Homemade English Toffee is a sweet and addicting treat made with a hard candy layer topped with chocolate and chopped pecans for a nutty crunch. Plus, it is a no-bake dessert, so there is no need to turn on the oven.

Trays of Homemade English Toffee broken into Pieces.

Homemade English Toffee

Toffee is made with just a couple of ingredients that give you sweetness from sugar with added butter for richness. In fact, if you want to get technical about it, toffee is just butterscotch that hardens when cooked to a higher temperature (as opposed to softer butterscotch that is heated to a lower, more pourable consistency). When toffee is topped with chocolate and nuts, it is often referred to as English Toffee. I love a few pieces on my no-churn ice cream!

Butter in the middle of broken up chocolate covered toffee.

Ingredients & Substitutions

Butter: With butter as one of the main ingredients in toffee, make sure it’s the highest quality butter you can find. I use Challenge butter.  Challenge Butter is made the old-fashioned way, churned fresh daily from the freshest milk and cream from happy cows at family-owned dairies since 1911.

Sugar: The granulated sugar caramelizes in this recipe, turning a golden brown color.

Chocolate: I used 2 cups of semi-sweet chocolate chips that melted over the top of the toffee. You could also use milk chocolate.

Nuts: Pecans were my choice for nuts in this English toffee recipe. However, almonds and walnuts would also be delicious options. Of course, you could always leave them off altogether.

Stack of English Toffee Pieces.

What Temperature does Toffee Need to Be?

When it comes to making toffee, it’s a matter of reaching the proper temperature when heating up the butter and sugar. So, I highly recommend using a candy thermometer to get the best results. Toffee (as opposed to butterscotch) should reach about 285°F. This ended up being the perfect temperature for the toffee to harden after being poured onto the baking sheet.

Can I Make Toffee Without a Candy Thermometer?

Sure! Making toffee is all about the temperature, but you can still make this sweet treat without a thermometer. One way to check for the correct temperature for toffee is to first place a bowl of cold water next to the saucepan that holds the butter and sugar. Let the sugar heat up enough to turn a darker brown color. Then, use a clean spoon to take a little bit of the mixture and drop it into the cold water. If the mixture hardens immediately, it is at the proper stage for toffee.

Close up of Chocolate and Nut Covered English Toffee.

What Caused the Butter to Separate?

It’s frustrating when you are making candy like toffee and something goes wrong. In addition, this recipe is oftentimes made during holidays, so you want to show off your skills a bit! One of the most common complaints when it comes to making toffee is that the butter separates. Here are some things to consider to prevent that from happening.

  • Make sure the temperature is consistent throughout the heating process. The goal is to have the butter and sugar cooking together, at the same rate. Don’t rush it!
  • Use a candy thermometer that is accurate. One way to test your thermometer is to bring a pot of water to a boil. Then, insert the thermometer into the boiling water for about 5 minutes; it should give you a reading of 212°F (100°C).
  • Use a wooden spoon. If you use a neutral-temperature spoon, there will not be any chance to shock the mixture with something too hot or cold. This can also happen if you mess with the temperature on the stove.
  • Are you using a heavy-bottom saucepan? The quality of the saucepan makes a difference when it comes to melting sugar. They distribute heat more evenly when compared to a thin saucepan.
  • Check the butter you are using. I always use Challenge butter, so I know exactly what I am getting. If you are using a different brand of butter than you have in the past, it could affect the toffee. Different brands have different water-to-oil ratios. In addition, salted vs unsalted butter can make a difference, too.
  • Take it easy when stirring. Stirring too quickly can also cause separation.
  • Pour the toffee into a thin layer. When the toffee is poured into a thicker layer, the more time it will take to cool, which, in turn, can cause separation.
Tray of English Toffee Broken into Pieces and a Box of Challenge Butter Behind it.

How to Store Toffee

Store the homemade English Toffee in an airtight container at room temperature for up to a week. Or, store it in the refrigerator for up to a few weeks. You can also freeze toffee for a few months.

