Tempered Chocolate
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Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques
"Just keep in mind that you will need to re-temper every time you want to start over - I don't know how not to re-temper once the chocolate hardens."I'm not trying to pick a fight, but this has worked well for me:Basically your tempered chocolate is a seed, so you take your tempered chocolate and break it up into small pieces. Put about 2/3 into a bowl and heat it up to the melt point (I use the oven), it's different with every chocolate but usually around 90ish, keeping it from all melting completely, you want to keep some of the solid chocolate. Then stir, stir, stir (listen to Brad on this) until it is all evenly melted, just don't let it get too hot. I keep the 1/3 'seed' in case it gets slightly hotter than the target temp. and starts to un-temper. I do all my tempering by hand, so I guess this is sort of a tempering re-melt?I am a little confused though, I've never used a melter, but I thought this is what they did? If not, what's the point of not just buying a tempering machine?Kiran~If you are going to be molding up solid chocolates I have to agree with the others, it seems a lot less time consuming to just temper and mold than to re-melt.