Christmas Rocky Road (2024)

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Introduction

It’s not that I felt my usual Rocky Road Crunch Bars needed any improvement (though fiddling with recipes is one of life’s pleasures) but I thought they would benefit from some seasonal adjustment.

So, out go the Rich Tea biscuits and in come amaretti and — in the seasonal spirit — I’ve crammed in some Brazil nuts and glacé cherries (as red as Rudolph’s nose), along with snowy mini marshmallows. The fresh snowfall of icing sugar on top might seem seasonal enough, but not for me. So I add some edible glitter in Disco Hologram White.

For US cup measures, use the toggle at the top of the ingredients list.

It’s not that I felt my usual Rocky Road Crunch Bars needed any improvement (though fiddling with recipes is one of life’s pleasures) but I thought they would benefit from some seasonal adjustment.

So, out go the Rich Tea biscuits and in come amaretti and — in the seasonal spirit — I’ve crammed in some Brazil nuts and glacé cherries (as red as Rudolph’s nose), along with snowy mini marshmallows. The fresh snowfall of icing sugar on top might seem seasonal enough, but not for me. So I add some edible glitter in Disco Hologram White.

For US cup measures, use the toggle at the top of the ingredients list.

As featured in

  • Christmas Rocky Road (1)
    NIGELLA CHRISTMAS

    2008

Christmas Rocky Road (2)

As featured in

  • Christmas Rocky Road (3)
    NIGELLA CHRISTMAS

    2008

Ingredients

Makes: 24 bars

MetricCups

  • 250 grams dark chocolate
  • 150 grams milk chocolate
  • 175 grams soft butter
  • 4 tablespoons golden syrup
  • 200 grams amaretti biscuits
  • 150 grams brazil nuts (shelled)
  • 150 grams red glace cherries
  • 125 grams mini marshmallows
  • 1 tablespoon icing sugar
  • edible glitter
  • 8 ounces bittersweet chocolate
  • 6 ounces milk chocolate
  • 1½ sticks soft butter
  • ¼ cup golden syrup or light corn syrup
  • 7 ounces amaretti cookies
  • 1 cup brazil nuts (shelled)
  • ⅔ cup red candied cherries
  • 2½ cups mini marshmallows
  • 1 tablespoon confectioners' sugar
  • edible glitter

Method

  1. Chop both sorts of chocolate small, or use chocolate buttons made for melting, and then put into a heavy-based pan to melt with the butter and syrup over a gentle heat.
  2. Put the biscuits into a freezer bag and bash them with a rolling pin to get big- and little-sized crumbs; you want some pieces to crunch and some sandy rubble.
  3. Put the Brazil nuts into another freezer bag and also bash them so you get different-sized nut rubble.
  4. Take the pan off the heat, and add the crushed biscuits and nuts, whole glacé cherries and mini-marshmallows. Turn carefully to coat everything with syrupy chocolate.
  5. Tip into a foil tray (I use one 236mm x 296mm / 9¼ x 12 inches), smoothing the top as best you can, although it will look bumpy.
  6. Refrigerate until firm enough to cut, which will take about 1½–2 hours. Then take the set block of rocky road out of the foil tray ready to cut.
  7. Push the icing sugar through a small sieve to dust the top of the Rocky Road. Then, if you like, add a sprinkling of edible glitter for some festive sparkle.
  8. With the long side in front of you, cut into it 6 slices down and 4 across, so that you have 24 almost-squares.
  1. Chop both sorts of chocolate small, or use chocolate buttons made for melting, and then put into a heavy-based pan to melt with the butter and syrup over a gentle heat.
  2. Put the biscuits into a freezer bag and bash them with a rolling pin to get big- and little-sized crumbs; you want some pieces to crunch and some sandy rubble.
  3. Put the Brazil nuts into another freezer bag and also bash them so you get different-sized nut rubble.
  4. Take the pan off the heat, and add the crushed biscuits and nuts, whole glacé cherries and mini-marshmallows. Turn carefully to coat everything with syrupy chocolate.
  5. Tip into a foil tray (I use one 236mm x 296mm / 9¼ x 12 inches), smoothing the top as best you can, although it will look bumpy.
  6. Refrigerate until firm enough to cut, which will take about 1½–2 hours. Then take the set block of rocky road out of the foil tray ready to cut.
  7. Push the confectioners' sugar through a small sieve to dust the top of the Rocky Road. Then, if you like, add a sprinkling of edible glitter for some festive sparkle.
  8. With the long side in front of you, cut into it 6 slices down and 4 across, so that you have 24 almost-squares.

