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Nuts & Seeds | Mixtures
| Chocolates | Snacks | Candy | Fruit | Gifts |
Tins
Candy
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| Our old
fashioned candies are keeping memories alive here at the Nut Factory. Think of the kind of
candy store where huge jars were filled with every kind of confection; that's the kind of
candies and the memories that you'll find here. |
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| We love the candies that
were popular many decades ago. It seems that every city had a candy maker and each one had
special recipes. Some have withstood the winds of time and are today more popular than
ever. Jellies, caramels, taffy's and mints are all part of the Americana of yesteryear. So
we made a special effort to find the traditional candies. We carry only the freshest
candies and we strive to find only the finest memories of a bygone era.
Come with us to yesteryear, when life was simpler and a trip to the candy store was an
adventure that was every child's dream.
Learn
how to
make
candies and see how
licorice is made.
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Nuts & Seeds | Mixtures
| Chocolates | Snacks | Candy | Fruit | Gifts |
Tins
Half a century of fun

The theme of our new plant is a return to the early 1900's. The building resembles a
crystal palace that you might have seen around 1900. The feeling this building evokes is
nostalgia and a sense of elegance. To achieve that feel, we used a special brick for
the plant and a highly decorative colored stucco and cut glass exterior for the store.
Our history |
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| Our
favorite recipes Florentine
Wedding Cake
a Mexican wedding cake which takes on an Italian veil
¾ cup hazelnuts
1-cup (½ pound) butter or margarine, 1-¼ cups powdered sugar 1 tsp vanilla 2 cups
all-purpose flour
¼ tsp salt 2 tsp Dutch-process cocoa
1. Put nuts in a 9-inch cake or pie pan. Bake in a 350-degree oven until pale gold under
skin, 10 to 12 minutes. Pour nuts into a towel and rub briskly with the cloth to remove as
much skin as possible. Lift nuts from towel and finely chop. Wipe out pan.
2. Cut butter into chunks and put in a large bowl. Beat with a mixer on high speed until
fluffy. Add 1/3 cup of the powdered sugar and the vanilla; beat on slow speed to
incorporate, and then beat on high speed until fluffy.
3. On low speed, mix in flour and salt, and then beat until blended. Stir in nuts.
4. Shape dough into 1-inch balls. Place about 2 inches apart on baking sheets.
5. Bake in a 300-degree oven until cookies no longer feel soft when gently touched but are
not browned, about 18 minutes. (If using one oven, alternate pan positions after 8 to 10
minutes.) Cool on pans about 5 minutes.
6. Place remaining powdered sugar in cake pan. Gently roll hot cookies, a few at a time,
in sugar to coat well. Set cookies slightly apart on piece of waxed paper (about 20 in.
long) until almost cool, and then roll in sugar again. Return cookies to paper in a single
layer. Shake cocoa through fine strainer over cookies. Let cookies cool.
7. Serve, or store airtight at once for up to 3 days. Freeze to store longer.
Prep and cook time: 50 minutes Makes: 5 dozen 1 1/2 cups sugar
More recipes
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