Carolina Candy Land | Our State (2024)

Red Bird Puffed Peppermints — Lexington

Named for North Carolina’s state bird, the cardinal, these soft, crumbly, melt-in-your-mouth mints have been made by Piedmont Candy Company since 1933, when founder Edward Ebelein revived the brand from his previous business. Piedmont Candy remained in Ebelein’s family until 1987, when another Tar Heel family took on the mantle of making the sweets.

redbirdcandies.com

Boston Fruit Slices — Sanford

These Northern transplants moved to Sanford after being produced in Boston for seven decades. H.W. Powers Candy Company made the first jelly fruit slices in the country, and in 1984, an employee bought the product line and started Boston Fruit Slice. The candy is still handmade in small batches to look and taste like slices of lemon, lime, orange, and other fruits.

bostonfruitslice.com

Butterfields Peach Buds — Nashville

After nearly a century, Butterfields’ sweet, sugar-coated peach buds are still a Southern favorite. The hard candies — also available in other flavors — are handmade using vintage machinery, original recipes, and real fruit, including a sliver of coconut in the center of each uniquely shaped bud.

butterfieldscandies.com

Rusty’s Peanut Brittle — Tarboro

Rusty Holderness’s mother used to pour hot peanut brittle onto her marble countertop to cool, leaving the air bubbles intact to keep it light and crispy. Today, Holderness makes the nostalgic treat — using North Carolina-grown peanuts — the same way, using a recipe passed down from his grandmother’s nurse, a World War II veteran.

(252) 823-3611, rustyspeanutbrittle.com

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Wynn and Annette Conrad bought The Candy Factory from Jeanne Leonard, who was Annette’s sixth-grade teacher. Leonard’s father made the fudge when he started the business in 1978, and now Wynn makes it. photograph by Dhanraj Emanuel

Behind the iconic red-and-white awning on Main Street in Lexington, Wynn and Annette Conrad continue a tradition that began more than 40 years ago. In 1978, Robert Ebelein — the second-generation candymaker who owned Piedmont Candy Company with his wife, Frances — set up a small shop on the company’s property to sell his family’s homemade fudge and peanut brittle. The next year, he bought and renovated the 1890 Lexington Hardware building downtown and opened The Candy Factory. The Conrads took over from the Ebeleins’ three daughters in 2018. They keep wooden barrels and glass jars filled to the brim with the treats of yesteryear, like rock candy, Bottle Caps, and, of course, Piedmont Candy’s Red Bird puffed mints — plus the creamy homemade fudge that launched a legacy.

15 North Main Street, (336) 249-6770, lexingtoncandyfactory.com

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Old North State’s drop candy — in flavors like blue raspberry, huckleberry, and the best-selling sour tangerine — is made by rolling molten candy into bubbly-looking sheets before it hardens. The sheets are then “dropped,” breaking the candy into pieces. photograph by Maria West Photography

As a little girl, Donna Rogers often played in her grandmother’s copper candy-making pot. Years later, after she bought a 110-year-old candy business in 2018, Donna and her team now use a similar pot — which, in addition to a candy hook and a batch roller, is original equipment from 1908 — to make 47 flavors of hard candies. At Old North State Candy and Gifts in Thomasville (plus online and via wholesale), Donna and her daughter, Cheyenne, sell old-fashioned and freeze-dried sweets alongside fudge, nut brittles, and drop candies under the brand name Chesebro’s, Donna’s mother’s maiden name — a nod to her family’s candy-making heritage.

2 East Main Street, (336) 475-0022, oldnorthstatecandyandgifts.com

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Videri sources cacao beans from seven different countries. After the beans arrive, employees sort them by hand, removing twigs and rocks and separating good beans from ones that are broken or flat. photograph by Anna Routh Barzin

When Sam Ratto and his team roast cacao beans, Videri Chocolate Factory smells like brownies baking. Chocolate-making begins in the bean corral, where employees hand-sort 17 to 20 tons of beans each year. Then, they roast, winnow, grind, and refine the beans before tempering and adding sugar and cocoa butter. Inside the historic Raleigh Depot, visitors can see — and smell — the entire process. That transparency is reflected in the name Videri, a Latin word that translates loosely as “to be seen” — from North Carolina’s state motto, esse quam videri, or “to be rather than to seem.”

