Forum Activity for @Melanie Boudar

Melanie Boudar
@Melanie Boudar
04/02/09 01:03:15
104 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Hey man, I'm no prude...The religious value of Easter is pretty lost on me as well. I don't read the Bible or believe in Jesus. But many customers do and I respect that. Maybe you make so much $$ you don't care who you offend but I do care who I offend .
Ilana
@Ilana
04/01/09 23:02:27
97 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

As I mentioned, frogs (for the plague) and pyramids (Egypt)
Gretchen Tartakoff
@Gretchen Tartakoff
04/01/09 19:14:52
7 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I'm making macaroons drizzled with chocolate...for Passover. This is rich, flavorful and a real treat. I drizzled "enjoy life" chocolate chips, melted. They're dairy, soy, and gluten free and as a plus-pareve. I'm experimenting so they got tested out. Any dark chocolate 70%, preferably kosher for passover, would be great as a compliment to the almond flavor. Want the recipe? Check out Recipes with Chocolate
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 17:56:11
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

why thank you sir....I really cant believe how well these dumb things are selling....I sent you one for A.........
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
04/01/09 17:49:58
1,696 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Jeff:You are one sick puppy. But I mean that in the nicest way.:: Clay
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 17:28:34
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

ok.....its getting sicker.....by the minute.....these sold today....to a nurse..........
Carolyn Byrnes - C'est Très Chic
@Carolyn Byrnes - C'est Très Chic
04/01/09 11:55:34
4 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

am having fun creating egg boxes and 3-D characters from antique molds. They are all embellished with Lusterdust! I also sell the molds: www.oldmolds.com , I have loads of eggs!
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 11:35:44
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Those are pretty. I have looked at your site for years and coveted many of your molds....wish list stuff...
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 11:11:05
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Its all about the marzipan and cocoa butter paint......
Ilana
@Ilana
04/01/09 11:05:35
97 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I am scared to imagine what you will come up with for Halloween... With your imagination! And I thought green frogs with strawberry ganache (blood?) would be daring... innocent me...
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 07:09:20
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

My kitchen is staffed by pagan reprobates with a penchant for hard work whiskey and chluthlu. The religious value of easter is lost on us.
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 07:00:20
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

you can rest assured we have tried to crucify a few but they just dont stand up.....
Jeff
@Jeff
04/01/09 06:58:05
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

thank you artisan....much ado about nothing. We plaan on having a ball with halloween this year.
Tom
@Tom
04/01/09 04:51:11
205 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Wow they are spectacular!
updated by @Tom: 09/07/15 15:49:19
Artisan
@Artisan
04/01/09 01:46:15
8 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

That's the beauty of all of us having our own businesses is that we can all do what we want product wise.Some might find it sick and others fantastic, but in all cases it makes the choc world more diverse and that's worth celebrating.For my part i think these would be great for Halloween more than Easter but well done for the idea!
Bill Tice
@Bill Tice
04/01/09 01:44:20
10 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I mold the two halves and base. Fill with ganache as smush together. I don't melt or fill the joint and as you can see it is very small. These are 4" eggs.
Melanie Boudar
@Melanie Boudar
04/01/09 00:54:15
104 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

....and I do believe his work is art,I got a chuckle out of it but I personally just don't condone and promote violence and gore to children especially on what is more or less a religious value holiday.
updated by @Melanie Boudar: 01/29/15 00:29:12
Bill Tice
@Bill Tice
03/31/09 12:00:50
10 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I have good luck with these, 65% Dark with white marbling. Filled with white chocolate vanilla ganache and a lemon (Limoncello) yolk. Randomly I put two yolks in a few just like getting a double yolk egg. People love them and slice them like bread for Easter desert.
Jeff
@Jeff
03/31/09 07:48:45
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

well melanie it takes all kinds. we make and sell 10,000 + perfectly acceptable easter bunnies and hand painted eggs. Most of our voodoo bunnies grotesque features are being suggested by 10-12 year old kids who not only dig em, but want them extra gory. My daughter made 3 yesterday for her classmates, the kids love em.. Lighten up, life is a carnival, buy the ticket, take the ride.
Artisan
@Artisan
03/31/09 04:03:25
8 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

We have a one shot machine and got custom moulds made for mini eggs for the one shot,then we round them off and decorate them.It's the most efficient way to produce these but of course the investment is huge
Melanie Boudar
@Melanie Boudar
03/31/09 03:31:34
104 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

