complexity of whiskey complement­s the cooked sugar and butter flavors beautifull­y. We always add a splash!

The salted butterscot­ch sauce recipe tastes great served warm over vanilla ice cream with sliced bananas. You can use it as a pancake syrup or stir it into hot oatmeal for a morning treat.

Use the sauce as a glaze over the pound cake that follows or on homemade donuts or muffins. No judgment if you enjoy it straight from the jar.

The buttery cake recipe gets its butterscot­ch flavor from dark brown sugar and scotch. The loaf looks prettiest made in an 8-by-4inch loaf pan. However, a standard 9-by-5-inch pan works well, too; the cake will not be quite as tall. The recipe can be doubled to make two loaves — one for you and one for a gift. Add a jar of the butterscot­ch sauce to your gift, and all will be golden.

 ?? JEANMARIE BROWNSON/TNS ?? The pound cake recipe can be doubled to make two loaves — one for you and one for a gift.
JEANMARIE BROWNSON/TNS The pound cake recipe can be doubled to make two loaves — one for you and one for a gift.

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