More Candy Recipes

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5 from 6 votes

Homemade Toffee

Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Resting Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 50 minutes
Homemade English Toffee is a sweet and addicting treat made with a hard candy layer topped with chocolate and chopped pecans for a nutty crunch.

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
  • To a medium, heavy-bottom saucepan over medium heat, add butter and sugar. Cook, stirring only occasionally with a wooden spoon until the candy reaches 285°F on a candy thermometer. (It should be a dark amber color.) This will take between 35-45 minutes; don't rush it. If your temperature is rising too quickly, turn the heat down slightly.
  • Pour the candy mixture onto an 11×15 lined baking sheet. While still hot, top with chocolate chips in an even layer. Let it rest for 1-2 minutes to allow the chocolate time to soften and melt. Carefully spread the chocolate into an even layer.
  • Sprinkle with pecans and gently press them into the melted chocolate.
  • Let it sit for about 1 hour, or until set.
  • To serve, break into pieces.
  • To store, place pieces in an airtight container at room temperature for up to a week.

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Meet Amanda Rettke

Amanda Rettke is the creator of I Am Baker, and the bestselling author of Surprise Inside Cakes: Amazing Cakes for Every Occasion – With a Little Something Extra Inside.Over the course of her 15+ year blogging adventure, she has been featured in and collaborated with the Food Network, New York Times, LA Times, Country Living Magazine, People Magazine, Epicurious, Brides, Romantic Homes, life:beautiful, Publishers Weekly, The Daily Mail, Star Tribune, The Globe and Mail, DailyCandy, YumSugar, The Knot, The Kitchn, and Parade, to name a few.

Reader Comments

  1. Could you send the toffee recipe to my email address? I’m not techy so when I leave this page I won’t be able to find it. Thank you so much.

    1. You can tap the arrow at the bottom of the page and you get the option to copy link. Tap that and paste to your email or you can’t go into your texts and paste it into a text to yourself. Or, tap where it says “more” and you have choices where you want to paste it.

  2. Do you have a video of this recipe and is there a way to “fix” it if the butter does separate? Thank you so much… excited to try it out!

  3. The video uses Challenge Butter and it shows salted butter. In the recipe it says 2 cups of unsalted butter. Is the butter for the toffee recipe salted or unsalted?? Thank you,

  4. Followed the recipe step by step. Butter separated terribly. The recipe looks yummy, but couldn’t make it work twice. Waste of time an money. Really wanted this to work.

    1. If you followed instructions and it still did not harden then look out your window. Is it a cloudy, humid or rainy day? Brittles and fudge do not like humidity and they will be hard to set and sugar will get grainy. I always set aside candy day for days that have less than 50% humidity per our weather station.

  5. I’ve just wasted two batches of the butter/sugar combo. The first time I thought maybe heating too fast was what caused it to separate. The second time I think it just got too hot by the time it reached 285 on my candy thermometer, as it didn’t seem to be separating until it was approaching that temp. So disappointing!

    1. I made it just now for the first time it turned out absolutely wonderful.. when it says to stir occasionally -I started stirring more often. To keep it from separating no need to add any other ingredients. I turn down the heat so that I could stand there for 45 minutes and stir every few minutes constantly until the color turn an amber color and I used up the whole 45 minutes. It turned out the best candy I’ve ever made

  6. My first batch burned😞but luckily I had just gotten another pound of Challenge butter the second batch separated somewhat but I bet it’ll still taste delish!! Set it outside to harden for a minute.

  7. I read everything, and followed all directions, spent $5 for Challenge Butter, and it separated anyway and is a big mess. Dang it! Shoot shoot shoot. Unfortunately, I didn’t read about the 2 TB corn syrup until AFTER the disaster. Oh well. I’m glad I wasn’t “counting” on it, but just making it for fun.

  8. It was the easiest and best recipe I’ve ever made -thank you so much standing there for 45 minutes stirring more than occasionally-made the Candy turned out absolutely perfect. I did half with walnuts and the other half with sparkles. Cover on top with chocolate. No need to add anything if you have the candy thermometer and turn down your heat if it heats up too fast and wait till it totally turns Amber in color- thanks

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