Can grocery store chocolate be used as chocolate coating?
Suppose I want to coat a random object in chocolate.
(Because, let's face it, why would you not want to do this??)
Can I simply buy my favorite brand of chocolate, melt it, and pour it over stuff and wait for it to set? Or is that likely to ruin the chocolate in some way?
(The obvious follow-up question being "if that's not the right way to do this, what is?")
Best Answer
Cocoa butter crystallizes into various types of crystals depending on the temperature at which it cools. If the butter cools into an ad hoc assortment of crystal types then they don't arrange themselves uniformly and the chocolate will be dull and sticky.
The process of melting chocolate to encourage proper crystal growth is called tempering. You will find quite a few questions on the subject here.
You can use any chocolate that contains cocoa butter. However, if you are going to be putting that much work into tempering your chocolate you might spring for the nicer quality chocolate and not just plain Hershey's.
Alternatively, if it meets your needs, you can either serve your chocolate still melted or make a thick syrup/fudge dip that stays soft and doesn't need to be tempered.
Pictures about "Can grocery store chocolate be used as chocolate coating?"
Can you use normal chocolate for coating?
Grab a bag of your favorite HERSHEY'S chocolate chips, whether its HERSHEY'S SPECIAL DARK, semi-sweet or milk chocolate. Once you gently melt down 2 cups of chocolate chips and add a bit of shortening, you can create a homemade, savory chocolate coating to make dozens of delicious desserts.Can you temper supermarket chocolate?
Tempering chocolate \u201cWhen you buy chocolate from the supermarket it is shiny and snaps when you break it. If you melt it and cool it again without tempering, the cocoa butter crystals form in a loose and uneven structure leaving you with dull chocolate that crumbles rather than snaps.Can any chocolate be used for melting?
All chocolate will melt, but not all chocolate will resolidify nicely. Often, after chocolate melts it develops as dull, almost chalky appearance. It can also be brittle, rather than snappy. Good melting chocolate will melt at low temperatures and become smooth if done correctly.Can you use any chocolate for tempering?
You can temper and coat with most any chocolate, including semisweet, milk, or white; they just need slightly different handling, mostly regarding temperatures.How to make coated chocolates
More answers regarding can grocery store chocolate be used as chocolate coating?
Answer 2
Cocoa butter contains different fats with different melting points. In order to avoid whitish smears in your coating, the chocolate must be melted just above melting point, and kept under constant stirring. This is quite tricky but its the way to ensure a homogeneous coating.
Commercial coating does not contain cocoa butter but some other shortening with a single melting point, thus easing manipulation. But it is not chocolate.
Answer 3
I have had success simply melting chocolate chips from the grocery store to coat strawberries. No adding cream or anything. Food Network recipe says use chips. http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/food-network-kitchens/chocolate-covered-strawberries-recipe/index.html Delicious!
Answer 4
Melting chocolate chips on top IS my favorite kind of frosting. Milk chocolate chips can especially be effective as frosting.
Answer 5
Tempering properly and coating with real chocolate is all well and good, but probably a bit much work for many. There is an alternative (which Juancho mentioned), though. There are commercial chocolate coatings (e.g. Magic Shell) which are very easy to use - no tempering. They're not pure chocolate though; there's a substantial amount of another oil to make things work right. I haven't tried it, but it looks like you can make your own with coconut oil (for example this recipe). Could be that with your favorite chocolate, you'd prefer that to commercial versions, and that it'd be worth the time savings compared to working with pure chocolate for you.
Answer 6
Chocolate chips are fine by me to make chocolate-coated whatevers. Hershey bars (no nuts please), Kisses (kind of a paint to unwrap tho), Ghirardelli squares (no fillings), they all work.
A few things:
Always use a double-boiler to melt chocolate. You don't have one? Poppycock; get a large-ish metal or Pyrex mixing bowl and set it on top of a saucepan large enough for most of the bowl to be in the pan but small enough that the bowl will sit on top and leave enough space for an air gap between bowl and boiling water. Voila, a double boiler. The double boiler will prevent the chocolate getting too hot and "breaking" (cocoa solids precipitating out of the oil); still gotta keep an eye on it, but it's harder to mess up.
Pouring is more difficult than dipping. While you're pouring, the chocolate's off the heat and so it's cooling, you're exposing the chocolate to surfaces that may be hotter or cooler than the bottom of the bowl it's been melting in, etc etc. If the object is small enough for it to be practical to dip, then stick a toothpick in it and dip it. If it's too big (bigger than your average finger food like a banana chunk, strawberry or cookie), then go ahead and pour, but be patient and I strongly recommend using a bowl or double-boiler pan with a prominent pouring spout on the brim, and a rubber spatula; get the chocolate close to the pour spout, then carefully use the spatula to push a little chocolate into the pour spout and then onto your random object.
The random object must not be a living thing. Chocolate may melt at body temperature, but there's only 7 degrees F difference between body temperature at 98 and painfully hot at 105, and at 125* you can very quickly cause blisters. If you're planning a fun, slightly messy Saturday night with your main squeeze, I'd go with chocolate syrup.
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