Are there any special techniques for tempering dark chocolates with different cacao percentages?

Are there any special techniques for tempering dark chocolates with different cacao percentages? - From above of crop unrecognizable female adding hot ganache made of heavy cream to dark chocolate drops in glass bowl

I want to use up some chocolate I have on hand, and don't have enough of either one for the recipe I plan to use for truffles, so I thought I'd try combining the 3 chocolates. One is 54%, one is 63%, and one is 86%. Any suggestions or warnings would be appreciated! Thanks!



Best Answer

You're first melting it all and mixing it together, right? You can just compute the cacao contents of the resulting mixture. For that you'll need to weigh the three batches. Say the 54% batch is 200g, the 63% batch is 150g and the 86% batch is 100g. Then you have a total of 54% * 200g + 63% * 150g + 86% * 100g = 108g + 94.5g + 86g = 288.5g of cacao out of a total mass of 200g + 150g + 100g = 450g. So the resulting cacao percentage is 288.5 / 450 = 64%. Now just treat the mixture as you would 64% cacao chocolate (since that's what it is).




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Can dark chocolate be tempered?

First of all, the most important thing, any chocolate with cocoa butter in it can be tempered! Whether it's dark (semi-sweet), milk, or white \u2013 as long as it has cacao butter \u2013 that is what we're actually tempering.

What are the different methods of tempering chocolate?

Being a chocolatier, you should follow one of these 6 tempering chocolate methods to temper your couverture chocolate.
  • Tempering with Chocolate Chip & Melter.
  • Tempering with Chocolate & Double Boiler.
  • Tempering Chocolate in the Microwave.
  • Tempering Chocolate with Cocoa Butter.
  • Tempering Chocolate with Tempering Machine.


What are the 3 methods for tempering chocolate?

There are two tried and true methods to tempering; the Inoculation or Seed Method and the Tablier Method. In both methods you are bringing the temperature up, cooling the cocoa butter, and re-warming it.

What percentage of chocolate is best for tempering?

Adding about 25% unmelted chocolate (or "seed chocolate") by weight to the melted chocolate will help bring the whole mixture into temper. Cool: Stir continuously until the chocolate is at or below 90\xb0F/32\xb0C; as low as 86\xb0F/30\xb0C for dark chocolate or 84\xb0F/28.9\xb0C for milk or white.



How To Temper Dark Chocolate




More answers regarding are there any special techniques for tempering dark chocolates with different cacao percentages?

Answer 2

Mixing chocolates for tempering is usually fine. The percentage of cocoa isn't actually what makes a difference in the tempering. The percentage of cocoa butter is what really matters. Unfortunately, that information is usually hard to find, so most tempering techniques just assume an average amount.

As long as all three chocolates have been properly stored (cool, dry, sealed), then you should have no problem. If you are using the seeding method, save the best stored or newest chocolate to use as the seed, since it will be most in temper.

Answer 3

Ok, self admitted dark chocoholic here. I have done this myself. Its really not that different. You might want to consider adding Paramount crystals to aid in the tempering process.

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