
My dad didn’t cook on any sort of regular basis – that was solidly Mom’s domain – but he had a few specialties. There was always a jar of this strange-looking, thick gray stuff on the top shelf of the fridge, right behind the purple half gallon of milk with the smiling Elsie the cow– sourdough starter for those days that he wanted to make tangy loaves of bread, or occasionally, pancakes. In the summertime, he made bread and butter pickles with the cucumbers that he grew in his garden out back, and canned jalapenos, too, which we were grateful for throughout the year. He also made the best fried egg sandwiches in the world.
But my dentist dad, whose sweet tooth drove him to keep his own stash of Reese’s peanut butter cups high in the cabinet behind the cups and saucers, really excelled at making hot fudge sauce.
Usually late at night, long after the dinner dishes were put away, and often when I was studying for an exam, I’d hear a knock on the door, and Daddy would peek his head in and smile. “How about a hot fudge sundae?” he’s say.
Um, yeah. And down the stairs I’d go, taking the steps two at a time, trying to beat my brother to the kitchen. I loved Daddy’s late-night hot fudge sundaes because they were always a surprise — and special because he’d made them just for us. Even today, a couple of scoops of Blue Bell vanilla bean in a bowl covered with his thick, shiny chocolate sauce is my preferred dessert – and go-to comfort food when I’m feeling a bit homesick, or blue, or both.
Here in France, they fancifiy the idea by hiding the ice cream in little choux pastry puffs and calling them profiteroles. In Belgium, vanilla ice cream with hot fudge is known as a “Dame Blanche.”
Call it what you will, in whatever language you choose, it’s the same thing, isn’t it? Wherever in the world you happen to be, melty chocolate poured on top of vanilla ice cream satisfies.
Daddy’s recipe was straight from Craig Claiborne’s “The New York Times Cookbook,” and while there’s nothing wrong with this version, I tweaked this a bit – I cut the sugar and corn syrup in half, upped the cocoa and added some bittersweet chocolate, too.
Because, like scarves and boots, you can never have too much chocolate.
Daddy’s Hot Fudge Sauce
Adapted from Craig Claiborne’s “The New York Times Cookbook”
INGREDIENTS
¾ cup cocoa
4 ounces bittersweet chocolate
½ cup sugar
½ cup corn syrup
½ cup cream
3 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
WHAT YOU DO
In a heavy saucepan over medium-low heat, combine all of the ingredients except the vanilla extract. Cook and stir constantly until the mixture comes to a rolling boil. Remove from heat and add the vanilla.
Serve warm.
This sauce will keep for a week in the fridge (yeah, right).
To reheat, put chocolate sauce in a bowl over a saucepan of hot (not boiling) water, and let warm up again.















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I have never tried making my own but you have inspired me once again. Thanks for sharing – love the story.
Where do you get corn syrup in France? Or do you substitute something else?
Thanks!
Megan: You can get corn syrup at the Asian supermarkets here. I saw that David Lebovitz (www.davidlebovitz.com) suggested Lyle’s golden syrup or rice syrup as a substitute for corn syrup in his recent salty caramels recipe, so you may want to try one of those, too. I’m going to give the Lyle’s a test next time I make this.
Have you ever looked at Maida Heatter’s “Book of Great Desserts”? I think that’s the right book of hers… she has a Hot Fudge Sauce, the kind that can get very hard when it hits the cold ice cream, that is my absolute favorite! I don’t cook it that long, so I avoid the hard as rock on your teeth kind of thing, and it’s divine.
This looks DELISH! Thanks for sharing the recipe …
And it’s funny…my dad has the same fixation with Reese’s peanut butter cups, too. I buy bags and bags of the stuff whenever I go back to Singapore because that’s all he wants from NYC!
aneyefordetail: Yes, I have Maida’s desserts book, plus the one devoted just to chocolate (maybe that’s the one that you’re talking about?). I think that I know the sauce – I’ve tried lots, but always go back to a version of this one. In a pinch, I’ll melt down a big chocolate bar with butter, cream, and some sugar, too!
I LOVE homemade hot fudge sauce and this looks awesome!!
OMG. I WANT THAT! You are killing me with this!
I’m coming back next week, so let’s make a Montmartre date for the following week… or maybe we can meet at my new apartment!!!
Such a sweet story. Could you guys fall asleep after your chocolatey sundaes? I get so amped when I have chocolate at night. Gosh, i do love a good HFS though. I like that you cut the sugar and created a nice dark choc. sauce. Just the way I like it! A hit of steamy caramel never hurt either
Elise-
My mother-in-law makes a great chocolate sauce that I wanted to share with you and my kids vehemently objected. “It’s a family secret”, they barked. Oh well, I guess I will just have to mail you some. Send me your address and I’ll ship some off to you. I’ll be making a batch to send to my mother for her birthday this month. Recipe hint: It uses evaporated milk and cocoa.
Ellise, I feel like I know your dad through this wonderful post on hot fudge. You’re such a wonderful story teller.