Showing posts with label qzina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label qzina. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Class - Bean-to-Bar Chocolate Making, Day Two

When we arrived for Day Two of chocolate making class, the refining machine was still churning away at incorporating the sugar and making our chocolate as smooth as possible. (If you missed reading about Day One, you can catch up here.) 


That refining is called conching. The goal of conching is to refine the particles in the cacao mass small enough that the tongue cannot detect them, which means the chocolate will feel nice and smooth in texture.

But let me back up for a minute. At the end of Day One, after our chocolate was in the refiner with the other ingredients, we had time left. So Chef Francois grabbed some chocolate that he had made the day before and we tried our hand at tempering it.


Tempering. That's an odd word if you're like me and have no idea about anything relating to the science of cooking and confection making. They temper steel, I think. Well, they temper chocolate, too. When chocolate begins to cool and become solid, what's happening is that the cocoa butter is turning from a fatty liquid into a crystal. Tempering is, basically, making sure that only very small crystal are formed, giving the chocolate a glossy finish, a nice snap when you break it, and lets it re-melt around body temperature.

Tempering chocolate consists of heating and cooling it to some very specific temperatures, and those temperatures and the order in which they are achieved ensure that only very small crystals are formed. Once that is done, the chocolate cools very nicely, it's shiny, it snaps well, and melts just as you would expect it to. You can temper chocolate very carefully on a stove, but the industry has, of course, created some high tech machines to run through the correct procedures automatically. 

We'd be using the machine to temper ours, but first, Chef Francois wanted us to try tempering some chocolate on the big marble table there in the kitchen.


We poured a little of the chocolate out on the cool table and began spreading it and scraping it back into itself, trying to bring the temperature down evenly throughout. Once it started thickening, we'd put it back in the bowl, and the chocolate that was beginning to crystallize would hopefully cause the whole batch to solidify with the small crystal structure.

For some of us, it worked. For some of us, not so much.

We used this chocolate to make some raspberry ganache-filled bon bons. Since this wasn't the chocolate we made ourselves, I wasn't too excited about it, but it was still fun.

Ok, less talk, more pictures of chocolate making! Back to Day Two!


We drained the refining machine once the conching was done. You can see the thin stream of chocolate pouring into the bin underneath in this picture.














Oh man! That is brand new, sweetened, delicious, molten chocolate! The urge to just put my hands or face into this bin was almost overwhelming!


Still going! We filled this bin just about to the top. I still get chills just looking at the pictures!



One last step before putting it into the tempering machine - sifting. This machine had a fine mesh screen on top, and when switched on, it vibrated like crazy. The liquid chocolate would slowly work its way through the mesh, run down the pan, and drip into the bowl.















I can seriously look at pictures of liquid chocolate all day long. 

You know that chocolate river in the original "Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory"? I loved that! I dreamed of seeing that in person! And this, while not quite a river, is 20 lbs of liquid chocolate!












Click on this picture to see the big version. For reals.


Here you can see why we're sifting it. See that grainy stuff? That's the germ of the cacao bean. It's a hard little stem inside the bean, and it's so hard it doesn't really break down through all the grinding and refining we've done. Being almost impossible to grind down, the easiest solution is to sift it out.












Done, everything sifted.



This is the high tech tempering machine I was talking about earlier. You just pour all your chocolate into it, and it runs through an automatic cycle of temperatures so that the chocolate will crystallize perfectly.













Once it's been in here through the whole cycle, it's ready to go! Ready to be turned into candies, molded into bars, or for bathing in-- I mean, molding into... uh... nevermind.


This is how we tested the tempering. We'd run a spoon under the stream, then set it aside for a few minutes to see how it cooled.


The first thing we made were little chocolate candies called mendiants. Mendiant means "beggar" in French, and the original toppings were meant to represent the robe colors of four different monasteries.


They start with just a dab of chocolate. Once the pan was covered, we banged it on the table a few times to smooth them out. Then we started putting on one each of our toppings.


We made two of these sheets. Tons of them! Part of the class is leaving with a pretty huge box of chocolates, and these were a big part of that.

And of course, we'd tasted our chocolate many times by now. Delicious! It was very fruity, almost tangy, with hints of citrus. Insane that all this flavor came just from the bean! And, having tasted every stage along the way, I could very much recognize the flavor of the roasted bean in this finished chocolate.

We made some other things with our chocolate, too!


We made hundreds of these little tasting squares.


We made up a batch of buttery smooth caramel and used these little cacao pod-shaped molds, making caramel filled chocolates. Chef Francois added a touch of sea salt to the top of each when we took them out of the molds.


This caramel was insanely good! I made sure to write down the recipe.


