In this Instructable, I'll tell you about how I laser etch designs onto chocolate, and the tips and tricks I have found so far.
The most important insight when working with chocolate is that the etching works more by melting and re-settling the top layer of the chocolate than by vaporizing it. This means that the etching is a fundamentally unsubtle process, and also has implications for the resulting colors, the resulting structures, and for handling the chocolate in the middle stages of the process.
Step 1: Pick and prepare a picture
For the design, don't try to be subtle. Grey shades don't carry particularly well: the most clearly articulated part of etched chocolate is the difference between etched and not etched: different shades will be hard to pick out, if at all possible, in the finished product.
For our running example today, I picked a picture of the Golden Gate Bridge I took a while back. The picture is already in black and white, so we can skip the greyscale conversion: however, I would recommend you do convert your image to greyscale — this gives you more control over what parts of the image are dark or light. However, to emphasize the shape, I used Photoshop's «Posterize» filter to get a more quantized image with very few grey scale steps.
Step 2: Pick and measure your chocolate
Once you have your chocolate picked out — I picked a Ghirardelli extra bitter mini square — you need to make sure you know the dimensions of the chocolate piece, so that you don't etch outside of the actual chocolate piece you want to etch. My pieces work out to 1.7" x 1.7".
Step 3: Layout the design for the chocolate
Notice that if your image is light-on-dark, like the jellyfish I experimented with, you may want to invert the image in this step so that the laser only etches the contrasting part, and not the entire background of your image.
Text works well too — but I won't cover it in this Instructable.
Step 4: Laser-etch the chocolate
- Setup your design (see previous steps of this Instructable)
- Switch the laser cutter on. Check that all ventilation systems are working. Check that the vector plate is mounted properly, and that the tray underneath is empty. Check that the lens is clean, and that the cutter is aligned properly.
- Put your chocolate on a tray of some sort: paper plate, piece of cardboard, paper napkin… The laser cutter is most likely used to cut things that aren't chocolate — and you don't want your nice candy to get infused with, say, acrylic fumes.
- Put the tray on the vector plate. Try to align it in the top left corner, for simplicity.
- Focus the laser cutter.
- Setup the printer settings for your control system. Make sure the dimensions of your design match the dimensions inside the Epilog driver dialogue.
- Setup the laser cutter settings in the printer dialogue. I use, for most of my chocolate etches, on an Epilog 60W cutter: raster only, 50% speed, 30% power, 400dpi.
- Send the print job.
- Push “Go” on the laser cutter, and monitor the job until it finishes. For a full size chocolate cake, these settings will be done in roughly 8 minutes. For the Ghirardelli 1.75" x 1.75" mini bars, it takes about 1m30s.
- If you want to do double passes, repeat steps 8-9.
- Retrieve your chocolate bar carefully. You may want to consider using a spatula, especially if you etch very close to the edge: when you remove the chocolate the etched surface is going to still be molten chocolate.
- Let the chocolate solidify in a fridge for a few minutes.
Most likely, by cooling the chocolate completely between passes, more passes and higher power will contribute to deeper etched profiles down into the chocolate — but cooling the chocolate between passes will lead to problems putting it back exactly right, to get the registration right and not accidentally etching on a ghost image just barely next to the one you started with.
Step 5: Things to keep in mind
- This process works by melting and re-solidifying chocolate. You will get a slight height difference, but nowhere near what you may have hoped for.
- Pick a design with lots of contrast. Black in your design program will come out reddish on the chocolate. White will come out chocolate brown. Even very light grey comes out more red than brown.
- Invert your design if you need to.





























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