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confectionaries

Confectionaries, or confectionery products and shops, refer to foods and commercial outlets that produce and sell sweets. The term encompasses a broad range of items, including candies, chocolates, gums, jellies, fondants, caramels, nougat, marzipan, and pastilles, as well as related baked or decorative confections.

Main categories include sugar confections (hard candies, chews, toffees, fudges, and taffy), chocolate products (bags of

Common ingredients are sugars or syrups, fats and dairy, flavorings, colorings, and stabilizers. Production methods vary:

Confectionery has long historical roots in ancient civilizations with sugar refining expanding through the Middle Ages

Regulation focuses on food safety, labeling, allergen information, and packaging. Ethical and sustainability concerns have grown,

pralines,
bars,
and
truffles),
gum
and
mint
products,
and
pastry-based
confections
(sweet
pastries,
fillings,
and
decorative
candies).
Many
confectionaries
also
offer
sugar-free
or
reduced-sugar
options
using
alternative
sweeteners.
sugar
syrups
are
boiled
and
crystallized
for
hard
candies
or
pulled
for
taffy;
caramelization
and
boiling
create
caramels
and
toffees;
chocolate
is
tempered
and
enrobed
or
molded;
confectioneries
may
be
molded,
enrobed,
filled,
or
dusted
with
coatings.
and
into
early
modern
Europe,
where
artisans
and
later
factories
began
mass
production.
The
modern
confectionery
industry
is
global,
with
regional
specialties
such
as
British
toffees
and
boiled
sweets,
Belgian
and
Swiss
chocolates,
Italian
nougat,
Turkish
delight,
and
Japanese
wagashi.
including
cacao
supply
chain
transparency
and
labor
practices.
Confectioneries
are
linked
to
festivals,
holidays,
and
everyday
snacking,
reflecting
cultural
preferences
and
innovations
in
flavor
and
form.