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Chocolate makers like Sam Ratto transform beans into bars, while chocolatiers (Videri employs three) turn those bars into truffles, peppermint bark, and other goodies. photograph by Anna Routh Barzin

In 2010, Sam Ratto got a job sorting and roasting cacao beans and knew immediately that he would spend the rest of his life making chocolate. He opened Videri in 2011 but says that “it took about eight years to understand more about this process than I don’t understand.” Now, he and his staff lead informal tastings with anywhere from 40 to 100 groups of customers a day, educating them about the nuanced flavors of dark chocolate. “This is what chocolate tastes like when it’s properly farmed, harvested, and fermented,” Ratto tells customers. They might learn to detect notes of fruit or spices — and the tastings allow the staff to get immediate feedback on new creations. “We’re still learning every day.”

327 West Davie Street, (919) 755-5053, viderichocolatefactory.com

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In a blind taste test, Tom Thekkekandam and Jenny Citineni’s sugar-free caramels — available in classic, chocolate, ginger, spiced rum, and coffee flavors — proved indistinguishable from sugared versions. photograph by Alex Boerner

Dr. Jenny Citineni, a dentist, kept seeing the same patients coming in with cavities from eating too much sugar. So she and her husband, Tom Thekkekandam, started experimenting with making sugar-free candies. They tested about 200 batches of gummies, chocolates, and more in their kitchen. The candy that stood out: a soft caramel. The couple worked with Michael Laiskonis, a James Beard Outstanding Pastry Chef, to perfect their recipe. The caramels sold out on QVC in just 12 minutes, and the couple won UNC’s Carolina Challenge for entrepreneurs, but “the more everyday [moments],” Thekkekandam says — the appreciative emails, reviews, or comments from people who just need a little something sweet without the sugar — “those are really the ones that we live for.”

tomandjennys.com

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Barrels of nostalgic candies await inside the original Mast General Store in Valle Crucis, which opened as Taylor & Moore General Store in this same building in 1883. photograph by Revival Creatives

Bullseye caramels, Astro Pops, Mallo Cups, Bit-O-Honey: Kids and adults alike grab old-fashioned and popular candies by the handful and pay by the pound at Mast General Store. This special section of the store, called The Candy Barrel, began in 1982, when the Manzes, who owned the building across the bridge from the original store in Valle Crucis, offered to sell some of Mast’s products while the bridge was under construction. The Manzes started The Candy Barrel in what became the Mast General Store Annex. In 1997, Mast’s owners, John and Faye Cooper, bought The Candy Barrel, ensuring that customers at each of their eventual 11 locations would enjoy a taste of sweet nostalgia.

mastgeneralstore.com

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Kimberly Smith and her daughters, Lauren Rich and Brooke Harrell, are known for their toffee, which has “a nice, soft, buttery crunch,” Rich says. photograph by MALLORY CASH

Carolina Candy Company is a family affair: Kimberly and Charles Smith, a Navy veteran, have been running the business with their daughters, Lauren Rich and Brooke Harrell, since they bought it in 2007 — even the Smiths’ sons-in-law pitch in during the busiest times of year. “It’s really neat to have everybody’s hands in the pot, making it work,” Rich says. In their store, they sell their handcrafted toffee, gourmet chocolates, and other candies alongside gifts from small, family-owned businesses, Rich says. “Every item in here has a story just like ours.”

1045 South Kerr Avenue, Suite B, (910) 794-9905, carolinacandy.com

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For those who can’t make it to downtown Asheville for dessert at the French Broad Chocolate Lounge, the company offers a Bonbon of the Month subscription. photograph by Tim Robison

After dropping out of grad school, Dan Rattigan and Jael Skeffington moved to Costa Rica, bought an abandoned cacao plantation, and started a café and dessert shop. In 2006, they moved to Asheville, and later opened the French Broad Chocolate Lounge, which serves decadent desserts like bonbons, cakes and cookies, house-made ice cream, and drinking chocolates. All of the sweets use as many local ingredients as possible, including chocolate made in their own factory.

Lounge and boutique: 10 South Pack Square, (828) 252-4181
Factory and café: 821 Riverside Drive, (828) 348-5187, frenchbroadchocolates.com

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Carolina Candy Land | Our State (10)

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There’s something about breathing in the salty ocean air that calls for something sweet. Scotch Bonnet Fudge & Gifts has been satisfying those cravings for more than 60 years. Its 22 flavors of chewy, gooey saltwater taffy and 34 flavors of homemade fudge — swirled together; dotted with nuts or cookies; or sandwiched around caramel, coconut, or fruity fillings — made the shop nationally famous when it appeared on Food Network’s Food Finds.

