Tempering help

Brad Churchill
@brad-churchill
04/16/12 16:37:39
527 posts

Ok... I'll help.

If you get your room temperature down to 24 degrees, using the ACMC (I own 6) will take absolutely FOREVER to cool and reheat. My suggestion is as follows:

  1. Heat the chocolate in your ACMC to 120 degrees F, and make sure it's thoroughly heated.
  2. Ensure that your motor is running and the bowl is spinning.
  3. Reset your machine temperature to 90 degrees F, and begin to cool it.
  4. When the chocolate gets to105 Degrees, remove 1/3 and cool it using a cold water bath in your sink. DO NOT GET ANY WATER IN THE BOWL.
  5. The temperature of the chocolate in your cold water bath should get to about 79 degrees F. It will cool very quickly, so make sure you are stirring the entire time. It should get thick like pudding, and begin to stick to the sides of the bowl.
  6. Add the chocolate back into your ACMC and stir really really well, MAKING SURE THE WATER IS WIPED OFF OF THE OUTSIDE OF YOUR BOWL BEFORE YOU POUR IT BACK IN. This will not only bring the chocolate in your ACMC down to the working temperature, but will also seed the uncrystalized chocolate and bring it into temper.
  7. Let the machine mix the chocolate for 10-15 minutes to ensure uniform crystalization before beginning to work with it.

That's it. Super easy.

Hope that helps.

Brad

Rosie
@rosie
04/16/12 15:27:31
8 posts
I'm definitely no expert but i noticed no one else had replied. As far as I've learned and experienced ambient temp of the room in which your tempering should be closer to about 20. Also you can temper without seed by tableing.
Malcolm Tiu lim
@malcolm-tiu-lim
02/01/12 01:24:05
5 posts

I was wondering if you need to use seed chocolate to acutally temper?

Could you temper the whole batch? like say i bring the whole 5lbs of chocolate down to 80 F and then heat back up to 90 - 92 F?

I'm about to buy an ACMC machine and im in the tropics where the ambient temperature is 33 C. So I will have to temper in an airconditioned room where i bring the ambient temp down to 24C. I use a Santha to grind my beans and add my ingridients, and when i usually get the chocolate out of the santha the temperature is about 115F.


updated by @malcolm-tiu-lim: 04/11/25 09:27:36

Tags

Marketplace

Activity

Clay Gordon
 
@clay • yesterday • comments: 0
Posted a response to "Packaging and Storage"
"Mandy: There are multiple types of packaging used for chocolate, depending on the brand, purpose, and specific product. Some common types of..."
Clay Gordon
 
@clay • yesterday • comments: 0
Posted a response to "Paper vs. Metal vs. Plastic: A Candid Look at Chocolate Packaging Pros & Cons"
"Mandy – I appreciate that you did not appear to link to the company you work for, which apparently manufactures tin cans, given your email address...."
Eric Lau
 
@eric-lau • 2 days ago • comments: 0
Posted a response to "Paper vs. Metal vs. Plastic: A Candid Look at Chocolate Packaging Pros & Cons"
"Good suggestion! We have a chocolate shop. I think the aluminum foil +paper box packaging would be very suitable for us."
Eric Lau
 
@eric-lau • 2 days ago
@eric-lau is now following @community
kapil jain
 
kapil jain
 
kapil jain
 
@kapil-jain • 9 years ago

Chocolatevenue is an online chocolate store in India.We are specialized in customized chocolates  .Chocolates can be customized as chocolate message and chocolate bars.

You can get written your message on chocolates and can get customized your chocolate bars by selecting the desired ingredients.

for more details