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tammylc

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Posts posted by tammylc

  1. I baked them last night, and crushed them up into nibs. They really must have been somehow pre-peeled as the bag said, because there wasn't any kind of papery husk when I crushed them. So now I have a tupperware container of crushed nibs.

    I'd really like to experiment with some kind of chocolate making, so I might borrow a Vitamix just to see what I can get!

  2. I like El Rey - but I have had trouble with it melting smoothly, so it depends on what you are going to do with it.  Cluizel is nice but taste doesn't justify the price with their white (v. some of the dark).  I'm currently using Callebaut and have been happy with taste (although its not my favorite tasting), meltability and price.

    I think you make a good point - I would tend to agree that the differences between whites are not as commensurate with price points as with darks.

  3. I use (and like) Michel Cluizel's white chocolate. But I can't claim to have done any sort of cross-chocolate tasting or testing - since I use the rest of the Cluizel line, it only makes sense to get my white from them too. But I do quite like it. It's tricky to use for molding and even worse for dipping, however, because it's a very viscous chocolate. You definitely want to add cocoa butter for those applications. But I expect it would perform quite well in baking applications, etc.

  4. I have bought some good 5 lb boxes with plastic trays that were absolutely a great investment, because made the transportation so easy , and also the storing thru the production.

    Do you have a link anywhere to the 5 lb boxes? i'm always contemplating storage!

  5. Gorgeous displays! Gorgeous chocolates (as usual, of course). Congratulations on a successful event. And congratulations on the expecting - birthing a business and a baby at the same time is going to be a challenge, but I'm sure you're up to it!

  6. I bring back cacao from Oaxaca.  I roast the beans, peel them, and then use my high power Vita-Mix to create a chocolate liquor.  It is hard going as the Vita-Mix will shut off to protect against overheating.  But the alternative of grinding with a heated metate just isn't an option for me.  In Oaxaca, the shops have motorized grinding stones that do the job in minutes.  If you do a search for Oaxaca Chocolate on youtube, you'll probably find some good videos to watch.

    I found a Champion juicer at a second hand store for $15 and bought it specifically to make chocolate liquor.  It worked okay but was really messy.

    Jay, can you tell me anything more about using the Vita-Mix? I have access to one of those, but not a Champion Juicer. I've read the basic outline on Chocolate Alchemy - do i need strain the mixture some how afterwards?

    My beans claim to be already peeled. So does that mean there's no shell and it's all nib?

  7. Thanks, Rob. Unfortunately that thread is a real mix, since it talks about both whole beans and already crushed nibs. But I got a few ideas and links to work from.

    If I can find a Champion Juicer I'll probably try making some chocolate liqueur and then mixing it with sugar to make an Italian style crunchy chocolate - I don't have any refining equipment at home and don't plan on investing in any!

    Anybody else have any ideas?

  8. I was in my local natural foods market this afternoon, and back in the clearance section they had bags of whole raw peeled organic cacao beans. I decided I had to buy some, so I now have .61 lbs of beans.

    What can I do with them? I assume I could make some sort of primitive chocolate by roasting them then grinding them with some sugar? Any thoughts along that line or otherwise?

  9. Richard seems  to be a really nice guy and I am happy to see that his cooking has been received well.. My one experience at Element in Atlanta was not a good one.

    Whereas my experience there was great, so I've been rooting for Richard from the beginning!

  10. Great experiment, David! Looks delicious.

    Here's my Mother's Day collection. The theme was "A Box of Flowers" - can't decide whether to get Mom a bouquet of flowers or a box of chocolates? - now you don't have to! I got a new wholesale customer and wanted to give them two full weekends to sell chocolates, so I made up a batch last weekend, and this weekend i'm working on the ones for my direct retail customers.

    gallery_7436_3666_71292.jpg

    The purple ones are lavender caramel, and the pink one is pomegranate-rose, the brown/yellow one is honey-vanilla (milk chocolate), and the bronze stripe is jasmine tea.

