Forum Activity for @Kerry

Kerry
@Kerry
04/01/10 05:48:57
288 posts

Panning machine experts?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Excellent. Let me know if I can help. I'd have been there in a heart beat if the schedule allowed.
Roni-Sue
@Roni-Sue
03/31/10 20:44:18
4 posts

Panning machine experts?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

hi kerry,the pan has a fan/blower attachment. actually, i think we've located someone now to come and meet with us and show us the tricks of our machine. i'll let you know if we need more help but i'm told these folks know their stuff. hope so! thanks for being in touch. i'll let you know how it turns out!
Kerry
@Kerry
03/31/10 19:36:27
288 posts

Panning machine experts?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

What are you using to warm and cool?
Roni-Sue
@Roni-Sue
03/29/10 07:10:00
4 posts

Panning machine experts?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hi Kerry,Yes, chocolate only, covering nuts, coffee beans, etc. We have a 24" pan with two bowls, one ribbed, one smooth.
Kerry
@Kerry
03/28/10 20:45:48
288 posts

Panning machine experts?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Roni-Sue,What do you plan to do with the panning machine? Strictly chocolate?
Roni-Sue
@Roni-Sue
03/28/10 19:32:11
4 posts

Panning machine experts?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

I have a brand new commercial panning machine and my staff and I have limited experience with such equipment and thepanning processin general. We would like to hire a panning expert in the NYC area to come into our shop and do a hands on tutorial for us. Please spread the word to help us find someone and let us know if you can fill the bill, thanks!

Also, if you have materials you have found helpful, I'd appreciate if you would let me know about them. I've found some on-line and have down-loaded them but there's nothing like a real face to face hands on experience to learn something!


updated by @Roni-Sue: 04/11/25 09:27:36
Mark Wilton
@Mark Wilton
03/28/10 21:07:22
2 posts

Adding Own Ingredients.


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks for the information - Obviously I'm no Chocolatier yet would like to add my own ingredients where possible.How about honey as a form of sweetning?Thanks again.
Kerry
@Kerry
03/28/10 20:51:32
288 posts

Adding Own Ingredients.


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Liquid milk, liquor or fruit juice can't be used in chocolate. It will cause the chocolate to seize. Those liquids can however be used if making a ganche.You can add cocoa butter to couverature - however adding sugar may result in a grainy product. Sugar is generally added before the conching process insuring that the particle size becomes very small and thereby preventing it from be detected as crystalline by the tongue.
Mark Wilton
@Mark Wilton
03/28/10 18:10:23
2 posts

Adding Own Ingredients.


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hi,

I naturally have thought of adding my own ingredients to a 99%couverture chocolate I can get hold of. Is this an easy thing to do i.e can Ijust simply add my own milk powder and cocoa butter to a melted chocolate? can Iadd things like a liquor, Cognac or even fruit juice, for example juicedstraberries ect?

PS. Can I use liquid milk instead of powdered form? I'mfrom England and there's a chocolate bar that states it uses real milk.Obviously I can't stand the thing now that I'm aware of decentchocolate.

Thanks.
updated by @Mark Wilton: 04/11/25 09:27:36
Matt Caputo
@Matt Caputo
05/20/10 08:30:52
53 posts

What happened to De Vries?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Thanks for the update. Unfortunately no chocolate is for sale on his website.
Scott
@Scott
05/20/10 08:29:10
44 posts

What happened to De Vries?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Just updating this to note that DeVries did appear at the DC event last month.
Mark J Sciscenti
@Mark J Sciscenti
03/27/10 00:23:44
33 posts

What happened to De Vries?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I saw Steve in July last year up in Denver. Yes, his mother is ill. Steve also contracted a bug while down in Bolivia which he has been fighting since that trip in early '09, I think... maybe earlier then that. I do not know whether that has changed or if he is still fighting that. I am sorry to hear that his mother is so ill. Sorry Steve. Hope you are better though. -Mark
Carlos Eichenberger
@Carlos Eichenberger
03/26/10 12:24:29
158 posts

What happened to De Vries?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

I was told by a fellow chocolatier that Steve's mom has been having health issues, so he has suspended operations until further notice. Sadly, IIRC the illness is terminal.
Scott
@Scott
03/25/10 10:23:59
44 posts

What happened to De Vries?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Steve DeVries appeared at a chocolate event in Dallas (along with Alan McClure of Patric) in late August, at which point his online portal was already indicating that no chocolate was available for retail sale. He appeared to still be in the business, despite the unavailability of retail product. He is also scheduled to do a presentation on chocolate next month in Washington, D.C., in conjunction with National Geographic.I'm reluctant to assume anything from the recent unavailability.
Matt Caputo
@Matt Caputo
03/24/10 22:00:41
53 posts

What happened to De Vries?


