I first ran across this recipe on the web and was intrigued; Max and Eli Sussman’s S’mores with Maple-Bourbon Marshmallows. The Sussmans add Bourbon and maple separately but we conveniently have a bourbon barrel-aged maple syrup that already has the flavor in it without the alcohol. Confectionary is an intricate and precise dance of science and art using sugar as a medium. Dare I try to mess with the recipe? I dared.
The result turned out pretty damned well, if I do say so myself. I was actually a bit lazy and tried it with our whiskey barrel-aged syrup because it was the closest at hand on that particular day but I’m guessing the rum, bourbon, or apple brandy barrel-aged syrups would work equally well. It helps to have a standing mixer or, at the very least, a hand-held electric beater.
This is one of those recipes that you have to follow precisely and have faith that if you don’t deviate it will turn out well even if you don’t understand why. There is some magic that happens when mixing sugar, heat, air and gelatin which results in the pillowy wonder that is a marshmallow. I paired it with Lindt bittersweet chocolate and graham crackers. Our photographer, Carol Sullivan happened to have some chocolate sauce on hand and that wasn’t awful either.
One note about these marshmallows; they are not good for roasting over a fire or subjecting to any kind of heat – they will just melt. A small price to pay for an otherwise very cool homemade confection.