Making Chocolate
Ever wonder how chocolate is made? The short story is that these are made from bitter cacao beans and then molded into chocolate bars. If you were a chocolate company like Hershey’s, you would need a lot of them and to give you an idea how it is made, here is a guide in the production process.
The first thing that needs to be done is to harvest the cacao beans. Large companies buy these from farmers or buy the farm and harvest these themselves. They then put these in an oven at a temperature between 120 to 163 degrees Celsius that is about 250 to 325 degrees Fahrenheit for 5 to 35 minutes.
Naturally, you will gradually lower the temperature and stop roasting them when the beans start to crack.
There are two reasons why cacao beans stay in an oven at varying times.
First is to prevent them from burning. Naturally, you will gradually lower the temperature and stop roasting them when the beans start to crack. Naturally, you will gradually lower the temperature and stop roasting them when the beans start to crack.
Second, the cooking time of cacao beans varies depending on the type of bean that is being used.
Since companies produce chocolates in vast quantities, the cacao beans are stored in drums and then rotated over a gas grill. After they are roasted, the beans must be cracked into small bits better known as nibs while those that can’t are removed.
The next step is to grind the nibs into a cacao liqueur. For that, you will need a machine to liquefy this and at the same time separate the remaining husks that were not removed after roasting.
You then conch and refine the chocolate so you are able to give the chocolate its distinct taste. This is what makes Hershey’s chocolates different than for example M&M which can be achieved by using a powerful wet grinder.
You first have to melt the chocolate and the cocoa butter in the over at about 120 degrees Fahrenheit. You should then mix non fat dry milk powder, sugar, lecithin and a vanilla pod for about an hour. This mixture is then poured into a grinder together with some heat to keep the chocolate in liquid form. This should be refined for at least 10 hours but not more than 36 hours.
When it is ready, you then temper the chocolate so it looks shiny and soft enough to easily melt in your hand.
The second to the last part in making chocolate is to mold this into whatever shape or form that you would like. To produce these in vast quantities, chocolate companies but custom made molds. The chocolate is then poured there and after this is cooled, this is then packaged and ready for delivery to stores.
Some companies even sell these in the form of blocks so people can buy them, melt it and mold this to whatever shape they desire.
Making chocolate is easy as long as you have the equipment and all the ingredients needed. It doesn’t matter if this is produced in large volumes or in small quantities because the principle behind it is the same. If you want to learn more about making chocolate, sign up for some classes.
Written by mrpooper
Blogger
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Categories: chocolate articles Tags: CHOCOLATE, making
How to Make Chocolate Ice Cream
Do you love eating ice cream? Are you a chocolate lover? Do you want to have a chocolate ice cream without visiting any store at all? The video you are about to see is all about making ice cream!
Yes, you’ve read right. Now you can have all the ice cream you want even if you don’t go out to buy some. You will be guided with the steps on how you can do it. The video will have all the information you need to know.
A demonstration with our expert on how to do it will be shown to you in this very detailed video. You will enjoy this wonderful learning experience on how to make your own chocolate ice cream.
After watching this video, you can eat your creamy chocolate ice cream anytime!
Categories: chocolate recipes, chocolate videos Tags: CHOCOLATE, cream
The Great Book of Chocolate
The Great Book of Chocolate
The Great book every chocophile has been waiting for, pastry chef David Lebovitz’s guide is a jam-packed snapshot of the global chocolate picture. In this compact volume, he gives a succinct cacao botany lesson, explains the process of chocolate making, runs through chocolate terminology and types, presents information on health benefits, offers an evaluating and buying primer, profiles the world’s top chocolate makers and chocolatiers (with a whole chapter dedicated to Paris alone!), and shares dozens of little-known factoids in sidebars throughout the book. More than 30 of his favorite chocolate recipes‚Äîfrom Black-Bottom Cupcakes to Homemade Rocky Road Candy, Orange and Rum Chocolate Mousse Cake to Double Chocolate Chip Espresso Cookies‚Äîare icing on the cake. His extensive resource section (with websites for international ordering) can bring the world’s best chocolate to every door. A self-avowed chocoholic, Lebovitz nibbles chocolate every day‚Äîand with THE GREAT BOOK OF CHOCOLATE in hand, he figures the rest of us will too.
