After extensive research, I've discovered chocolate's dirty little secret - it's a piece of cake to make at home.
And if your family is impressed by homemade truffles and cakes, imagine how they'll feel when you had them a bar of home-freaking-made chocolate.
Chocolate manufacture requires six steps.
- First comes fermentation and drying. The beans are harvested from the pods, and allowed to naturally ferment over a period of two days to two weeks. Heat kills the delicate germinating seed, and natural yeasts grow to develop complex flavors. The beans are then sun-dried to preserve them for shipping.
- Next, the beans are roasted. Cocoa beans are roasted for the same reason that coffee beans are - to develop complex flavors via the Maillard reaction, and to drive off unpleasant acidic compounds developed in the fermentation process.
- Cracking and winnowing follow roasting. This step is purely mechanical, to separate the valuable nibs from the worthless shells.
- After this, the nibs must be refined. The tongue can perceive particles larger than 30 micrometers in size, so extensive grinding is needed for a good mouthfeel.
- The raw cocoa liquor is then "conched," a lengthy process which drives off the rest of the acidic flavoring compounds.
- Finally, the finished product is tempered to give the chocolate good gloss and snap.
Ready? Into the breach we go, my friends!
Or, you can just watch the video. (Which works now! Hooray!)
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Signing UpStep 1: Equipment and Ingredients
- Cocoa beans. These can be troublesome to find locally. Fortunately, we have the internet! I bought my beans from Chocolate Alchemy, which also has a treasure trove of chocolate making information.
- Something to sweeten the chocolate. You can use any solid sweetener - table sugar, brown sugar, "raw" sugar, splenda, etcetera. Don't use honey, agave nectar, molasses, or other liquid sweeteners unless you want to end up with a chocolate paste.
- Spices (optional). Since this is your chocolate, you can add whatever you want! Cinnamon and cardamom are delicious. Chili powder is a classic. The sky's the limit! Curry powder! Wasabi! Coffee! Peppercorns! ...even bacon, perhaps.
- If you are planning on tempering the chocolate by seeding, you'll need a small amount of tempered chocolate.
- Cocoa butter (optional), to thin the final product.
On the equipment side, you'll need:
- A food processor or spice grinder (blade grinder, not burr grinder).
- A baking sheet (perforated, ideally).
- A hairdryer, heat gun, or shop-vac.
- A bowl.
- A mortar and pestle/molcajete (for smaller batches) or a stand mixer (for larger batches).
- If you're planning on tempering the chocolate by tabling, you'll also need a slab of marble, granite, or other smooth nonporous stone surface, and a pair of scraping tools (like these or these).












































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Congrats on your winning! I followed your tutorial...but used sugar cane instead of white sugar...my end product tastes tarty/sour...and once held after the tempering it melts in the hands...is it possible that I am not tempering enough? Any suggestions would be appreciated!
From what I've seen, it takes several hundred pounds to generate enough heat to ferment properly.
Alternatively, there is a company in town that buys the pods from the farmers. I would prefer to do my own though.
These are two entirely different plants.
With apologies to Carl Sagan.
A mixture you might use for a "dark" chocolate containing additional cocoa butter might be something along the lines of 60% cocoa powder, 20% cocoa butter, 20% sugar.
If you can't find cocoa butter, coconut oil might serve as a reasonable substitute, but it melts at a much lower temperature (76 °F/24 °C) than cocoa butter (approximately body temperature).
Huge congrats on this well-deserved Grand Prize Winner!!!
PearlZenith's got it right - you'd want to add powdered milk, either at the end of the grinding process or during the conching step - that will ensure that the milk is evenly distributed. Typical milk chocolates are around 45-55% cocoa solid, so you'd want to add about 30% sugar (by weight) and then 20% powdered milk (also by weight). For a hundred gram batch, that would be 50 grams cocoa nibs, 30 grams sugar, and 20 grams powdered milk.
This process reminds me of watching my grandad and grandmother make ice cream from scratch on the back patio, at their home in Birmingham: a lot of work but oh so fun to watch and get to eat.
Good on ye! :)
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I've had some friends tell me "that looks like a whole lot of work for not a lot of product."
They must not like chocolate enough, I think. :)
Here in Brazil, cocoa trees are relatively easy to found, but I never realized what the processing for the seeds to become in chocolate.
Thank you to share this!
Please keep up the good work, and thanks for this instuctive.
A well-deserved win for a great instructable and a very useful video!