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Cajeta

Cajeta is another name for fruit pastes, or ates, and is a term still used in certain states, but the most familiar form of cajeta is the sweet caramel made from goat’s or cow’s milk and cooked down with sugar in copper pots. The goat’s milk has a distinctive grassy, musky flavor and is the most commonly used for this application. The name derives from the wooden boxes called cajetes made from tejamanil or ocote (pine). Adding a little corn syrup helps with the sticky consistency, but it can be left out if you prefer to make it the old-fashioned way. This luscious sauce is wonderful to top (warm) or swirl into ice cream, to accompany pancakes, or, better yet, to eat by the spoonful!

Cooks' Note

Although it can’t compare to the traditional made from scratch, a quick and easy way to make cajeta is with a can of condensed milk. Using a can opener, poke 2 to 3 holes in the top of the can, then place the can in a pot with simmering water for about 2 hours. (Make sure you don’t forget the holes in the top—without them too much pressure can build up, causing the can to explode.) Open the can and add the vanilla or liquor. Pour out the cajeta and and store any leftover in a jar.

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