So I made caramel with honey and cream.
It's like this: you take a pot, put some sugar and honey in (I usually take a tablespoon of honey for every four or five tablespoons of sugar), then pour some 10% cream on it. The point is to make the sugar wet, not dissolve it. After you're done with the cream, you can add some more sugar to soak up excess moisture. You should end up with an unappetizing sugary mess with a glob of honey sitting in the middle of it. I used last year's honey, so it's not liquid. Point is, if there's still liquid in the pot, UR DOIN IT WRONG.
Then you turn the stove on to the lowest setting (without stirring), and wait for the mess to start bubbling at the edges and for the honey to start melting. Then you stir it and basically bugger off for twenty minutes or so while you wait for it to turn a reddish-brown color. Be careful, it bubbles a lot, so it may climb out of the pot if you took too much sugar. It's a bitch to wash off the stove afterwards. You can stir the mixture periodically, but it's not really necessary.
After it's turned the proper color, you pour a little more cream in carefully. This step is really important, because without it the end result won't be properly chewy, just crunchy and hard to eat. Be careful, though - it sizzles. Then you wait for it to sink in and evaporate, stir the mix, and pour it out onto parchment (or just paper, if you have none. Point is, you don't want to wash this stuff off plates). Then you wait for it to cool - should take about fifteen minutes - and start rolling it into balls. You can pull strands out of it while it's hot with a fork, just to pass the time. Well, start rolling, anyway. It should still be hot and stretchy, just not too hot. If you let it cool too much, the sweets will be inconsistent in texture. If you did everything right, they should be hard but chewable, and have this rich honey-ish taste, and kill diabetics with a single helping, as well as ruin dentures and make you uber fat. You can probably substitute milk for cream, and add vanilla sugar instead of regular sugar. But heck.