We absolutely adored our instructor, Michelle Tampakis. We both agreed we learned more about chocolate in the first hour of that class than we had learned in our entire lives. I finally understand what the percentages listed on the chocolate bars mean.
After a lecture that began with the cocoa bean to the resulting coverture, Michelle than tempered dark chocolate and made coconut and almond clusters. Here she demonstrates an almond roasted completely thorough. Important because if it isn't completely roasted the moisture left in the nut will spoil the chocolate and cause the nut to become rancid, shortening the life of the confection. Not that anything will last long enough to become rancid around my house.
Left to set up, she explained that hardening in the air will make them dry a looking dull.
We had decided to make white chocolate clusters with walnuts and dried cherries. Tilla began measuring the chocolate.
We had to melt the chocolate and bring it up to a temperature between 115 degrees and 120 degrees.
Cool the melted chocolate down to 84-88 degrees F by adding extra chocolate, or seeding as it's called.
Keep checking the temperature. The chocolate needs to be between 84 and 88 degrees for white and milk chocolate, dark has to be within the zone of 87-91 degrees. This is for the ultimate shine and flavor. Sometimes you have to go back to the bain marie to warm it a bit. We spent a lot of time going back and forth between the stove and table. Michelle said the best way to melt chocolate was in a microwave oven. The school had none, so we used a bain marie. A simple metal bowl in a pot of simmering water.
Once the chocolate was at the correct temperature, we added 12 ounces total of walnuts and cherries.
Tilla, hard at work.
Once the clusters were spooned onto the sheet pan, and cooled, we melted some dark chocolate and piped it on top. They looked gorgeous!
Moving right along, we decided to make a dark chocolate bark of pistachios and dried cherries.Tilla became an expert at tempering chocolate! He could really work that thermometer.
Can you tell we both adore dried cherries?To enhance the look of the bark, always top it with more of the same ingredients you used to make it. Here we placed more pistachios and dried cherries on the top.
Michelle than began dipping fruit in chocolate.
My favorite was the dried mango dipped in dark chocolate and sprinkled with chili pepper flakes.
Spread your tempered chocolate over the transfer plastic.
Cut angles into the chocolate.
Tilla and I knew we couldn't live withou a chocolate thermometer, on Michelle's recommendation we immediately went to JB Price at 60 East 31 st. street, on the 12 th floor. A store to the trade. OK, we loved it. And we both promptly blew 50 bucks each!
My box of confections before it was attacked by my teenagers! I quickly took a few pieces to my neighbor Natasha.