And that was it! We were done! We'd turned 30 lbs of cacao beans into 20 lbs of amazing chocolate, then made candies and tasting squares with it. There's almost no better way to spend two days!

We also made some chocolate mousse the first day, which is what you see in the middle in the picture above. We used different chocolates they had there in the kitchen to make them.


Our finished raspberry bon bons.


The completed caramels, topped with sea salt.


Our tasting squares, just the pure chocolate.


And our mendiants. With the fruits and nuts, and knowing how pure the chocolate was, these almost felt healthy to eat!

Also, during the first day, we all talked about why we were there taking the class, our love of chocolates, and the great variety of artisan chocolate makers that are out there now.


On Day Two, a couple of us brought in some artisan chocolates, and at the end of the day, we had a little chocolate tasting party! Holy cow, this was just astounding! Trying all these amazingly different flavors, and having our own chocolate there to taste with them. The variety was just unbelievable.

Recently, a lot of high end chocolate makers have been giving out chocolate and wine pairing advice, or even chocolate and cheese pairings. You should try them! Or, like we did, just get a bunch of artisan chocolates from around the country (or world), invite some friends over, and taste all of them, compare them, see how different they are. You'll be amazed.

And that was chocolate making class! I left with a big box with over a pound of the chocolate we had made, and if you know me or have been following this blog, you very well know I plan on making a hot chocolate with some of it.

If you're in the Los Angeles area and are interested in taking this class, keep your eye on  Qzina's website. At the time of this posting, they haven't yet announced another class, but I'm sure they will.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Class - Bean-to-Bar Chocolate Making, Day One


Obviously, I love chocolate. It's amazing stuff. Although I blog about real hot chocolate drinks, I do of course have tremendous love for chocolate in general. In the past year or so, I've also come to understand that chocolate doesn't only mean Hershey's, Nestle, and Cadbury's. We all know these names because these are the companies that are big enough to have their products in every gas station and market in the world.

Unknown to most, there is a world of artisan chocolates. People who make chocolate by themselves, in a regular kitchen, with utensils everyone can buy. I don't mean making chocolate as in melting down some baking chocolate and pouring it into molds. I mean taking a cacao plant and turning it into a chocolate bar. "Artisan" means they're doing it for the art of the process, not with the goal of making the most money, but with the goal off seeing what kinds of flavors develop from certain types of bean, and really letting that singular flavor come through.

This sounds odd until you try your first artisan bar. More often than not, they're fruity and tangy, sometimes they're earthy and nutty. When you look at the ingredients list and all it says is "cacao beans, sugar", that's when the surprise hits. Where did all that fruitiness come from? Why was one bar sour and citrus flavored, when another was smokey and bitter? That's what artisan chocolate makers are exploring, that range of flavors in different types of beans. It's astounding! It's really hard to fathom the variety until you try a few.

Some of these makers, like Mast Brothers, Patric, and Madre, have small factories or shops, usually just one building in one location. Some, like Potomac, are so small, the chocolate maker is literally working in his basement on machines he built himself. Others, like Taza and Chocovivo, stone grind their chocolates, or only grind them once, leaving them with a texture unlike any others. Chocovivo doesn't even temper theirs!

What is tempering? What does a cacao bean look like? How does it become a chocolate bar if all you have to add is sugar to make it? The more I tasted these amazing chocolates, the more questions I had. I searched online, read wikipedia entries, watched youtube videos, but it's not the same as seeing it done in a kitchen, being a part of that process from beginning to end. So when I found this two day class, I signed up!


It's held at a place in Orange County, CA, called Qzina. They supply restaurants, bakeries, and caterers all over southern CA. They also have a bunch of classes in pastry and confection making.

As much as I was interested in learning how chocolate is made, I also was really hoping to come away with enough knowledge to perhaps make a hot chocolate directly from the cacao bean! How awesome would that be?!

So, in that spirit, let me show you what it was like to make chocolate from a bin of cacao beans!






This is the inside of the Qzina showroom and demonstration lobby. We browsed the products they sell, admired the amazing chocolate sculptures created by the chefs, and ate lunch here.


Chef Francois Mellet was our instructor. He is very French, and absolutely amazing at what he does.
Which is work with chocolate.
Every day.
I can't even fathom...


In Qzina's huge storeroom, he explained to us the entire process. See the plastic bin his hand is resting on? That's 30 pounds of cacao beans. This room was amazing. They store many bins of beans from various places around the world, and the smell of them filled the entire place. Not a chocolate smell, but a tangy, fruity, earthy smell. 