51684 NC Highway 12 (open seasonally), (252) 995-4242, scotchbonnetfudges.com

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GGB Candies sells gummies in hundreds of variations, ranging from 1.75 ounces to five pounds (plus the 25-pound party bear) in every shape, color, and flavor imaginable. photograph by Charles Harris

Weighing in at a whopping 25 pounds, GGB Candies’ largest gummy bear is made for sharing. Founded in 2007, the business evolved from a small chain of candy stores owned by CEO Mike Horwitz’s family into a line of giant gummy bears. But they didn’t stop at bears: Horwitz counts gummy pizza, gummy hamburgers, gummy pies, and spicy gummy peppers among his favorite inventions — although, he says, “on any given day, it changes.” He, his wife, and their four kids are all official taste testers, of course, ensuring that each new sweet is bursting with flavor and creativity.

(919) 665-6361, giantgummybears.com

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This story was published on Jan 31, 2023

Carolina Candy Land | Our State (2024)

FAQs

What candy is North Carolina known for? ›

Its most popular candies — Red Bird peppermint sticks and puffs — are an iconic flavor of the holidays. Their name gives a nod to the North Carolina state bird, the cardinal, though their popularity reaches well beyond state lines.

What is the most popular candy in South Carolina? ›

So, any guesses what this South Carolina favorite candy might be? Well, it's none other than Skittles. According to a survey from candystore.com, Skittles are the most popular candy in South Carolina.

What's so special about North Carolina? ›

2) Beaches and mountains

The geographical diversity of North Carolina provides a special fusion of mountain majesty and seaside beauty. The state has more than 300 miles of immaculate coastline along its eastern border, where the Atlantic Ocean meets soft-sand beaches.

What food is unique to NC? ›

What Food is North Carolina known for?
  • North Carolina-Style Barbecue. Dishing up a plate of premium Southern cuisine should always include a stop at the nearest barbecue place. ...
  • Texas Pete. ...
  • Carolina-Style Hot Dogs and Hamburgers. ...
  • Krispy Kreme. ...
  • Fried Chicken. ...
  • Livermush. ...
  • Mt. ...
  • Fried Green Tomatoes.

What is the favorite cookie in North Carolina? ›

Food researchers at Menu Price compiled data from Google searches to see which cookie recipe reigned supreme in each state. North Carolina cookie eaters love the Moravian cookie.

What candy is Charleston, SC known for? ›

Charleston Chew is a candy bar consisting of marshmallow flavored nougat covered in chocolate flavor coating. It was created in 1922 by the Fox-Cross Candy Company, founded by stage actor Donley Cross and his friend Charlie Fox. The candy was named after the Charleston, a popular dance at that time.

What is America's #1 candy? ›

Top-selling chocolates and sweets. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups are the No. 1 selling candy brand in the United States, consisting of white fudge, milk, or dark chocolate cups filled with peanut butter. They were invented by H.B. Reese after he founded the H. B. Reese Candy Company in 1923.

What is the candy capital of the United States? ›

Chicago has been the “candy capital of the world” since the late 1800s. Tootsie Rolls, Brach's, Frango, Wrigley Gum, Fannie May, and Mars Candy all have roots in Chicago.

What are people from North Carolina called? ›

Those who live in North Carolina are proud North Carolinians. The name is a variation on Charles, after Charles IX of France.

What fruit is North Carolina known for? ›

(a) The official fruit of the State of North Carolina is the Muscadine grape (Vitis genus). (b) The official red berry of the State is the strawberry (Fragaria genus). (c) The official blue berry of the State is the blueberry (Vaccinium genus).

What is North Carolina number 1 in? ›

CNBC has named North Carolina as America's Top State for Business in 2023 for the second year in a row. CNBC has named North Carolina as America's Top State for Business in 2023 for the second year in a row.

What dessert is North Carolina known for? ›

Coconut Cake

Yes, that's right. According to this list, North Carolina's favorite dessert is coconut cake.

What is the sweet smell in North Carolina? ›

Sweet-shrub, Carolina allspice, Calycanthus floridus, is a shrub that is native to the Southeast, and which is fairly common, in many places from northern Virginia down through lower Mississippi. It likes to grow in rich woods, and often in the shade.

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