I have a big ol’ candy cane I need to use up. The only ideas I’ve had so far are crushing it and adding the pieces to brownies or maybe make ice cream with it.
Anything else? The more outlandishly creative the better for entertainment purposes … Practical ideas welcome too.
Make sugar cookies, and when cutting into shapes, hollow out the middle bit. Add crushed candy cane and bake. If you do this with jolly ranchers, you can make your own little edible stained glass windows.
Knock off bits into long slivers like toothpicks and use to spear fruits as a dessert shish kebab. Or drop the speared fruit into some sort of cocktail, as you would olives in a martini.
Yep. Stuff like nuts, marshmallow fluff, crushed bits of candy and the like, then break it up into chunks like peanut brittle.
Save it for next year. And the year after that. And the year after that…
Candy canes are really just decorations, right?
They never tasted good as candy…even when I was a kid. Way too minty to eat…they just leave an unpleasant burning sensation in your mouth.
And Candy canes are like Twinkies…they never go bad.
You can hang it on the tree every year and pass it down to your great-grandkids.
But don’t eat it.
When I was a kid, we would jam a peppermint stick into a lemon, squeeze the lemon, and suck the lemon juice through the peppermint stick like a straw. The juice would pick up the sugar from the peppermint stick so it wasn’t so sour, and lemon with peppermint is surprisingly good.
Try it sometime. Peppermint candy, sticks or canes, are full of minute air channels created during the manufacturing process. It’s a hard pull at first, but as the sugar melts, the channels open up. Eventually, the stick falls apart.
Visit a horse. Break cane into chunks. Offer candy cane chunks to horse (flat palm, fingers and thumb tucked snug, not spread). Enjoy whiskery tickle, soft breath, and gentle lipping on palm.
My mom doesn’t like to eat them at all until they’re at least a year old, and get soft and gummy instead of crunchy. We buy them for her when we see them on closeout after the holidays, and save them to give to her the following year.
Could you pulverize them into a powder in a blender or food processor, and use it for peppermint sugar? Or would it turn into a sticky mass? I’d experiment but I threw out my candy canes.
I wish they sold air freshener or room smellies in Candy Cane scent. I find mint, spearmint, and mixtures, but unadulterated sweet peppermint is hard to find.