One of the lessons my home economy teacher drummed into me
at school was that I must never use ordinary chocolate for cooking. She never explained why but my guess is that
it is due to the high sugar and low cocoa content of eating chocolate.
I have seen huge 5kg bags of cooking chocolate buttons on
sale at the cash and carry here in Astana, but I rarely use cooking
chocolate. I prefer to use a really good
quality dark chocolate in my cooking, it is usually possible to buy 75% or even
90% chocolate very easily here and this gives excellent results and you don’t
need to reduce the amount of sugar in your recipe. Good chocolate like this melts very easily or you can chop
it into chips. I now use my food processor to do this but for many years my kitchen was too small to accommodate one and I used a mezzaluna to good effect. Aside from saving my wrists I find the real advantage of the food processor is the by-product.
Chocolate chips in the food processor. |
As well as
the chocolate chip rubble you get a considerable amount of powdered
chocolate. I love hot chocolate, it is one of my real failings and I add the powder to warm milk to make a really luxurious drink. If you are using very high percentage chocolate you may want to add some sugar - I like my hot chocolate strong and bitter, my husband has to have sugar. This is the sort of luxury product you pay over the odds for if it comes in a packet, in fact you could, if you are that way inclined, get some natty cellophane packages, ribbon and labels and make up some gift packages. I can usually not bear to part with the extra.
Luxurious hot chocolate is a tasty by-product. |
I never bake with ordinary milk chocolate as I find that even the best quality eating milk chocolate
is too sweet. The quality of milk
chocolate is also very variable, popular brands such as Cadbury’s (UK) and
Hershey’s (US) have very little actual chocolate in them. Not at all pleasant to cook with and probably
explains why supermarkets in those countries carry an extensive range of
cooking chocolates.
If very sweet milky chocolate is the only stuff available
you can still use it. Look for the
highest level of cocoa solids you can find and remember to cut the amount of
sugar in your recipe. Substitute the milk
chocolate for the cooking chocolate on a 1:1 ratio and then remove 1 teaspoon
of sugar for each 6 grams of chocolate so, if your recipe calls for 100g of
sugar you will need to remove 16-17 teaspoons of sugar from your measured
weight.
If I can only find milk chocolate I prefer to make my own
cooking chocolate. It is very easy to do
and I speak from experience when I say that the ingredients are available almost everywhere in the world even in the
middle of the African bush. All you need
is butter and cocoa powder on a 1:1 ratio. 1 table spoon of butter combined
with 1 tablespoon of cocoa is equivalent to about 25 grams of solid
chocolate.
Simple ingredients make a good substitute for cooking chocolate. |
Just melt the butter (I use a microwave but otherwise place
a bowl over a saucepan of boiling water without letting the water touch the
bottom of the bowl). Sieve the cocoa
powder into the butter and whisk together to a smooth paste.
The paste can be used immediately or kept until later |
You can either use this directly in your cake mix
or pour it into a container lined with baking paper or buttered cling film and refrigerate
it for later use. Remember that because
this is butter based it will melt at room temperature so it has to be kept in the
fridge.
Once set keep in the fridge until needed. |
Don't be tempted to eat this, it does not have a pleasant taste on its own but it does give a wonderfully chocolaty flavour hit in any cake.
Click on the picture for more posts on the challenges of expat cooking.
Click on the picture for more posts on the challenges of expat cooking.
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