Caster Sugar
© Copyright 2010. Do not copy. All rights reserved and enforced.

Sugar Caster
© Denzil Green
Bar Sugar
Berry Sugar
Caster Sugar
Quick Dissolving Sugar
Superfine SugarCaster Sugar is a very fine white sugar mostly used in baking, as it dissolves very quickly. For this reason, serious bakers like to use it in cakes, meringues, dessert soufflés, mousses, custards, etc. Its quick-dissolving abilities also make it a favourite of bar-tenders.
It also makes a good sprinkling sugar for fresh fruit desserts. In fact, that's where its name of Caster Sugar comes from. There was a time when sugar was served in a shaker (called a caster, because you would cast sugar or pepper from it), and salt in a small bowl (called a salt cellar.) Now, instead, we serve sugar in a bowl, and salt in a shaker.
Pictured here is a sugar caster.
Caster or Superfine Sugar is more commonly used in UK cooking than in North American; North Americans have tended to prefer more all-purpose ingredients.
1 oz Caster Sugar = 30g = 2 tablespoons
3/4 cup = 6 1/2 oz = 185g
See Also: Golden Caster Sugar
Other entries for: White Sugar
Caster Sugar, Cinnamon Sugar, Jam Sugar, Preserving Sugar, Sugar Cubes, Sugar
Other entries for: Sugar
Aspartame, Brown Sugar, Chinese Sugar, Date Sugar, Dextrose, Erythritol, Frosting, Fructose, Gelling Sugar, Granulated Sugar, Icing Sugar, Invert Sugar, Lavender Sugar, Malt Sugar, Raw Sugar, Rosemary Sugar, Sanding Sugar, Snow White Sugar, Sparkling Sugar
Other entries for: Sweeteners
Amasake, Honey, Sorbitol, Stevia, Syrups, Xylitol
- S'mores
- Sabat Mung
- Sable Potatoes
- Sabra Liqueur
- Sacchi -- Bartolomeo
- Sachertorte
- Sachet Bags
- Sack Apples
- Saco Potatoes
- Saddle of Lamb
- Saddle of Turkey
- Safe Cooking Temperatures
- Safflower
- Safflower Oil
- Saffron
- Saffron Thistle
- Sagan -- À la
- Sage
- Saginaw Gold Potatoes
- Sago Flour
- Sago Grubs
- Sago Meal
- Sago Palm
- Sago Pearls
- Sago Starch
- Sahnequark
- Saint-Germain -- À la
- Saint-Honoré Cream
- Saint-Mandé -- À la
- Saint Agur -- (Crème de)
- Saint Agur Cheese
- Saint Edmund's Pippin
- Saint Paulin
- Sake -- Fugu
- Sake -- Shiro



