Forum Activity for @Louwegi

Louwegi
@Louwegi
09/14/14 14:12:05
16 posts

Fat Bloom, fat migration, under tempering? Wonder what it could be (pictures attached)


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hey Sebastian,

So we just did another huge production of 600 bars and they bloomed again within 24hrs:(

This time warming the inclusions to 88.7f, our tempered dark chocolate temp.

See pictures.

Its really frustrating because for the last year we have been in a shared commercial kitchen with less than ideal conditions (75-78f) and humidity over 50% sometimes. In that kitchen we successfully made over 30,000 bars with no issues. And now, since moving into our newly built out kitchen with supposedly perfect chocolate making condition, we are struggling like complete newbies..

In the attached picture you can see how badly the bars with inclusions have bloomed. For reference, I also posted a plain dark chocolate bar that came out absolutely perfect from the same batch of Chocolate.

Our process goes like this:

-Load Savage Brothers tempering machine with raw materials at night and set machine to have the chocolate tempered in the morning.

-In the morning we check the temper of the chocolate, if correct, we transfer 30# of tempered chocolate at a time to our Chocovison 3z machine for easier work flow.

-Tempered chocolate is portioned into warmed stainless steel bowl, inclusions are mixed in and then hand poured into molds with a portioning scoop.

-the molds are then put into the True-49 refrigerator(with a wine/choc thermostat) from the bottom up

-once the chocolate is set (pulled of from mold), they are removed from refrigerators and set on racks.

This process has worked well for us at our old kitchen but for some reason isn't working in our new one and its driving us crazy!

On the front of the bloomed chocolates, the white blemishes are directly above inclusions(in this case nuts).

Yesterday, we also tried a different method of setting up the chocolate whereby we filled the bar molds and then let the chocolate bars sit at room temp(69-70f) for 15 minutes until the backs went from liquid to solid matte. Then the bars were placed in the refrigerator(55-60f) to finished the cooling process. These bars unfortunately also had that nightmarish bloom.

Some other info that could help you diagnose this problem:

-64g Chocolate bars.

-1/4 inch thin molds

-vacuum formed molds from Tomric.

Really hope you can help us find the issue

Thanks in advance.

Louwegi
@Louwegi
09/08/14 07:18:37
16 posts

Fat Bloom, fat migration, under tempering? Wonder what it could be (pictures attached)


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Soaked in filter water and then dehydrated at 170f for close to to 24 hrs to get rid of some of the enzyme inhibiters which affects digestion.

The almonds are room temp (68-70f).

Ive read over and over that inclusion should be the same temp as the tempered chocolate(88.7f) but for some reason I didn't think it was that big of a deal. In my mind, I thought having inclusions colder than the chocolate would just accelerate the crystallization of the chocolate but not affect the bar negatively.

Thank you so much for the help :)

Sebastian
@Sebastian
09/08/14 04:50:20
754 posts

Fat Bloom, fat migration, under tempering? Wonder what it could be (pictures attached)


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Soaked in what?

What's the temperature of your almonds when you put them in the chocolate - remember if they're too cold or too warm, they will result in localized over temper / under temper. ideally they'd be *slightly* warmer than your chocolate (for example, 89F)

Louwegi
@Louwegi
09/07/14 19:37:31
16 posts

Fat Bloom, fat migration, under tempering? Wonder what it could be (pictures attached)


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hi,

I made some Dark chocolate yesterday and the bars already have white spots on them. The white spots are exactly where the inclusions (soaked and dehydrated Almonds) are.

Is this Fat Migration, or a tempering issue ?

Chocolate Bars set up in a True T-49 refrigerator with a chocolate/wine thermostat (55-60f).

Really confused as to what is causing this as our conditions are idea.

68f working environment, automatic savage brother tempering machine, vibrating table. etc

Any help would be much appreciated.

thanks


updated by @Louwegi: 04/11/25 09:27:36
Bryan
@Bryan
09/08/14 10:11:36
21 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

Sometimes it is slab candy. Sometimes it's miscellaneous shapes and piece. I will try the method for slab candy but I never over tempered chocolate at least not on purpose.
Larry2
@Larry2
09/08/14 05:44:16
110 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

no, the chocolate around the edge will seal to the dot.

We used to do this to dip cream fondant. Now we've switched to dipping the fondant with the slab method that Gap mentioned. - precoating the bottom & using a dipping fork to dip.It is MUCH faster, easier, and it has eliminated our spurts altogether.