These are sick and sicker still are the people that think this is a cool way to scare kids.I can understand an inside joke in the kitchen but not to actually sell to the public.
Jeff
@Jeff
03/30/09 13:59:23
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Nobody expects the spanish inquisition!Thanks rob. We too think they are just a fine representation of the holiday...we sell them for $15.00 each and we have it down to a science. I just made a couple this morning with their eye sockets torn out and the eyeball still attached but hanging down....very graphic but oh so cute.we sold a few dozen this weekend, it was shocking, and we upset a few people too... which is half the fun.....we ship everywhere. .....for a price.1-888-899-2022
Melanie Boudar
@Melanie Boudar
03/29/09 12:51:25
104 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I am making a version of a mendiant- it is oval egg shaped disc with 65% Belgian Chocolate or Valrhona Ivorie White Chocolate studded with an edible viola flower, jellybeans, an almond, mac nut, blueberry, cranberry and crystallized mint. They are packaged in a clear cube with easter grass in various colors and breaks up the usual asst of bunnies. I will try to take a better picture of it today.
Jeff
@Jeff
03/29/09 12:43:29
94 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

well...we always make the cute little flop earned bunny and this year we changed up the eggs a bit but our newest fun project are the Voodoo Bunnies. They are selling like crazy AND scaring the children. Whats not to like? I mean once you have a pile of broken eared bunnies what are ya gonna do?
JOE CREVINO
@JOE CREVINO
03/28/09 15:39:15
6 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

We are making a Dark 8oz egg using Belgian Chocolate (70%) and filling it with a dark kona coffee truffle fillingJoe CrevinoSweet Mary's
Jeff Stern
@Jeff Stern
03/28/09 12:19:25
78 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

For the local market here in Ecuador, we are making painted easter eggs. I use a variety of techniques and colors. People don't see much stuff like this here, so it goes over well. On the other hand, people think stuff that is "hand-made" is equivalent to home-made, and have notions of quaint, cute, but not of quality or appreciation for all the work behind it. In Ecuador, if you're not cranking the product out by the tens of thousands, then it must not be that great-at least that's the perception.

For more info see www.aequarechocolates.com and www.giandujachocolates.com
Artisan
@Artisan
03/28/09 11:00:18
8 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

"object of Design" is Artisan du chocolat theme for Easter.My favourite piecesVery British punky Duckmade with Brazilian choc that we produce from ground beansShaker egg- finally an egg where you can eat the inside without breaking the egg, just shake them out.These eggs are filled with tiny drops of salt and pepper caramel coated in chocolate.Graffiti eggs "Who's your bunny" designed by London artist Darren CullenFor more visit www.artisanduchocolat.com Pics to follow
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
03/28/09 10:42:53
1,696 posts

Calling all Chocolatiers: What are YOU Making Special for Easter This Year?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Easter is one of the top holidays for buying and gifting fine chocolate and I know that there are many very creative chocolatiers that are members of TheChocolateLife.So - what are you making special this year? Let us know - and please post pictures of whatever you mention.:: ClayTech Note: Please limit file size to about 100Kb so the page does not take forever to load. Maximum width of 800 pixels, medium-quality compression - these are not for print reproduction. Minimum width dimension should be 600 pixels so we can see the detail.Tech Note Too: To embed a photo into your post, click on the camera icon in the "Reply To This" area and then select the file you want to upload. The HTML code will appear in the reply area, and you can embed as many photos as you want, you're not limited to three attachements.
updated by @Clay Gordon: 03/11/26 06:20:34
cybele
@cybele
03/28/09 15:33:50
37 posts

SF Chocolate Salon Tasting Panel Winners: Amano Cleans Up


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I thought I had missed something when I was looking at the winner listings and the website. I too could find no description of the categories or specifics about what products won. I'm sorry to see that more information isn't available (though it appears that going to the website for the winners seems to help as they're happy to provide details).
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
03/27/09 07:47:18
1,696 posts

