Sort of: toffee gets some of its flavour from butter so it's not going to taste the same if you use margarine. Also, margarine typically is a bit more fat volume per cup because butter has some milk solids, so you may find the toffee just a bit oilier if you don't adjust amounts.
yes example milk toffee chocolate toffee butter toffee lolly pop etc...................
With skill
It's toffee! Made with sugar milk and butter.
at the dollar store
The ingredients listed in Heath Toffee bits are Sugar, Butter, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Almonds, Salt, Cocoa Butter, Artificial Flavor, and Soy Lecithin
Toffee is a kind of hard candy, that made by mixing Sugarand Butter together by boiling them, but it is often made by other ingredients.
A candy made by cooking sugar, water (or cream) and usually butter to anywhere from 260° to 310°F on a candy thermometer, depending on whether a chewyor crunchytoffee is preferred. Other ingredients such as nuts may be added
toffee Paul Fernandes
It is actually a chemical change. The butter, sugar, water and cream are cooked, resulting in a chemical change. Toffee cannot be "uncooked" back into butter and sugar. Physical changes can be undone. Chemical changes, no.
Chemical
Really, it's just sugar and butter. You could dip it in chocolate too.
you can use a couple of drops of vinegar