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Stephanie Wallace

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Posts posted by Stephanie Wallace

  1. i follow his theory closely, its amazing that by examining recipes from famous chocolatiers like herme or greweling for example you will find out by using our (based on ramons theory) excel sheet that a lot of recipes are incorreclty balanced, which leads to accelerated spoilage of those chocolates

    t.

    It is worth noting that formula development can be geared only toward developing optimal flavor/textural balance; shelf-life is not necessarily the greatest concern if chocolates are intended to be consumed within ~10 days from production.

  2. ... BTW, I charge $35 for mine and they last 90 minutes.

    Wow, I've really been selling myself short at $10 per head!

    Regarding enrobing; it is worth noting that products by Valrhona and others that have been formulated for coating have an extremely large quantity of cocoa butter for couverture with such a low cacao content. Beyond lowering viscosity, this reduces the amount of cacao solids that hit your tongue, heavily accentuating the interior of your piece. Presumably, your ganache is always the focus of your work.

  3. Try finding mild beans from South America that HAVE NOT been heavily roasted. The majority of the bitterness comes from the caramelization of overly-roasted coffee. African coffees may be too heavy on the umami for an application such as this. You may also have more success at getting a decent extraction by brewing a coarser grind in a french press.

  4. The key really is not the number of ingredients, but whether or not the specific piece is geared towards showcasing the chocolate over the paired ingredient. Again, components like ganache and mousse can convey the subtleties of excellent chocolate (in some cases more so than eating the chocolate alone); baked items generally cannot. If you are willing to rework recipes when necessary to ensure that you are focusing on those individual chocolates (I'm guessing that you are), and if a reasonable portion of your customer base will "get it", go for it.

  5. In my experience the best results are achieved when the sugar content is in the neighborhood of %30 to %35. Valrhona has finally release versions of their Grand Crus sans sugar in the U.S.; Araguani would work very well in this case. If you are trying to adjust ratios, remember that you cannot simply reverse the percentage to approximate the sugar content of your milk chocolate due to the additional solids. You must look at the nutritional information.

  6. I second this. I mean... WTF!!? I searched and searched in Paris and surrounding region and found nothing. Got excited about a place that had single origin options, and was horrified to see the open "coffee packets" on the tray as the waitress arrived.

  7. I know down in the US, drugs such as marijuana and cocaine are highly illegal.  If you don't allow people to use those products, why should it be a problem that unaged unpasteurized cheese is outlawed?  Both are dangerous, so it only makes sense that both are illegal, no?

    This could spin into a terrifying discussion, but I'll happily refrain from sparking it today ;)

    -->Recent relevant reading on the subject from the Triangle Independent.

  8. A totally different approach: make a normal cream-based ganache with fruit juice or puree, temper your chocolate, hold around 88 degrees and emulsify cream brought to the same temperature (no higher). Add any additional butter, mix in the pop rocks, then pour into a frame. This is standard procedure for creating a ganache with praline or any other dissolvable sugar.

  9. Unfortunately the rest of the piece cannot be made until late Sunday (It's not a cake and will not last as long). While I would like to knock the BC out early for efficiency's sake, the real question is in what condition will the dairy products--particularly the butter--retain their peak flavor? Will making the butter cream actually stabilize those ingredients? And, could making it too early result in loss of texture (lightness)? The only truly important consideration is the excellence of the final product.

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