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My Mom’s Fudge – A Sweet Slice of Holiday Memory That Melts in Your Mouth

Pro Tip: Leave an overhang of foil — makes it easy to lift the fudge out for clean slicing.

Step 2: Cook the Base

In a medium saucepan, combine:

Butter

Sugar

Evaporated milk

Place over medium-high heat

Bring to a full boil, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon or silicone spatula

Step 3: Boil for 5 Minutes

Once boiling, reduce heat to medium

Let it boil gently for exactly 5 minutes — no more, no less

Stir the entire time to prevent scorching

Why 5 minutes?

It’s the sweet spot — long enough to thicken, short enough to avoid graininess.

Step 4: Remove & Mix

Remove from heat

Immediately add:

Chocolate chips

Marshmallow fluff

Vanilla extract

Whisk vigorously until smooth and glossy — about 1–2 minutes

Don’t stop too soon — the fluff needs to fully incorporate.

Step 5: Pour & Chill

Pour the mixture into the prepared pan

Smooth the top with a spatula

Let cool at room temperature 10–15 minutes

Refrigerate at least 3–4 hours, or until firm

Pro Tip: Cover with wax paper — not plastic wrap (it can stick).

Step 6: Slice & Share

Lift the fudge out using the foil overhang

Cut into 1-inch squares with a sharp knife

Wipe the knife between cuts for clean edges

Serve chilled — and watch them disappear.

Pro Tips for Perfect Fudge Every Time

Use a heavy-bottomed pan

Prevents hot spots and burning

Stir the entire time

Keeps sugar from crystallizing

Don’t overcook

5 minutes is perfect — no more

Chill fully before cutting

Prevents smearing

Store in the fridge

Keeps texture firm — up to 2 weeks

Also, this fudge freezes beautifully — wrap in parchment, then foil, and freeze for up to 3 months.

Final Thoughts: Sometimes the Best Gifts Aren’t Wrapped — They’re Made in a Pan

We buy gifts.

We wrap them.

We search for the perfect thing.

But the truth is:

The most meaningful presents are often the ones made by hand.

A batch of fudge.

A jar of cookies.

A recipe passed down.

So next time you want to give something that says, “I love you”…

Don’t reach for the store.

Reach for the saucepan.

Because sometimes, the difference between “a gift” and “a memory”…

Isn’t in the bow.

It’s in the butter.

And once you make this?

You’ll understand why my mom’s fudge wasn’t just a treat.

It was love, in chocolate form.

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