How can I cause (yes, cause, not prevent) bloom in chocolate?

How can I cause (yes, cause, not prevent) bloom in chocolate? - Assorted Food To Avoid for Diabetics

I've had a few Hershey chocolate bars in the past that had a white surface coating. After a bit of searching, I found this is called bloom. I'm not sure if this is sugar bloom or fat bloom, but it was from a newly bought chocolate bar. I actually, and apparently unpopularly, enjoy this effect. Is there a way to induce it in store bought chocolate?



Best Answer

Sugar bloom is a bit more stable than fat bloom, so if you like that effect I'd suggest that you try to leave the chocolate first in a slightly warm and damp environment, the sort of temperature that would make it really soft, and once it is "sweating" move it to a freezer.

Sugar bloom is caused when the moisture from the chocolate gets slight separated from the chocolate, it dissolves the surface sugars and then evaporates, leaving sugar crystals behind. So it might be possible that spraying a soft warm mist of water might help accelerate it.

I never tried to have sugar bloom intentionally, but I'll give this mist technique a shot and let you know.




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Quick Answer about "How can I cause (yes, cause, not prevent) bloom in chocolate?"

  • Avoid Drastic Temperature Changes. Temperature shock and a humid environment are two main causes of chocolate bloom. ...
  • Understand The Technique Properly. ...
  • Choose The Right Type Of Chocolate.


  • How do you stop chocolate from blooming?

    Store your finished chocolate products at a constant temperature between 18\xb0C and 20\xb0C. Fat-based fillings (e.g. pralines or nut-based fillings) will make fat bloom appear faster. You can prevent this by adding 5% to 6% cocoa butter to your filling and then pre-crystallising (or tempering) it.

    What causes blooming in chocolate?

    The cocoa butter inside your chocolate melts and separates from the rest of the ingredients when it is in a warm environment that is not properly managed. As a result, it then rises to the surface and settles, thus creating the off-white bloom.

    Can you correct chocolate bloom?

    Chocolate bloom can be repaired by melting the chocolate down, stirring it, then pouring it into a mold and allowing it to cool, bringing the sugar or fat back into the solution.

    What ingredients cut chocolate bloom?

    This blooming happens when the chocolate has been exposed to warm temperatures. Once the chocolate is warm, the cocoa butter in the chocolate softens and separates from other ingredients in the chocolate. Once it rises to the surface and re-solidifies, it creates the bloom.



    How to prevent fat bloom




    More answers regarding how can I cause (yes, cause, not prevent) bloom in chocolate?

    Answer 2

    Since @TBonamigo have already addressed sugar blooming, I will comment on fat blooming.

    Fat blooming is the migration of fat from the bulk of the chocolate to the surface. Why and how blooming happens is not an easy question, and there is a lot of research in the industry trying to address the problem.

    But we can build a heuristic picture. The first important information is that when liquid cocoa butter cools, it forms a solid crystalline structure. Different spatial arrangements of the fat molecules lead to different crystalline structures, each characterized by different physical properties such as melting point, specific heat, and resistance to strain.

    If you melt your chocolate and let it cool randomly, it will (almost) randomly crystallise in these different shapes. The result is a polycrystalline solid. Since some of these crystals have a lower melting point, imagine that with temperature fluctuation some of them can melt and become a liquid trapped in the unmelted crystal. But since liquids occupy a higher volume, this generates pressure that 'push' the liquid fat to the surface. This migration also increase the porosity of the chocolate which itself helps blooming.

    Chocolate makers usually want to reduce this effect by controlled cooling o form a uniform structure with the most stable crystals. If most of the crystals have the same (high) melting point you reduce blooming. This is achieved by tempering, and your industrial bar is usually in this phase.


    With the science in mind, an easy way to get fat blooming is untempering your chocolate by melting it completely and let it cool into a polycrystal at room temperature. From personal experience this usually leads to blooming within a few days. If you cool in the fridge and after let it sit at room temperature It might even accelerate the process, since you are creating more drastic temperature fluctuations.

    Answer 3

    If you put it in the freezer for a while, it sometimes happens. Or long time sitting on the shelf (room temperature) I mean a long time, like years (not decades).

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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