Additional Information

MAKE AHEAD:
Make the Rocky Road and refrigerate to set. Don’t add the icing sugar yet, but cut into bars, then store in an airtight container in a cool place for up to 1 week. Decorate with icing sugar and edible glitter about 1–2 hours before serving.

FREEZE AHEAD:
Make the Rocky Road as above and freeze for up to 1 month. Thaw overnight in a cool place. Decorate as above.

MAKE AHEAD:
Make the Rocky Road and refrigerate to set. Don’t add the icing sugar yet, but cut into bars, then store in an airtight container in a cool place for up to 1 week. Decorate with icing sugar and edible glitter about 1–2 hours before serving.

FREEZE AHEAD:
Make the Rocky Road as above and freeze for up to 1 month. Thaw overnight in a cool place. Decorate as above.

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Tell us what you think

What 24 Others have said

  • I have been making these every year for a long while now, exactly as written. My family loves it.

    Posted by Hilty on 1st December 2023
  • I'm making this recipe for the first time. My friend runs a busy cafe so to say thank you, I'm using orange-flavoured ingredients, including Turkish delight and glace slices of the fruit.

    Posted by JenniB56 on 23rd December 2021
  • Mine is made and cooling in the fridge. I used crushed pretzels instead of amaretti biscuits (couldn’t find at supermarket). I sprinkled chopped Christmas M&M’s on top with gold dust. Looks amazing!

    Posted by SueB-5862 on 1st December 2020
  • I have made these for the last 4 or 5 Christmases but as family members are allergic to nuts I have used, wait for it,.....Maltesers! I also use dried cranberries instead of the cherries and buy the amaretti biscuits made from apricot kernals instead of almonds. Absolutely yummy and strictly calorie free!!

    Posted by Millcotties on 31st January 2020
  • These are fabulous. I used mini veggie marshmallows and a mixture of biscuits. I couldn’t bring myself to use 200g of amaretti so mixed in 100g of some left over home made fork biscuits and actually some rather stale digestives and it tasted great! Very chocolatey, could even add more fruit, like dried cranberries and it would still mix in well.

    Posted by Hilty on 25th December 2019
  • These bars look so good and with the marshmallow inside I bet that they taste amazing. Going to make these during Christmas week for sure. All Nigella's Christmas recipes sound absolutely delicious, so difficult to choose what to make.

    Posted by Monkeyboo27 on 23rd December 2019
  • My now Christmas Tradition for around the last 10 years! Everybody who knows me expects to bring these little treasures and I adore them! Introducing my 4 year old son to the recipe tonight. Thank you Nigella

    Posted by loupol on 22nd December 2019
  • A must in this is shards of oozing stem ginger and some peel even cranberries balance sweetness just a small nudge towards daily 5 but awesomeness in a nibble

    Posted by Carolhan2 on 17th December 2019
  • Dear Nigella, I added "drunk" cherries instead of marshmallows (cherries soaked overnight in sherry). I think I may have died and gone to heaven. It is divine. Thank you.

    Posted by Angel2 on 17th December 2017
  • I make these every year. I like to make early and freeze and take out when needed. Everyone loves them. They have become a Christmas tradition!

    Posted by StephenB on 30th October 2015
  • Dear Nigella , I made this Rocky Road for some friends at the weekend. When I made it home after buying all the ingredients I realised I'd forgot to get the Amaretti biscuits!!! I used the kids' breakfast biscuits and some chocolate popping candy, they went down a treat. Lots of Love Suzanne xx

    Posted by suzannne Facenna on 14th December 2015
  • I started making these every Christmas to have in fridge for when guests pop around for tea or coffee. They are absolutely delicious and so easy to make. I discovered this recipe while watching Nigella Christmas on DVD few years back. Thank you Nigella for your beautiful recipes. Merry Christmas to you and your children.

