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Chocolate (rec.food.chocolate) all topics related to eating and making chocolate such as cooking techniques, recipes, history, folklore & source recommendations. |
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NM-Bruce wrote:
> Chocolatier comrades-in-arms, > > On a trip recently to Chicago, I had the opportunity to sample the > products at Vosges Haut Chocolate, an upscale chocolatier that > specializes in unusual ingredients in their truffles such as spices and > cheese and so on. What impressed me about their products was that they > had perfectly spherical shapes to their truffles. > > How do they get such perfectly round shapes? From visual inspection, > the chocolates are not molded: they don't have the high gloss of > molded chocolate, they don't have any seams that I can see, and they > have a flat 'foot', so it appears they are enrobed or dipped. But > they are perfect spheres and very smooth. And the ganache is pretty > soft, which would seem to be difficult to form into spheres. > > Can perfect sphere shaped truffles with a soft-ish ganache be done by > hand? Or is this some "trick-of-the-trade" using some kind of mold > system that assures uniformity? It's probably my lack of skill, but I > find I need to use a pretty stiff ganache for hand-rolled-dipped, and > my truffles always have a certain slightly non-spherical quality. I'd > love to be able to do better. Personally, I use a device that is something like an ice cream scoop that holds about 1 1/2 TBSP of ganache. It has a little "sweeper" in it that forces it out while leaving it in a perfect shape. I can't remember what the thing is actually called. Then I freeze the balls for 30 minutes or so while I temper the chocolate. Jeff |
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