- A compact connoisseur’s guide, with recipes, to today’s cutting-edge array of chocolates and chocolate makers from former Chez Panisse pastry chef David Lebovitz.
- Includes more than 50 location and food photographs.
- Chocolate—like its predecessors coffee, wine, and bread—is the latest darling of the food scene.
- The New York Times on Lebovitz’s first book: ‚ÄúInstructions are clear and simple, and the recipes are so good that it becomes clear what a master baker he is.‚Äù
List Price: $ 16.99
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Categories: chocolate products Tags: Book, CHOCOLATE, Great
Tea and Chocolate Tasting with Charles Chocolates’ Chuck Siegal
Watch the Tea and Truffles Pairing with Samovar and Bay Area chocolatier Charles Chocolates. Jesse and Chuck discuss entrepreneurship, what a food or beverage company unique, and the worlds of premium chocolate and teas.
After seeing creamy ganaches paired with honey-like, tropical Phoenix Oolong, or matcha truffles specially made for the event, it will make you reach for your teacup–and the chocolate stash!
Have fun watching this video on Tea and chocolate tasting with charles chocolates Chuck Siegal.
Categories: chocolate videos Tags: Charles, CHOCOLATE, Chocolates, Chuck, Siegal, tasting
How do you make chocolate cream icing, for chocolate cake?
Question by Anony Mouse: How do you make chocolate cream icing, for chocolate cake?
I LOVE chocolate cream, and tried to make it once, in order to put it on a chocolate cake, but it came out all buttery and no joy, and tasted rather horrible.
Does anyone have a surefire way or recipe to make proper, tasty, rich chocolate cream/soft icing?
Best answer:
Answer by ♥Ms.Suz E.HomeBAKER♥
If you’re referring to chocolate ganache icing, here’s a tried and true recipe. http://www.dianasdesserts.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/recipes.recipeListing/filter/dianas/recipeID/366/Recipe.cfm
If it’s buttercream, here’s another recipe.
http://www.dianasdesserts.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/recipes.recipeListing/filter/dianas/recipeID/645/Recipe.cfm
http://www.dianasdesserts.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/recipes.recipeListing/filter/dianas/recipeID/201/Recipe.cfm
Add your own answer in the comments!
Categories: chocolate questions, chocolate recipes Tags: Cake, CHOCOLATE, cream, icing
What To Do If Your Chocolate Seizes
The video you are about to see will provide you with all the information you need when your chocolate seizes. When melted chocolate is with contact with water the dried particles it become moist and begins to stick together. That is why it ends up to be messy.
While watching this video, you will also understand why must not cover a warm chocolate with lid. Our expert will explain why this could result to seized your chocolate. In the video you will learn what to do if your chocolate seize.
It’s easy and fun to know how you can prevent this from happening. Our expert will give you the steps so you can able to follow it properly. So enjoy this video about what to do if your chocolate seizes.
Categories: chocolate videos Tags: CHOCOLATE, Seizes
How to Make The Best Hot Chocolate On A Wood Stove
Water
Teapot or small pot
Milk
Sugar
Marshmallows or whipped cream
Chocolate bars or chocolate chip
Cinnamon (optional)
In my other recipes, I have said to make sure the wood stove is blazing hot. For this recipe it does not matter. In fact, I would recommend that you use the wood stove when the initial fire has died out and it now has beautiful ember coals. This will keep you from scalding the hot chocolate.
This will make enough hot chocolate for four people. In a pot, add 4 cups of water and 2 cups of milk (preferably whole milk for the creaminess). Designate a person to continuously stir the liquid while it sits on the wood stove.
Add cinnamon and a dash or a 1/4 teaspon of sugar (more if you want it sweeter).
You don’t want the liquid to boil, but just come to a near boil. Once it reaches this point, add the eqivalent of 1 cup of chocolate chips or 2-3 hershey’s bars (not both!). Stir continuously.
In the meantime, add marshmallows to each of the cups (unless you are using whipped cream, which you will add last).
When the chocolate has melted and resulted in a creamy delight. Remove from the wood stove and pour the amount desired over the marshmallows.
Serve and warn your patrons of the heat!
Now, sit around with candles and/or flashlights and play games or share family history stories. Either way, make sure you go back for seconds and let’s hope the power does not come back on too soon.
Written by FurryLoo
Categories: chocolate recipes Tags: best, CHOCOLATE, Stove, Wood