    Posted by mumto2boyz on 20th December 2014

Show more comments

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Christmas Rocky Road (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between Rocky Road and Rocklea Road? ›

Rocklea Road differs from the American Rocky Roads in that it contains coconut. Even then, Darrell Lea was not the first. “Rocky Roads” was advertised by Myer in Adelaide in 1933 as a “Delicious combination of Chocolate, Cocoanut and Marshmallow.

What is Rocky Road made of? ›

Rocky road ice cream is a chocolate-flavored ice cream. Though there are variations from the original flavor, it traditionally comprises chocolate ice cream, nuts, and whole or diced marshmallows.

Is Rocky Road a thing in America? ›

Rocky Road is still one of the most popular ice cream flavors in the U.S. (Used with permission by Nestle.

How long does Rocky Road last? ›

How long does Rocky Road last? Rocky Road is best kept in the fridge but you can enjoy it at room temperature. Store it in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 weeks or at room temperature for 1-2 weeks. It can also be frozen, just let it come up to room temperature before eating.

What is the difference between Double Dutch and Rocky Road? ›

Double Dutch: Chocolate sauce (water, cocoa powder, refined sugar, food stabilizers and artificial food flavor) and cashew nuts. Rocky Road: Peanuts and cocoa powder.

What culture is Rocky Road from? ›

The origins of Rocky Road

One theory suggests that Rocky Road emerged in Australia around 1853 as a clever way to salvage spoiled ingredients imported from the UK. These past-their-prime ingredients were allegedly mixed with chocolate and nuts to mask their off-flavours.

Why do they call it Rocky Road? ›

In 1929, William Dreyer used his wife's scissors to cut up marshmallows and walnuts, which he then mixed into his chocolate ice cream. Later that year, when the stock market crashed, the name of the flavor became Rocky Road, “to give folks something to smile about.”

What's the difference between Tiffin and Rocky Road? ›

The difference between rocky road and tiffin recipes is typically down to how the chocolate mixture binds together. Some tiffin recipes use condensed milk and cocoa powder to hold it all together and then add chocolate on top.

What's in Baskin Robbins Rocky Road? ›

Cream, Nonfat Milk, Sugar, Corn Syrup, Marshmallows (Corn Syrup, Sugar, Modified Corn Starch, Gelatin), Roasted Almonds (Almonds, Safflower and/or Canola Oil), Chocolate Liquor, Cocoa Processed with Alkali, Whey, Stabilizer/Emulsifier Blend (Cellulose Gum, Mono and Diglycerides, Guar Gum, Carrageenan, Polysorbate 80).

What's in Edy's Rocky Road? ›

Ingredients. Skim Milk, Cream, Sugar, Corn Syrup, Cocoa Processed with Alkali, Miniature Marshmallows, Roasted Almonds, Whey, Guar Gum, Carob Bean Gum.

What is another name for Rocky Road? ›

What is another word for rocky road?
rough patchtough time
bumpy riderough time
tumultuous perioduphill battle
difficult phasestormy journey
strugglemisery
17 more rows

What defines a Rocky Road? ›

noun. : a difficult time. He knew he had a long rocky road ahead of him if he wanted to become a doctor.

What is the red jelly in Rocky Road? ›

Our original Rocky Road is still as popular as ever with sweet marshmallows, crunchy nuts and red wine jelly covered in delicious milk chocolate. Hide it somewhere if you don't want to share! Ingredients: Milk chocolate, marshmallows, red wine jelly, peanuts, almonds.

What kind of nut is in Rocky Road? ›

What is Rocky Road Ice Cream? Rocky Road is a chocolate-based ice cream flavor mixed with chopped almonds and marshmallow pieces. While most Americans are familiar with Rocky Road ice cream, many are unaware that it was originally inspired by a brownie-like dessert also called Rocky Road.

Why is it called Rocky Road? ›

And so Rocky Road was born. Its name was a play on words referring to the yummy chocolate chunks, but also the 'rocky road' that people had to walk during America's Great Depression.

What is a Rocky Road slang? ›

idiom. If you are on a rocky road, you are experiencing a difficult period and have a lot of problems: Analysts predict a rocky road ahead for the economy.

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