Hi,
I love meeting people from other regions of Illinois. When I was a Master Gardner, my best opportunity was via the annual meeting held at various locations around the state. In the last two years, I have been participating in the Blue Ribbon Culinary Competition at the State Fair, which has pleasant side benefit of meeting people from central Illinois.
I learned a competitor in Thursday's pie competition has a family who is in the candy business. She was telling me her family's candy operation is famous throughout Atlanta. I was thinking to myself Atlanta, Georgia, how could a small family candy business in central Illinois pull that off? That is until I realized she was referring to Atlanta, Illinois, which I now know is north of Lincoln and south of Bloomington with an Atlanta exit off I-55.
R.G.W. Candy Company was founded in 1942, which today is a wholly family owned, operated and staffed. It was founded by Grandfather Wertheim who used candy recipes from
The Blue Book on Home CandyMaking: Secrets of the Professional Candy Maker by Martin A. Pease. I had not heard of Pease though I since learned it is a well known candy maker in Central Illinois with several candy stores in Springfield.
R.G.W. Candy Company operates a candy kitchen in a separate building on the family farm. They recently reopened the kitchen after a fire destroyed the original, which was in the basement of the family home. In their new kitchen, they installed a water cooled table to replicate the marble slabs used. This may be the only bow to technology, otherwise the kitchen is equipped with copper kettles to cook caramel or melt choloate and racks to allow chocolates to set, because this is largely a hand operation.
They make their caramels from cream procured from a local dairy farm. When I arrived to their farm kitchen Friday night, they were preparing a batch of caramel to hand dip apples and make turtle-type candies. They had just made hand dipped fruits of blueberry and cherry, which were still setting. They provided samples to try of the still warm candies. Still waiting to be weighed and packed were batches of toffee, chocolate dipped caramels and chocolate pretzles.
I would have loved to wait for the dipping process, I had the practical considerations of my general fatique and several hours driving to reach home. Instead I bought some peppermint bark, chocolate caramels, chocolate mints and toffee, which I have been 'evaluating' and found to be of quite high quality.
If you are driving downstate on I-55, then please take these instructions with you:
Exit I-55 at the Atlanta exit;
Turn toward town;
Turn left on Old Route 66 BEFORE gas station;
Turn left at first left (not at the motel driveway) away from town,
go under overpass, past cemetary to 4-way stop;
Turn right, then look for candy canes (they will point you left, then right, proceed a bit further to a candy cane pointing to a house on the left);
Turn left into driveway and go to the end where the candy kitchen and shop at end of drive.
As my new friend Amy noted: "Dogs bark, then lick you to death."
R.G.W. Candy Company
1865 2200th Street
Atlanta, IL
217/648-2069 or 309/824-2492
www.rgwcandyco.com
http://www.peasescandy.com/
Pease's Candy
2501 Wabash Ave, Springfield, IL
(217) 726-5473
Pease's Candy Shops
1701 S State St, Springfield, IL
(217) 523-3721
Pease's Candy Shops
1871 E Sangamon Ave, Springfield, IL
(217) 528-2810
Pease's Candy Shop
4753 Jeffory St, Springfield, IL
(217) 529-2912
Pease's Candy Shops
3417 Freedom Dr, Springfield, IL
(217) 793-9868
Peases Candy Shop
531 E Washington St, Springfield, IL
(217) 241-3091
Regards,
Last edited by
Cathy2 on August 22nd, 2006, 10:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.