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Alleguede

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Posts posted by Alleguede

  1. I think they all look gorgeous - are the first 3 your favourites for colours or flavours or both?

    The flavor.

    I used pregel yogurt powder for gelato - the ganache is O-M-G

    The caramel and praline reminds me of childhood chocolate bars.

    The caramel passion is just acidic, sharp but not bitter.

    I have some of the candied fruits we talked about. Have to meet soon.

    Prahba: Merci

  2. I met a chef from Aussie and we compared prices. You guys do pay 15% more minimum then us.

    So the fillings are,

    Pink - berry jelly with yogurt ganache

    Black onyx - salted caramel with hazelnut praline

    Yellow - passion fruit caramel

    White - coconut

    Purple - blueberry jam lavender 54% ganache

    Red - strawberry - ice wine zephyr ganache

    My favorites, the first 3.

    Pcb colours I'm not a fan.

    image.jpg

    • Like 5
  3. Ganache is obvious. Cordial not as much.

    Example gelatine, water and sugar mold in less then a week. The brix is the sugar content of a product. It has no impact on the AW I think. To reduce the aw you need more solids. Or anti fungus. I have a friend to prevent mold on his brioches who sprays the inside of the bags.

    The amount of sugar does impact aW as the sugar binds to some of the water making less available for the critters. Another way to reduce growth is to add spirit alcohol. Wybauw discusses this in a couple of his books, but mostly in the 3rd which is pretty much all about shelf life. You can make a very tasty sugar syrup with spirits, sugar, and water.

    Yes I fully agree. I wasn't really clear on my thoughts on that one. My apologies. 66brix is the equivalent state of a marmalade (give or take one or 2brix degrees.

    In regards to my gelatine mold (May it rest in piece) it was a simple syrup with gelatine. It is true that a gummy has the same 3 ingredients but with different binding amounts a lot more gelatine and higher ratio of sucrose.

    Try is your best bet.

  4. Never ever add boiling 95C an over cream to chocolate.

    I always have the feeling that I am doing something bad when I add boiling cream to chocolate (previously I have posted the question, why doesn't this take the chocolate totally out of temper?), but that is what most cream ganache recipes call for--including many of the published experts (Greweling, Notter, Wybauw). Can you explain more about your advice?

    Kerry's view and link are true and so are the techniques she mentions. I have been to demos, classes, and test sessions with a lot of different brands and chefs and each time they show you one or two different techniques to make a ganache. Thermomix, whisk, kitchen aid, hand blender, emulsifier, spatula, Stephan, robot coupe,...

    Anyway, when cacao butter goes higher then 50 degrees, it's particle reaction changes and the setting of your product loses many properties.

    If your ganache stays within the 30/35degree range, all stays in temper. The mouthfeel, the texture, the elasticity,.... The binding all stays together. Which creates also a longer shelf life and all the rest.

    A lot of it is chemistry linked to the cristals in the chocolate (beta) as well as properties of the different ingredients too.

    Hope I answered the question. If not please pm me.

  5. You have your answer above by Kerry. But the answer is yes. If you do so you have to make sure that your chocolate mixture stays exclusively above 36C. You can add your cream in a 3 to 4 time pattern. Each cream addition needs to be emulsified. The first one will look as if everything went wrong, second will be better and finally you will have an elastic, smooth, beautiful ganache.

    Never ever add boiling 95C an over cream to chocolate.

  6. Thanks, I appreciate that. Would the same be true if the syrup did not contain any fruit? If it was just a simple syrup, would there be any shelf life gained?

    Simple syrup contains way too much AW to leave it as is in my opinion. It will not go sour but little particles will start creating themselves. It will either cristallyse. What you can do is try. But if you do make sure everything is super super clean. Any other variable will make the concoction go moldy faster. For me in my lab flour is my nemesis. But I have had a liter container of 30degree syrup next to the oven for 3 weeks, it just cristalizes no mold yet.

  7. Thank you,

    In regards to the single origins, they are good. The danger of them is that every year they taste different.

    I shouldn't say this too loud but I am fortunate enough to have access to many different chocolates, origins, and every specific type. I like to adapt my chocolate to my product. Red berries fit well with manjari or maralumi, banana goes flawless with alto del sol, yogurt with opalys or zephyr, dulcey with pecan or...

    FYI price of chocolate is gonna go up in the next 4 weeks average of 15% today's price.

  8. Hi,

    I have read your post.

    The method works but if the flour is not mixed in properly, but it doesn't really matter.

    This temperature, is actually the temperature for the bread making itself. And a 15 min Polish is quite short on time

    Try by warming up your milk to about 24 degrees.

    If all those ingredients are the total of the ingredients needed, then cut some back

    What yeast do you use? Does this recipe call for fresh yeast, active dry or instant.

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