SF Chocolate Salon Tasting Panel Winners: Amano Cleans Up


Posted in: News & New Products Press

The winners of the tasting panel awards from the recent 2009 "International" SF Chocolate Salon have been posted.Art Pollard's Amano Artisan Chocolate company walked away with many top honors, including:Best Dark ChocolateBest Milk ChocolateTop Artisan ChocolatierBest Dark Chocolate Bar (?)Best Milk Chocolate Bar (?)Best in SalonMost Gifted Chocolatier / Chocolate MakerIf you take a look at the awards and categories, you'll see some deep confusion about the makeup of the chocolate industry. This is a criticism I have long leveled at the organizers: their hearts are in the right place but they really don't know what they're talking about when it comes to the chocolate business. As with the organizer's books I found the information about the awards profoundly lacking in the basic - for example we only know the name of the company who won an award, not what product they won it for. We know that Amano won best dark chocolate bar over Tcho and Brix, but all three companies make more than one bar. WHICH chocolates were being awarded?It's also impossible to know what the difference is between the award for Best Dark Chocolate and Best Dark Chocolate Bar is. (It's not an editing mistake because it shows up in the 2008 LA awards list.) In another confusing award, because Amano does not make confections, it's hard to understand why they won as best artisan chocolat ier . Finally, there is no distinction (that is obvious) between companies that make chocolate from the bean and companies that either melt and mold a single commercially available chocolate or that melt and mold a blend of commercially available chocolates. What you say, too nuanced? Not at all - it's recognition of different skills.On the other hand, the awards do not seem to suffer from two of the challenges of the Academy of Chocolate awards - a dearth of judges, and obvious sponsor favoritism: more than 35 judges are listed and none of the apparent sponsors won awards. To their credit, the organizers did not have a single judge whose product was submitted for an award. As is most common, there is no description of the judging instructions.One other place where these awards differ from the Academy of Chocolate awards is that it appears you must be an exhibitor to submit product for judging. In the AoC awards, anyone can enter - they don't have to be Academy members. So, there is no obvious sponsor favoritism but the awards reflect a shallow pool of entries.These differences highlight the difference in intent in the purpose of the Awards and only begins to expose some of the challenges in creating the rules that govern a competition, including not only what will be judged, but how it will be judged, and how the judging process will be explained (or not) to the companies whose work is being judged as well as to the general public.In saying all this I don't want to be seen as diminishing Art's accomplishments. He - along with the many other young small bean-to-bar manufacturers - have done great work in a very short period of time. He deserves recognition for his success: Congratulations, Art.But it does say that there is a long way to go in crafting a competition that accurately and meaningfully represents the chocolate business in a way that is truly helpful to the consumer.
updated by @Clay Gordon: 03/11/26 06:20:34
Frank Schmidt
@Frank Schmidt
03/27/09 09:44:21
28 posts

Ghana Roasting?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

OK Guys,Thanks for the suggestions. I'm using a standard kitchen oven, electric, not convection to roast. Haven't gone to a drum roaster as yet. That, plus a tempering machine are my next upgrades.My usual roast on other beans has been 300 F (149 C) for about 20-25 min. so it sounds like I'm in line with your suggestions. Hope to start on this tomorrow. Weather here is expected rain (poss. snow) this weekend (southern Missouri). Therefore, no grape vine pruning in the vineyards for me this weekend. Will stay in the workshop with chocolate, someone's got to do it !I'll report back on my progress.
Carlos Eichenberger
@Carlos Eichenberger
03/26/09 17:12:03
158 posts

Ghana Roasting?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

From what I've read (I'm in Guatemala so I have no reason to import cacao) the Ghana Forastero likes a high roast. Are you using an oven or a drum roaster? IIRC John had it at a final temp of about 290 for 20 mins or so.
Tom
@Tom
03/26/09 16:58:03
205 posts

Ghana Roasting?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hi Frank,I have worked with these ones too, I did about 30 min in 150 degrees C and then 10 min in the cooling oven with the oven door slightly open. I didn't have a lot of these beans and am not conviced that this was optimal but it is a point to begin with. I didn't achieve the chocolateyness I was hoping for but didn't have more to experiment with. As a reference I roasted pretty much the same as the the Papua (because of the large bean size of the Papua) and 5-7 minutes less than the Dominican which I found needed quite a dark roast. Perhaps I was a little light on the Ghana - I was erring on the side of caution and John mentions it does well with both a light roast and a dark roast, so perhaps you could go a little darker. Anyway you have done a fair bit of roasting now and tasting as you roast should hopefully get you where you want with these comments as a reference.Hope this helps, happy roasting.
Frank Schmidt
@Frank Schmidt
03/26/09 15:50:37
28 posts

Ghana Roasting?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hi All,I just got a shipment of Ghana beans from John Nanci and will start roasting them in a couple of days. My first attempt with this origin.Any of you have a suggestion on roast levels or roasting times?Thanks
updated by @Frank Schmidt: 04/11/25 09:27:36
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