Sugar Syrup

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By Anne Willan

Published 1989

  • About
Refined white sugar and water, brought briefly to a boil, yields a simple syrup that can range in concentration from light to saturated (in which the maximum sugar has been dissolved). As a syrup boils, water evaporates, changing the concentration. If boiled beyond saturation point the syrup becomes a boiled sugar syrup, the properties of which change dramatically as evaporation continues.