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Confections! What did we make? (2014 – 2016)


minas6907

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A couple of Valentine's Day items...

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60% dark chocolate shells with milk chocolate PB&J, milk chocolate salty caramel, and white chocolate orange caramel centers

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Seashells for a special order, I was told 'purple, turquoise, and aqua blue', I'm not sure what the difference between turquoise and aqua blue is, I hope they like them!  These pieces have white chocolate orange caramel and white chocolate passion fruit centers.

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I used the cheap hobby molds for these so they are solid, not filled.  60% dark chocolate with bits of cocoa nib toffee

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A few more seashells, solid milk chocolate with bits of candied orange zest.

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Edited by pastrygirl (log)
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4 hours ago, pastrygirl said:

Seashells for a special order, I was told 'purple, turquoise, and aqua blue', I'm not sure what the difference between turquoise and aqua blue is, I hope they like them!  These pieces have white chocolate orange caramel and white chocolate passion fruit centers.

IMG_4667.thumb.jpg.a5baee833283358dee34e

 

IMG_4666.thumb.jpg.b21fa81c6d0f7429a7680

 

I used the cheap hobby molds for these so they are solid, not filled.  60% dark chocolate with bits of cocoa nib toffee.

 

pastrygirl, gorgeous chocolate work as always!

 

Your seashells look like something that might naturally be found in the sea, despite the weird color palette your client specified. I hope they like them too. I sure do.

 

No wonder you're not sure about the difference between turquoise and aqua blue. Panatone, sort of an authority on color shades, returns this for turquoise, and nothing for aqua blue or aquamarine. Google images returns this for turquoise, and this for aqua blue. :unsure: 

 

Again, I love what you did within the dictates of the order. It could have turned out just weird, but you have made it a beautiful work of art. 

 

 

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> ^ . . ^ <

 

 

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9 hours ago, pastrygirl said:

Maybe it doesn't need a stir, just the act of ladling and pouring into the molds is enough to marble?  I'm not feeling very inspired about Easter yet, marbled bunny lollipops might be the ticket!

Maybe. Might be interesting to do a side by side.

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7 hours ago, Thanks for the Crepes said:

 

Again, I love what you did within the dictates of the order. It could have turned out just weird, but you have made it a beautiful work of art. 

 

 

 

Thank you!  There were a few trays of ugly ones that got re-melted :(

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sigh.... now that lots of people knows how to do it... it's going to be very hard to kill them all. LOL :):):)

nice job pastrygirl. do you mind if i ask you how much "(about)" you charge per candy? just trying to find out the range spread

great job kerry Beal giving step by step ... thank you both

 

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On ‎2‎/‎24‎/‎2016 at 3:26 PM, fandi1 said:

HEY KEYCHRIS......

DON'T TELL THEM ANYTHING.... its will be OUR secret  LOL :):):);)

 

1 hour ago, fandi1 said:

do you mind if i ask you how much "(about)" you charge per candy? just trying to find out the range spread


The worm has turned... now you're the one wanting the information. :P :D

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It's kinda like wrestling a gorilla... you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is tired.

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I JUST LOVE THIS PLACE!!!!!!!!!!!!:x

but,,, jokes aside...  this is the only place i have been able to find where people will help without being A@@'s

thank you for that to all of you who are reading and helping us little people

:)

thank you

 

this is some of my work with help from people here:

 

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Edited by fandi1 (log)
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3 hours ago, fandi1 said:

sigh.... now that lots of people knows how to do it... it's going to be very hard to kill them all. LOL :):):)

nice job pastrygirl. do you mind if i ask you how much "(about)" you charge per candy? just trying to find out the range spread

great job kerry Beal giving step by step ... thank you both

 

 

Fandi, I never charge enough!  For wholesale/industry (the seashell order came from a chef friend, I don't even know what the event is) I charge about $1-$1.50 per piece.  If they are boxed and I'm selling directly to the customer I'll charge more, but that also has to cover the cost of the box.  I try to keep prices around the range of my competitors, Fran's is the big one around here.  https://www.franschocolates.com/

 

When using rigid polycarbonate molds I ladle the chocolate in, but the flimsy hobby molds are harder to scrape clean when full of chocolate, so I piped those.  That's also why those are solid instead of a filled shell.

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'iBark' to take to the Restaurant show tomorrow - busted macaron shells from @Alleguede's wholesale production with some freeze dried raspberries.

 

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I realize nobody's going to believe me but, about 8 or 9 years ago I was trying to mimic the swirl finish Steve Vai used to use on his guitars on dessert pieces and gave this very technique a try. To swirl finish guitars, borax is used to break the surface tension in a large container of water, oil paints are floated on the surface, swirled to the desired effect, the guitar is dipped through the paint into the water below, the excess paint is brushed away from above the guitar and it's pulled out of the tank. The paint adheres to the guitar on it's way in. The problems with doing that precise technique with chocolate on edible items are self-evident so using a pool of white chocolate instead was something I tried. It didn't allow for the exact effect I was after and the white chocolate muted the colors more than I wanted so I moved on to other ideas. None of which were ever successful to my satisfaction. I doubt if anyone would remember it, but I posted a thread here asking about food safe ways to break the surface tension in a container of water back at that time. That was just after the attempt with the pool of white chocolate didn't work out as I hoped and I was trying to think of other ways to do it. I like the way that looks on those pops though. Makes me wish I'd done more with it so I'd have something to point to and wouldn't sound like I'm making this up now. :D

Just in case anybody's interested, this is a link to the effect I was going for and never achieved to any degree I was happy with.

It's kinda like wrestling a gorilla... you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is tired.

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I read all about doing that with marbling on paper - carageenan was the magic in the water as I recall. Wanted to do it with chocolate.

 

http://marbleart.us/MarblingSupplies.htm

 

 

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On 2/26/2016 at 4:12 AM, pastrygirl said:

Maybe it doesn't need a stir, just the act of ladling and pouring into the molds is enough to marble?  I'm not feeling very inspired about Easter yet, marbled bunny lollipops might be the ticket!

its really very, very simple- kerrys on the right track. work in layers, baselayer, drizzle 1 accent color, another baselayer, drizzle another accentcolor, another baselayer. then just run a spatula through the bowl - i normally just zig-zag through once and then ladle into the mould. make sure to empty the mould into a separate bowl - et voila, u have a marbled looking shell...

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/Magnus - happy amateur chocolatier

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Getting started on Easter.  I finally sawed the alignment nubs off my 3-D egg molds to make filled half eggs easier.

 

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And some bunny pops, I thought it was a cute shape, haven't done anything on a stick before so we'll see how they go over.

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41 minutes ago, curls said:

@pastrygirl what are you filling your eggs with? Very pretty eggs and cute bunnies.  :-)

 

I used my two most popular truffles as filling - dark chocolate salted caramel and milk chocolate peanut butter crisp (with feuilletine, actually a gianduja)

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9 hours ago, Kerry Beal said:

I've found the bunny pops go over well - particularly the ones I have that have feet, ears and bunny butts only.


Have we seen those on here before and I missed it? They sound like they'd be an awesome combo with the f'ing bunny molds. I'm a fan of the irreverent and non-traditional.

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It's kinda like wrestling a gorilla... you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is tired.

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