Posted in: News & New Products Press

Anyone know what happened to De Vries chocolate? The website is down and I tried to email Steve, but no answer. I hope everything is okay.

updated by @Matt Caputo: 03/11/26 06:20:34
María Soledad Troya
@María Soledad Troya
04/08/10 17:14:55
6 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

This are some maps I gotSole
María Soledad Troya
@María Soledad Troya
04/08/10 16:46:49
6 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

VanessaIm sorry. I got this from a pdf, much bigger doc. Im trying to get it right for you.Sole
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
04/07/10 10:59:57
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

It is lovely :) One of the few around, at least, what I've come across.
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
04/07/10 10:59:23
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thank you, Maria.Unfortunately, I can't see the map since my computer doesn't support ClipFile documents. Do you have another version?
Paul Mosca
@Paul Mosca
04/06/10 20:27:58
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

The New Taste of Chocolate by Maricel Presilla has a lovely map. Page 32 is a world map of cocoa's disbursed cultivation.
María Soledad Troya
@María Soledad Troya
04/06/10 19:48:25
6 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

I have one that might interest you. It is a map of the Ecuadorian Nacional. The only forastero in the world to be considered aroma cocoa . Consider Ecuador produces the 60% of the aroma cocoa of the world. I send you an attached doc. The arriba subtype is not mentioned in the map, but corresponds to the Los Rios and Guayas provinces, southwest of the country. It is the one Samantha talks about.I hope this is useful to you.Sole
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
04/02/10 13:35:59
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Brilliant. Let's go for it.
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
04/01/10 09:52:42
1,698 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

A collaborative Google map is not a bad idea.There are tools to draw regions as well (to describe boundaries), attach pictures, and more.If this is of interest, I could set up the framework for people to work from.
Nick Frappier
@Nick Frappier
04/01/10 09:34:21
3 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

V- if there's something that needs doing Google had probably developed something to help. Have you considered using Google Earth to help keep track of plantations and areas? In the short term it can at least give you some basic info like coordinates.
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
03/30/10 11:55:55
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks, Clay. I agree that it will be harder. And the end personality of a chocolate comes after its rearing in a certain environment and how it's handled after the fact. After assessing everyone's input, it might be a worthwhile project to explore that on my own, slowly but surely.
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
03/30/10 10:15:24
1,698 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Vanessa:There are no generally available maps that provide the information you are looking for; some companies might have ones they use for their own purposes (I have seen ones Nazario Rizek has for various plantations they manage in the Dominican Republic but I don't remember if they have elevation data on them). But finding the underlying stratigraphic detail is going to be very hard - so correlating the geography with soil conditions (and then climatic patterns) is going to be even harder.I think that most of us in the industry with experience and knowledge agree that terroir is somehow involved, however, it's a lot more complex with cacao than with grapes - especially because the bulk of the crop is produced by smallholder farmers who don't care.
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
03/29/10 15:54:24
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks all for your replies.Samantha, yes I'm very much interested in cacao terroir. I'm a bit of a cartogrpahy geek, so literally mapping out the area in terms of orientation, elevation, climate and soil make up among others to me are fascinating. I'm curious if the concept of micro terroir that's prevalent in French wine appellations also hold true for a product like cacao and various regions where it's cultivated by smaller growers. Sounds like in terms of resources, I'll have to start compiling my own findings.I'll read up on your link on Notes on Flavor right now.
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
03/26/10 14:38:55
1,698 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

The web site Lowe is referring to is in support of the book, "Chocolate: History, Culture, and Heritage" published by Wiley and funded in large part by Mars.The web site itself (at the URL mentioned in the book http://cocoaknow.ucdavis.edu ) is still very much a work in progress. As near as I can tell, there has been no substantive work done on the site in the last nine months or so.
ChocoFiles
@ChocoFiles
03/26/10 10:39:51
251 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Oh yeah, here's a chart about re-classifying cacao varietals that you might find interesting too.
ChocoFiles
@ChocoFiles
03/26/10 10:32:56
251 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Here's someone that might be able to help you:Louis Grivetti-- FOOD GEOGRAPHY -- Louis Grivetti , a food geographer in the UC Davis Department of Nutrition, can talk about a variety of subjects, ranging from the history of chocolate to the Mediterranean foods of 1,800 years ago and how they relate to today. He is also leading a team effort to develop a comprehensive Web site on the history of chocolate. Contact: Louis Grivetti, Nutrition, (530) 752-2078, legrivetti@ucdavis.eduI don't know him; I just got this information from a website.I also uploaded 2 maps. I'm not sure if they're what you're looking for, but maybe it's a start.
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
03/25/10 09:42:35
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

That was my feeling. At the very least, it's a very inspire project to pursue :)'I was hoping there might exist some topographical resources online somewhere for map geeks. Considering some of these spots are land tantalizing to fossil fuel surveyors, maybe they might be quite hard to come by.
Alan McClure
@Alan McClure
03/25/10 07:05:23
73 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Nothing like this exists that I have ever seen. Cacao/chocolate is many decades behind wine, but maybe you can start to pull one together over time. Still, I've never seen any real detailed information on terroir in different cacao-growing countries.Alan
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
03/24/10 12:01:33
18 posts

Cacao Info Resources?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Love this site. Love the forum. I've amassed a decent collection of texts recommended on this site and other chocolate geeks, but find that I'd like to discover more about cacao.

