How to make best milk chocolate at home?

How to make best milk chocolate at home? - Side view of African American female cook with sieve pouring flour into bowl with chocolate batter while cooking in kitchen

I have eaten home-made chocolate before, and while it was pretty good, it could not compare with the expensive chocolate at the store.

I would like to make the best milk chocolate I can at home. From what I know, the main ingredients are: cocoa powder, some fat (such as butter, coconut oil, etc.), powdered milk, water, and sugar.

I guess my question is, do you have any advice (or recipe) for making a really good milk chocolate? Some particular questions I have are:

  1. Which is the best fat to use? Is it cocoa butter (I have trouble finding cocoa butter at the store)?

  2. Is the powdered milk found at the store really the best for making chocolate? Is it better to make my own powdered milk?

  3. Are there any other ingredients that are recommended for high-quality milk chocolate? I have seen soy lecitin, should I use this?

Thank you very much.



Best Answer

To really be considered chocolate, you need to use cocoa butter as your fat. Cocoa butter has a few properties that other fats don't have. Most notably, it is capable of forming a crystalline structure which is what gives tempered chocolate its "snap" and—when tempered—it has a melting point above external body temperature but below internal body temperature. Using any other fat will result in a chocolate flavored material that is not chocolate (more akin to frosting or fudge).

The other factor in the "expensive" chocolates at the store is the particle size of the cocoa powder. This can be in the neighborhood of 20 microns in a good chocolate, but can be half that size in high-end chocolates. To achieve this, the chocolate needs to be physically worked for many hours, if not days. Commercial suppliers use a machine called a conche to accomplish this. Cocoa powders usually contain particles in the 35-50 micron range, so you'll never get that "expensive chocolate" mouth feel.

In addition, the temperatures, humidity, roasting times, mix of beans, type of sugar and fat content of the milk powder are all precisely maintained, further impacting the flavor.

You may have trouble with milk powder at the store because it is usually made with little or no fat to extend shelf life. The same goes for the fat content of cocoa powder, as there is a wide range in the available products. Check to see if your recipe specified a fat content for the milk powder and cocoa powder, and if not, you might need to experiment.

As you said, you can make "pretty good" milk chocolate at home. The most difficult part will be tempering the chocolate, but it's so common to need to re-temper commercial chocolate when you work with them that it's a good skill to master anyway.

Most of the people I know who make chocolate at home do so because the vast majority of chocolate makers use soy lecithin as an emulsifying agent and they (or their loved ones) can't eat soy, but even then, there are a few manufacturers who make soy-free chocolates these days.




Pictures about "How to make best milk chocolate at home?"

How to make best milk chocolate at home? - Top view of delicious pieces of milk chocolate bar with filling on wooden board near heap of aromatic coffee beans and instant camera with artificial chamomiles on table
How to make best milk chocolate at home? - A hand holding a cup of beverage
How to make best milk chocolate at home? - Baked Cookies



How milk chocolate is made step by step?

The production of chocolate
  • Introduction. ...
  • Harvesting Cocoa & Cocoa processing. ...
  • Step #1: Plucking and opening the Pods. ...
  • Step #2: Fermenting the cocoa seeds. ...
  • Step #3: Drying the cocoa seeds. ...
  • Manufacturing Chocolate. ...
  • Step #1: Roasting and Winnowing the Cocoa. ...
  • Step #2: Grinding the Cocoa Nibs.


  • What ingredients are in milk chocolate?

    Milk chocolate gets its mild, velvety taste from a delicate balance of ingredients. While milk chocolate and dark chocolate both use cocoa liquor, cocoa butter and sugar, milk chocolate also uses milk powder to give it a creamier taste, texture, and lighter color.

    How is milk chocolate made from scratch?

    With chocolate milk, the sweeter the better, so mix in some sugar. Fans of salty-sweet flavor can add a pinch of salt. Stick the glass in the refrigerator until it's reached a cool temperature. For a thicker, shake-like drink, blend the chocolate milk with ice cubes in a blender.



    How to Make Chocolate Milk




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

    Images: Andres Ayrton, Ena Marinkovic, Fallon Michael, Marta Dzedyshko