    For the honey-vanilla, i made a vanilla infused milk chocolate ganache, and substituted honey for glucose in the recipe. And I drizzled a little bit of honey in the top of each shell before filling with the ganache.

    The pomegranate-rose are a variation on my passion fruit filling - butter ganache sweetened with honey and flavored with pomegranate juice concentrate and a few drops of rose oil.

    The lavender caramel is my standard fleur-de-sel caramel, with the salt toned down and the cream infused with lavender.

    The jasmine is just a straight up infused cream ganache.

  11. So I was wondering, since I am a newbie to the Mallow world.. what are all of you using to dust your mallows with. Ive been using a 50-50 mix of corn starch/confectioners sugar (10x). I cut them , then kinda toss them around in the mix. Im not sure that I'm enjoyng it though.. it seems to be a bit heavy, maybe even overpowering??

    As recommended somewhere in this very long thread, I use half confectioners sugar and half potato starch. The potato starch is very neutral and cuts the heaviness of the corn starch and sugar.

    Can you post the Splenda recipe?

  12. For chocolate centers - all the time.  I often do multiple small batches until I get what I'm after.

    Kerry, what size do you do your chocolate test batches at usually? With some formulas that have really small quantities of things, it seems difficult to scale down too far. I usually make 100g test batches (makes measuring easy, I can just use the percentages) but that sometimes seems like a waste!

  13. The "sinking" problem you describe with the backs may well be because you didn't let your ganache set up enough before backing off.  Just an FYI.

    I was thinking that too. Thanks for confirming. Next time I'll make it a two-day process (sigh).

    You don't even necessarily need to do two days, especially since you've only got two molds. That ganache sets up pretty quickly. Just give it an hour or two before backing off.

  14. Yeah, those look beautiful Emma.  You might consider the following workflow:
    • Day 1:  Make shells
    • Day 2:  Make ganaches and fill shells
    • Day 3:  Back off the filled shells

    Of course, you could do all of these steps in one day but it would be a LONG day...

    Of course, I had to do it all in one day. :rolleyes: I made the ganache, and while that was cooling to room temp, I tempered the chocolate and made the shells. then filled the molds and backed them off with piped chocolate.

    I'm working with a microwave to temper my chocolate and still quite new to tempering. It's probably not as big a deal as I think it is, but I don't want to do it multiple times for a single recipe.

    The "sinking" problem you describe with the backs may well be because you didn't let your ganache set up enough before backing off. Just an FYI.

    I used to use a two day process - make shells, fill molds, let set overnight, then back off the next morning. Now I'm more likely to do it all in one day for smallish quantities, but I still try to let my ganache set up for at least an hour before I back off.

    Tempering is a PITA, it's true. But the best way to get more comfortable with it is just to do it over and over...

  15. Looks good! Nice thin shells, and no air bubbles - great work.

    You should get at least 3 weeks at room temperature from that recipe, it keeps quite well. It's my go-to white chocolate citrus recipe - I've never made it as written, but I made a lemon-rosemary variation that was good, and it's really amazing with lime juice.

    And yes, having enough molds is key to making the work flow well with molding.

  16. That's true but I would just add that it's so much easier to fill your shells if the ganache is still at least semi-liquid when you pipe it into the shells.  The thicker the ganache, the more time you'll have to spend filling the shells.  Can be done, just not fun.

    So, would you recommend modifying the recipes to get a thinner ganache?

    I usually fill my shells when my ganache has cooled to 85 degrees, and even ganaches that get quite stiff later are pretty fluid then. So just ignore the instructions in the truffle recipes re cooling and tabling.

  17. If your caramels are fairly soft I've found it leads to more leaks, as the caramel continues to spread after it's dipped but before the chocolate sets, leading to a thinner coating that's more likely to crack. So cooking the caramel to a slightly higher temperature might be helpful as well. I know that the presence of salt can invert some sugar, and that can lead to a softer caramel, so it's possible adding salt had some impact. (But salty caramel is the best!)

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