Thursday, December 6, 2007

You say Potato...

I say Pa-tah-toe...

That little ditty from the "Shall We Dance" movie song "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off" came to mind as my hubby and I bantered about Christmas goodies called "Haystacks."

About a month ago, Dan volunteered to put together treat bags for children attending the church Sunday School Christmas Program. As a new church council member, Dan wanted to provide today's children with a taste of "the good old days" when he was a kid attending his grandparents' rural church in Leaf Mountain.

Dan was determined each bag should include unshelled peanuts, candy canes, ribbon candy, other Brach's goodies, and haystacks.

"Haystacks?" I asked. "Who's going to make those?"

"You can buy them," he said. I countered, "I've never seen them in stores. My grandma used to make them with butterscotch chips, chow mein noodles and peanuts."

"Haystacks are chocolate pyramid-shapes with a white center," Dan explained.

"What's in them?" I asked. "Marshmallow? Coconut?"

"I don't know," he said. "Something – creamy, sweet. But... we've gotta have chocolate haystacks like the ones in Leaf Mountain."

A couple weeks later, I began scanning store aisles to fill his old-fashion candy requests. My mom tipped me off on the ribbon candy available through my sisters' grocery employer. As I picked up four bags of mini-ribbon candy, I noticed clear boxes of chocolate pyramid-shaped candy with filled centers. The label said "Sponge Candy" but I had a hunch this might be my hubby's "Haystacks."

"Sponge Candy!" Dan said looking at the three boxes I'd brought home. "Those aren't Haystacks and I doubt the kids will eat sponge candy – the ones I've tried taste like burnt meringue."

"Whatever..." I said and set to work with the ingredients for my Grandma's Butterscotch Haystacks.

1 12-ounce package of butterscotch chips
1 cup of chow mein noodles
3/4 cup of peanuts

I melted the butterscotch chips in a pot and stirred in the other two ingredients. On a piece of wax paper, I dropped heaping-teaspoon-sized scoops of the mixture into mounds, let them set up for a half-hour, popped them off and offered them to my family saying: "These are what we called "Haystacks" when I was a kid."

Nodding to Dan, I added, "They're distinctively different than the Haystacks you've described."

Dan took a bite.

"Yes," he agreed. "They've got a distinct taste! Soy..."

I shook my head, "Hey! They're not my favorite. I don't like butterscotch."

Before our boys gobbled up the Butterscotch Haystacks, Dan grabbed a few more.

Tuesday I walked into our local farm store on a separate errand. As I passed by the Christmas candy aisle, an older woman worker was taking inventory. I asked, "Would you happen to carry something called 'Haystacks.' They're chocolate with a white center."

She walked over to a stand of clear boxes marked "Chocolate Drops," handed me a package and said: "I've heard people call these "Haystacks." They've got a white center."

"Creamy white?" I asked and she nodded.

"Thanks," I said reaching for three more boxes. "My husband should be thrilled."

Before checking out, I saw my in-laws in the store. Dan's dad confirmed the find.

"They're a little smaller than the ones we had at Leaf Mountain," he said. After the purchase, I cracked one box for him to taste test. "Yeah!" he said. "These are Haystacks."

On the drive home, I ate a few. From the sugar rush, I understood why Dan's mom refused the offer. She said, "If I'm gonna eat something that sweet, I like a nut in it."

At home, I placed a Chocolate Drop in Dan's hand and said, "Your Haystack!"

As he took a bite, I grimaced,

"And you like that all that icky, sweet stuff?

He smirked, "I didn't say I liked it. I said: It's – Tradition!"

Perhaps a showing of "Fiddler on the Roof" is in order this Christmas. Maybe then, the good-old-days candy bags will truly become a thing of the past and we'll know why to Call the Whole Thing Off.

You say Potato...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Tis the season for tradition....

Anonymous said...

Deck the stores with chocolate haystacks.Fa la la la la la la la la Tis the season to fill candy sacks. Fa la la la la la la la la......... Don we now out sweet tooth's peril. Fa la la la la la la la la......... Sing the ancient Leaf Mt's carol. ..Fa la la la la la la la la

Anonymous said...

Milk or dark chocolate covered vanilla creams (actually a starch molded cream)- Old-fashioned "Chocolate Drops". But I can understand the haystack name because of their shape. Most often I've seen coconut clusters in a lot of places (but not Buffalo) with the haystack name.

The Sponge Candy center shouldn't taste burnt and it absolutely needs a good thick coating of a high quality chocolate.

The Candy Maker
www.SpongeCandy.com