Gap
@Gap
09/08/14 03:41:41
182 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

Along the lines of Peter's response: what candy are you coating? Is it something you make in a "slab" before cutting up and then dipping? If it is, then you can pre-coat the bottom of the slab with over-tempered chocolate, cut up the slab into bite-size bits and then coat them in chocolate putting the pre-coated side as the bottom (essentially giving the bottom two layers).

Peter3
@Peter3
09/08/14 00:32:45
86 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

Coating it with chocolate twice is the best solution.

Bryan
@Bryan
09/07/14 22:26:51
21 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

But wouldn't the same thing happen to the chocolate that's on the hardened dot?
Bryan
@Bryan
09/07/14 22:22:32
21 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

So basically the candy sits on the dot of hardened chocolate and the weight of the candy no longer has an effect on the bottom. Nice idea never occurred to me
Larry2
@Larry2
09/07/14 21:47:51
110 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

The problem is the weight of the candy is pushing the the chocolate out from the bottom.Try making some dots on your parchment then dipping the candy onto the the hardened dot.
Bryan
@Bryan
09/07/14 18:59:46
21 posts

Hand dipping candy problems


Posted in: Tasting Notes

I am have trouble with my candy when I dip it. I dip the candy with a fork or whatever then I put the candy on parchment paper or a silpal May but then the bottom of the candy will have spaces or not be fully covered. How do I get the bottom completely covered?
updated by @Bryan: 04/10/15 14:59:40
Potomac Chocolate
@Potomac Chocolate
09/08/14 06:14:15
191 posts

Liquering


Posted in: Opinion

I'm not sure what you mean by liquoring. Do you just mean that the chocolate maker who makes the chocolate you use does not pre-grind his nibs before further refining? If so, I don't think that should cause the problems you're having, as that's what myself and many other makers do, and the resulting chocolate tempers fine.

Sarah8
@Sarah8
09/06/14 12:49:54
2 posts

Liquering


Posted in: Opinion

So it is definitely worth looking into. I feel like not liquering is reducing the amount of cocoa butter and fat in the chocolate. Guess I will find out! Thank you Larry
Larry2
@Larry2
09/06/14 07:26:09
110 posts

Liquering


Posted in: Opinion

Sarah,

This is a novice answer, so please take it with a grain of salt, or better yet, a truffle. :)

Skipping the step of grinding the nibs into chocolate liquor prior to further processing could affect the particle size or shape of the finished chocolate.

I've read that you can add nibs directly to some machines and the chocolate will come out just fine. However, the processing time will generally be shorter if you work with chocolate liquor. - The particles are already much smaller.

I've read that there is a point at which each cocoa solid particle is coated in a layer of fat. This coating allows the chocolate to glide smoothly and gives it a nice mouthfeel. If the particles are too small, then the surface area for a given amount of cocoa butter is too great and there isn't enough cocoa butter to coat the particles.

See Industrial Chocolate Manufacture and Use Chapter 7

http://books.google.com/books?id=xYe5oTopUTAC&pg=PT174&lpg=PT174&dq=cocoa+particle+shape&source=bl&ots=WOF_pOOz4k&sig=LK0tWpX2yZ5L7veU58faW-fiyGo&hl=en&sa=X&ei=bQkLVOa4ENHboAS77YKYDw&ved=0CHkQ6AEwCg#v=onepage&q=cocoa%20particle%20shape&f=false

If the cocoa butter is not sufficiently coating the cocoa, sugar, and ?milk? particles, then it would make sense that it cannot form a uniform tempered structure and thus crumble easily.

Again, I'm still a novice and chocolate is complexso I'm sure there is more going on.

Sarah8
@Sarah8
09/05/14 19:32:15
2 posts

Liquering


Posted in: Opinion

I've noticed my chocolate maker doesn't liquer his nibs anymore. We don't add extra cocoa butter or chemicals to our process. I've noticed my chocolate is crumbly and difficult to temper. I used to not have any issues until summer hit. We try to control the temperature of the shop but it seems to consistently stay at 81F. Could this physical change be caused by not liquering?
updated by @Sarah8: 04/23/15 18:38:07
Nicole5
@Nicole5
09/05/14 06:41:54
35 posts

Savage Bros. Melter vs. Tempering Machine


Posted in: Tasting Notes

We are looking at buying some new equipment, but would like to see if we can gather some feedback on a couple of pieces. Does anyone here use the fully automated tempering machine from Savage? (maybe there is more than one?) It's got lots of bells and whistles, such as being able to set it 7 days in advance to have chocolate ready at such-and-such a time. The more bells and whistles, however, may mean more repairs, etc.

