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Posted

Better homes and Gardens has an issue out "Holiday Baking" On page 65 they have a recipe for "honey crumch chocolate pecan pie:"

Question? What the hell is '2 envelopes (1 ounce each) premelted unsweetened chocolate product?

Posted

Nestle used to make a liquid version of baking chocolate in little packs.

Peter: You're a spy

Harry: I'm not a spy, I'm a shepherd

Peter: Ah! You're a shepherd's pie!

- The Goons

live well, laugh often, love much

Posted

Is it this maybe?

It is that. It's just liquid baking chocolate.

"Life is a combination of magic and pasta." - Frederico Fellini

Posted

Actually, it looks like oil, trans fats, and cocoa:

Cocoa, Partially Hydrogenated Cottonseed and/Or Soybean Oils, Coconut Oil, Tbhq and Citric Acid (to Preserve Freshness).

is the ingredient list as posted here at walmart.com.

Not chocolate at all.

Posted

Oh, yeah, I remember that stuff - tried it once. It was nasty. But I suppose if you had problems chopping chocolate it might seem like a godsend - until you remembered chocolate chips! :biggrin:

Posted

Nestle choco-bake. I'm having flashbacks.

Just substitute one ounce of unsweetened baking chocolate for each envelope. I use an old choco-bake brownie recipe and it is works fine (I would argue much better) with regular chocolate.

Posted

Mmmm ... chocolate product. Yum. Bringing the factory home!!!

As an aside, you look at 50's and 60's cookbooks and that is indeed what they were often trying to do, trying to bring that factory product to your home kitchen, like make your own TV dinners kind of thing.

Posted

The brownie recipe I use calls for this as well as chocolate. It adds a cocoa-y flavor. The Joy of Cooking substitute for it is cocoa powder mixed with vegetable oil - just enough to make the powder liquidy. I wouldn't sub straight chocolate, just so you don't miss the different flavors.

"Life is a combination of magic and pasta." - Frederico Fellini

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