Light
plumes
of
vapour
(not
acrid
smoke)
will
waft
from
the
pot.
At
a
perfect
colour
and
smell,
the
temperature
will
be
190°C
(375°F),
which
is
a
f
ew
degrees
away
from
burning.
If
you
are
nervous,
aim
for
180°C
(360°F)
the
first time – it will still
be
wonderful.
Under
arrest
‘Arrest’
is
the
professional
term
that
means
shocking
caramel
to
cool
quickly
by
adding
room-
temperature
liquids
such
as
water,
cream,
fruit
juices
or
syrups,
such
as
honey.
Alternatively,
you
can
arrest
your
caramel
by
lowering
the
pot
base
into
a
shallow
sinkful
of
cold
water.
The
caramel
will
resist
arrest
and
spatter
angrily
as
two
greatly
varying
temperatures
try
to
cohere,
so
…
Protect
yourself
At
its
hottest,
caramel
is
double
the
temperature
of
boiling
water.
When
you
add
a
liquid,
it
aggravates
the
caramel,
creating
dangerous
spattering
and
intensely
hot
steam.
To
be
safe,
tilt
the
pot
away
from
you
and
add
the
liquid
in
half
or
third
amounts
from
the
side,
at
a
safe
arm’s
length
distance.
Let
the
caramel
adjust
before
adding
more.
A
pro
tip
is
to
keep
a
metal
bowl
handy
and,
in
a
swift
and
confident
movement,
drop
some
liquid
in
and
then
place
the
bowl
on
top,
muffling
the
furious
mixture.
Give
the
pot
handle
a
little
shake
and
safely
remove
the
bowl
when
the
fury
subsides.
Play
it
extra
safe
and
wrap
a
kitchen
cloth
over
your
hand
and
forearm.
Re-melt
it
If
the
caramel
has
cooled
a
little
too
much,
just
warm
it
over
a
low
heat
and
use
a
hand
whisk
to
stir
it
back
together
into
its
former
mahogany-
hued
caramel
glory.
For
those
who
wash
the
dishes
Employ
heat
and
water,
not
elbow
grease,
to
shift
the
tenacious
caramel
residue.
A
good
long
soak
with
hot
tap
water
works,
as
does
half
filling
the
pot
and
simmering
the
remains
away
for
10
minutes.
Two
runs
through
a
dishwasher
also
works
well.
When
I
make
a
crème
caramel,
I
like
to
heat
the
milk
in
the
scraped-out
caramel
pot
for
dual
benefit – a
clean
pot
and
a
little
extra
caramel
flavour
in
my
milk.