Specifically, maps. I'm a sucker for cartography and am wondering if there is an Atlas of sorts detailing the cacao growing regions of the world. If such a thing isn't available, what other options are there for me to take a good look at these regions -- their elevations, soil content, etc.? Such things have been easier to source in the wine world, so I'm hoping that such is the case with cacao.

Obviously, it need not be bound in a book. Online references are fine. I am looking to literally visualize these places I have yet to visit each time I taste a bar and associate terroir with appropriate factors.

Thanks in advance.


updated by @Vanessa Chang: 04/11/25 09:27:36
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
03/24/10 07:05:55
1,698 posts

anyone producing easter chocolates in a nut-free environment?


Posted in: Uncategorized

Mary Jo -Are you looking for personal consumption because you (or someone you plan to gift to) is allergic? Or is there some official FCIA reason for the request? Your classifying this as news and including your FCIA affiliation makes me ask. If this were for personal consumption I would put this in the category "Where Do I Buy?"
MJ Stojak
@MJ Stojak
03/24/10 04:35:16
1 posts

anyone producing easter chocolates in a nut-free environment?


Posted in: Uncategorized

I often receive a variety of questions fromboth ourmembers and non-members. One consumer contacted me recently asking for companies who are producing premium Easter chocolate (solid and confections) that are not only nut-free--but produced in a nut-free environment. While I've sent an inquiry out to our members, many are heads-down working on their easter production. So, in the spirit of providing good and timely information, I thought I'd ask this community as well. Your feedback is greatly appreciated.

Thank you!
Mary Jo Stojak
executive director
Fine Chocolate Industry Association
www.FineChocolateIndustry.org


updated by @MJ Stojak: 04/09/15 12:53:43
Ilana
@Ilana
03/24/10 08:55:29
97 posts

Strange chocolate-no saturated fat?


Posted in: Opinion

okay. Thanks. Yes! nature was not meant necessarily for our pleasure-obviously!! Thanks for reminding me of that!!
Vanessa Chang
@Vanessa Chang
03/23/10 14:21:41
18 posts

Strange chocolate-no saturated fat?


Posted in: Opinion

I've come across equally perplexing questions and requests in regards to finding chocolate. Sugar-free. Gluten-free. Some answers are obvious. Some, like the one for your situation, is not."Ultra Metabolism" obviously doesn't take into account a typical fine dark chocolate bar's ingredient list that as Clay alluded to is something even Michael Pollan would approve of. And though fine chocolate as we know it are several procedural steps away from the cacao bean itself, I would argue that the beans have always done the body good to fuel long distance messengers and inspire warriors. But then again, many nuts and seeds get a bad wrap for its high fat content. People seem to forget that these things are meant to nourish another potential tree/plant and therefore requires dense -- and very pure -- energy.
Clay Gordon
@Clay Gordon
03/23/10 14:11:58
1,698 posts

Strange chocolate-no saturated fat?


Posted in: Opinion

70% cocoa solids is no problem as, technically, the solids refer both to the fat and non-fat content of the chocolate.Cocoa butter is a saturated fat - it's solid at room temp. So, no go there. You could, I suppose, use a 100% non-fat cocoa powder and some other fat - but I don't know of an unsaturated fat that is solid at room temp with some very serious processing (e.g., hydrogenation). And then, at least in the US, if you replace the cocoa butter with another fat, you can't call it chocolate.Sort of by definition, a 70% cocoa content chocolate contains about 30% sugar. You could replace the sugar with something else, of course.So, you're right. Whatever it is, it's not natural (and it's not chocolate). I will pun on Michael Pollan and call these (what ever they are) chocolate-like substances.:: Clay
Ilana
@Ilana
03/23/10 13:44:48
97 posts

Strange chocolate-no saturated fat?


Posted in: Opinion

A potential customer asked me this question:

Do you have chocolate that fulfills these requirements:

1. At least 70% cacao solids

2. A minute quantity of sugar

3. No saturated fats

After a back and forth including lengthy explanations about chocolate he came out and told me that he is reading a book called "Ultra Metabolism" in which they suggest a chocolate like this. I assume it is that Mars invention of CocoaVia or Hersheys new invention of a "healthy" bar.

Anyway it is something not "natural" .

Any ideas on what else it could be? Anyone read the book? Got curious, if not a bit flustered (to be polite)at the idea.


updated by @Ilana: 04/19/15 06:41:07
Sweet Morsels Toffee & Chocolate
@Sweet Morsels Toffee & Chocolate
03/27/10 08:48:20
6 posts

I need some advise on two piece chocolate molds.


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks for all of the advise everyone. Those bunnies are awesome Lana. Here is a picture of our bunny packaged.

Ilana
@Ilana
03/26/10 03:49:47
97 posts

I need some advise on two piece chocolate molds.


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

they are adorable! You have done an excellent job using chocolate's natural colors to decorate-I really like them! Kids must also go crazy for them! The "cow" bunny is my fav!
Kerry
@Kerry
03/25/10 20:53:25
288 posts

I need some advise on two piece chocolate molds.


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Lana,Those are very cute!I have a bunch of the clips that hold double molds together - but I often find that the rubber bands work just as well and are a whole lot easier to get on.
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