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Posted

I've been looking at Norman Love's chocolates and I can figure out how to do the designs for just about all of them.  The Lemon Bar Bon Bon has me stumped.  Anyone have any ideas on how he achieves the look of that one?  My initial thought was that he sprayed in the yellow, then used a tool (sponge-tip or q-tip to remove some of the color, then sprayed in white. I could not replicate the technique, as I could never remove the color cleanly enough or remove color precisely enough to create the thinner lines. It was also extremely time consuming - not efficient for large scale production.   Here is a screenshot taken from Norm Love's website (www.normanloveconfections.com).

Screen_Shot_2016_04_26_at_9_53_17_AM.png  


 

Posted

I suppose that is easier than doing the yellow first, but it is still extremely time consuming.  At his production volumes, I  imagine he has a full time staffer doing nothing but this :)

Posted

Are you ready yet to hire a herd of minions to drop in white and drag a clay tool through it?

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MelissaH

Oswego, NY

Chemist, writer, hired gun

Say this five times fast: "A big blue bucket of blue blueberries."

foodblog1 | kitchen reno | foodblog2

Posted (edited)

Very nice Kerry.  I have an opening on my staff for a dropper and dragger if you'd like to apply :)

Can you show me what that clay tool looks like?

Edited by Bentley (log)
Posted
5 hours ago, Bentley said:

Very nice Kerry.  I have an opening on my staff for a dropper and dragger if you'd like to apply :)

Can you show me what that clay tool looks like?

 

Think I'll hang on to my day job!

 

Clay tool like the one on the right in the picture here.

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  • 1 month later...
Posted (edited)

Update:  I went to a Norman Love chocolate class this evening. The white swirl is done with a finger. Apparently if you use the right pressure and speed, you will get the thin lines on each side of the finger rather than a wide brush of color.   Never would've guessed.

 

He would not divulge how they do the bonbons from the Black series. :)

Edited by Bentley (log)
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