Thanks!


updated by @Nicole5: 04/09/15 14:42:23
Marie Schorp
@Marie Schorp
12/08/14 12:38:45
2 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hi!

My store has a Savage stove with the largest copper kettle. You may want to know that it takes 3 hours of hand stirring to produce the caramel though....

BTW I was reading your post about fudge. I am new to the forum. Did anyone respond. I too am having the devil's time finding commercial recipes for fudge, specifically copper kettle fudge (the Savage kettle again).

Would much appreciate it if you could share what comes your way???

Tx,

Marie

Dirke Botsford
@Dirke Botsford
09/12/14 11:37:28
98 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

I cook all the sugars, corn syrups, butters etc together first and bring it up to 240 then add the creams then bring it back up again. Reduces the time by about 20 minutes for me. similar taste to a traditional caramel BUT not exactly the same.

John Duxbury
@John Duxbury
09/10/14 11:06:55
45 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks Larry. I do use sweetened condensed milk and I'll try your other suggestions.

Larry2
@Larry2
09/09/14 22:24:33
110 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Using evaporated milk instead of regular milk would speed the process up because there is less liquid to evaporate. Same with sweetened condensed milk (although the brands of sweetened condensed milk I've checked don't have any protein; which would increase the cold flow).Letting your butter come to room temp helps a lot as well.I've tried using a fan to blow the caramel while cooking, but I'm not sure that helped much.Also the pot shape could help. ( a wider pot will have a greater surface area for evaporation than a tall narrow one).
John Duxbury
@John Duxbury
09/09/14 16:40:49
45 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks Dirke. I'm finding the same thing. I just came back from the Philadelphia Candy Show and was talking to Savage Brothers about the same issue. They don't see any other solution than buying a fairly expensive machine. if you don't mind me asking, what changes were you able to make that allowed the manual process to go faster? John

Dirke Botsford
@Dirke Botsford
09/08/14 12:05:05
98 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

I've tried to do the same but gave up, ended up wasting more then we were making. Having the right balance of heat and correct agitation was difficult to achieve. If you find a way I'd love to hear about it. We ended up altering our recipe to make it a little quicker and with less agitation.

John Duxbury
@John Duxbury
09/04/14 15:19:00
45 posts

Looking for inexpensive ways to stir caramel


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hello All. We're starting to do a fair amount of caramel business and it's very time consuming stirring a batch of caramel for an hour or so. I'd love to have the $$$ to buy a Savage melter but that's not in the cards for right now. Has anyone tried to make / adapt their own stirring equipment, similar in concept to the professional models? I'm using a 5qt pot to make it now and would like to go up to a 20qt pot. Thanks for the help, John


updated by @John Duxbury: 04/11/25 09:27:36
Dirke Botsford
@Dirke Botsford
09/08/14 10:33:04
98 posts

Using coconut oil in truffles help


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Good to know, Thanks Sebastian. It turns out I had simply not mixed it enough, the result being grainy. I reheated and mixed it a lot and it turned out well. I've only just started using coconut products for shelf stability as customers want it. Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Cheers

Sebastian
@Sebastian
09/08/14 10:29:45
754 posts

Using coconut oil in truffles help


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Remember not all coconut oil's created the same. A natural coconut oil will harden at room temperature; while a fractionated will remain liquid. You may be getting 'lumps' as a result of using a natural, unfractionated coconut oil that solidifies at room temperature. Note: the fractionation process simply separates the higher melting point 'fractions' of oils from their lower melting point fractions. It does not suggest that because the starting material is referred to as 'natural' that fractionated oils are 'artificial'.

Dirke Botsford
@Dirke Botsford
09/08/14 10:16:52
98 posts

Using coconut oil in truffles help


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

good point, I will try that. Thanks

Ruth Atkinson Kendrick
@Ruth Atkinson Kendrick
09/04/14 16:29:54
194 posts

Using coconut oil in truffles help


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

If you use coconut oil instead of cream, you will end up with a melt away, not a truffle. Still tastes good, but not a truffle.

Dirke Botsford
@Dirke Botsford
09/04/14 11:28:10
98 posts

Using coconut oil in truffles help


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

I am attempting to create a shelf stable truffle by using coconut oil instead of heavy cream but am finding the resulting ganache is grainy. Does anyone else use a similar recipe for extending shelf life. I want a smooth ganache that I would getting using a heavy cream. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.


updated by @Dirke Botsford: 04/11/25 09:27:36
jisimni_mark
@jisimni_mark
09/04/14 03:00:10
20 posts

Dehumidifier for Retail Space


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Hello helpful peeps! :)

I'm looking at dehumidification of a retail space of about 60sqm. We have loose chocolates and currently, humidity is at about 100% so we need to control that. What dehumidifiers would you suggest to bring it down to a constant 50%? We currently have a dehumidifier, not a commercial one, and that only brings the humidity down to 80%. We need something better. I would appreciate if you pointed me to specific dehumidifiers. Also, if there are some tricks to save on electricity bills whilst keeping temperature at 18 deg and humidity at 50%. We do not manufacture chocolate, we just have a retail space, with many chocolate bars and a praline bar.

Your help is much appreciated!

M.


updated by @jisimni_mark: 04/11/25 09:27:36
mariano garcia
@mariano garcia
09/02/14 08:01:42
61 posts

Someone known machines used to make plastic molds personal?


Posted in: Tasting Notes

I want to make my molds to create custom products


updated by @mariano garcia: 04/11/15 04:50:26
Scott
@Scott
09/02/14 17:23:19
44 posts

Dallas Chocolate Conference/Festival


Posted in: Uncategorized

The structure doesn't seem different this year from those in years past (i.e., educational sessions, tastings, and a mix of mostly local chocolatiers and out-of-town chocolate makers). I've always found it to be a pretty solid value for adult admission and a steal for children. I look forward to attending again this year.

Scott

Potomac Chocolate
@Potomac Chocolate
09/02/14 06:10:12
191 posts

Dallas Chocolate Conference/Festival


Posted in: Uncategorized

Hi Jacob,

I've taken part in it for the past two years and will be again this year. Looking back through my emails, it looks like it's been called the 'DallasChocolate.org Chocolate Conference & Festival' since 2012.

The chocolate side of things this year looks to be as great as ever, with a lot of great chocolatiers and chocolate makers in attendance.

Santiago Peralta of Pacari will be doing a class on cacao growing and processing, and Art Pollard of Amano and I will be doing a class on the bean to bar process.

All in all, I think it will be a great event.

Ben

Jacob Royer
@Jacob Royer
09/01/14 19:42:24
1 posts

Dallas Chocolate Conference/Festival


Posted in: Uncategorized

Has anyone heard anything about what's happening with the Dallas event. Previously they had called it a "Conference" and this year they seem to have gone to "Festival".

It seems a little more on the fad side of things this year. They seem to have upped the prices a bit again and are having food trucks show up outside. I'm not a big fan of the food truck feel mixing with the chocolate feel of years past and don't think it will be as appealing. Put it all together and so far I am not inclined to go this year. If anyone has heard anything about what's happening I might reconsider.

Thanks all!


updated by @Jacob Royer: 04/12/15 02:45:25
mariano garcia
@mariano garcia
09/02/14 07:58:52
61 posts

tempering which is better Hilliard's Little Dippe or chocovision revolation delta?


Posted in: Tasting Notes

thanks for your opinion

ups did not know, I'm new to the site, I'm looking but can not find. You Might you help me choose?

Potomac Chocolate
@Potomac Chocolate
09/02/14 06:16:29
191 posts

tempering which is better Hilliard's Little Dippe or chocovision revolation delta?


Posted in: Tasting Notes

Hi Mariano. There's a lot of discussion on these two tempering machines (among others) on this forum. If you search for little dipper or chocovision, you can see what's already been said. I think there are a few threads that specifically compare the two.

-Ben

mariano garcia
@mariano garcia
08/31/14 09:52:13
61 posts

tempering which is better Hilliard's Little Dippe or chocovision revolation delta?


Posted in: Tasting Notes

need to buy a tempering machine and want to know what the best of these two brands.


updated by @mariano garcia: 04/09/15 13:07:19
Francis Murchison
@Francis Murchison
09/02/14 12:08:33
18 posts

Effect of Cocoa Butter on tempering


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, Techniques

Thanks for the pointers everyone!

I have had increased success, although it is definitely baby steps at this point. So many little details to remember! So far using the deodorized cocoa butter seems to bring about better results. I am on the market for an automatic tempering machine as well, which might help out.

Thanks again

Francis

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