There are three types of cacao beans that are mainly cultivated - criollo, forastero, and a hybrid of the two, trinitario. The beans we were using for our class were trinitario beans. This sack was from the Gran Couva Estate on the Caribbean island of Trinidad.

The beans were cut from their pods and fermented on the farm in Trinidad. Once they've fermented the desired amount of time (usually about two or three days), they are dried and packed into sacks for shipping all over the world.


First thing we did was sift them. Sometimes bits of the plant, leaves, insects, and other things can get bunched in there as they pack the beans. Sifting them gets rid of all that stuff and just leaves you with whole beans.


Which is what is in that bin right there. Sifted, ready-to-roast cacao beans.



Here's a portion of the storage containers of cacao beans they had there. It was fascinating reading the labels, seeing where each bean had come from. Such an insane variety!













The beans were scooped into the roaster. It rotates while the beans roast to make sure they all heat evenly.


We roasted them at around 185 degrees for over an hour. Occasionally, we would pull a couple out to check them and see how the flavor was developing. It was amazing to taste how the flavor changed as they roasted!


They slowly began taking on fruity tones and a bitterness that you could somehow sense chocolate in. It's hard to explain, because it didn't taste like chocolate yet. But the scents and tones of what our final chocolate would be were developed here, and I don't think I recognized that entirely until we were done and could taste those same flavors in our finished chocolate.


When they had roasted long enough, they had to be cooled quickly, so they'd stop cooking inside the bean. This pan connected to the front of the roaster was a metal screen that had air being pumped up through the beans. We took turns raking and churning them so they could all get cooling air over them.


Here they are, roasted cacao beans. They continue to call them cacao until the grinding process begins, when they finally switch to calling it cocoa.


The next step was to remove the thin crispy shell around each bean. This shell is the dried pulp of the cacao plant, which the beans are immersed in while inside the cacao pod. The acid that forms and penetrates the bean as that pulp ferments is the first step of creating an individual bean's flavor. But now that we've roasted them, the flavor is there, and it's time to remove that husk.



Apparently some pioneer of chocolate making learned that if you cracked the bean, the husk came off very easily. Not only did it come off, but it's very light compared to the bean chunks, so it can be separated out simply by vacuuming them away as the cracked beans fall into another bin. This is called cracking and winnowing, and this is the machine that does it.


And this is what you now have - cacao nibs. The cracked, shelled, roasted cacao beans. I don't know why they call them nibs. I bought a bag of these months ago online. These are a delicious, albeit bitter, snack, and they are really, really good for you! Chocolate doesn't become bad for you until the sugar is added.


You should order some! They are really good in yogurt, ice cream, almost anything. There's even some salad dressing recipes out there that use them, and some meat and poultry rubs!


It's still not chocolate yet, though. Those nibs need to be ground up a few times. This is the grinder. It has a filter on it that has little holes in it, and once the nibs are ground small enough, it comes through the holes and falls into the pan underneath.


It's becoming liquid because of the fat content in the bean. The friction of grinding the beans heats them up, which melts the fat inside of each bean. That fat is cocoa butter. So as the solids get ground smaller, and the fat gets liquefied, you end up with cocoa mass (also called cocoa liquor).


Here's the grinding discs. Yep, I tasted that.


Once that first grinding is done, we change the filter to one with smaller holes. So now the cocoa mass won't drip out until it's ground even smaller.


Finally, it's starting to look like chocolate! This is still nothing but the bean. Amazing! We tasted it after every grinding stage, to see if the flavor changed. Once the grinding began, the flavor changed very much, with all that warmed up cocoa butter. It actually got worse! Even though this looks delicious, it's pretty horrible!


Once the three stages of grinding was completed, we weighed it to see how much of the original 30 pounds we lost during the process. It was just a tad under 20 pounds now! Crazy!


The last stage of the day was the refining machine. This metal bucket was filled with steel balls, each about 1/4 of an inch around. Paddles inside the bucket rotated everything, and once we turned this on, it ran straight through the night and even after we all arrived the next morning. This really smoothed out the chocolate into a liquid, not grainy at all.

This was also the stage where we added the other ingredients to create our finished chocolate!


Once we got the cocoa mass into the refiner, Chef Francois showed us how to create a chocolate recipe. We decided to make a 72% dark chocolate. That means 72% of the entire final product had to be derived from the cacao bean.


67% of our recipe was the cacao mass we made, then we added in an extra 5% of cocoa butter. The extra cocoa butter would make it a bit smoother and shinier for a better presentation and melting smoothness.

This is the cocoa butter. Of course, we all had to taste this, as well. It tasted almost like nothing. Like plain wax.
We added 0.6% of lecithin powder. Lecithin is an emulsifier, so I believe it might help keep the cocoa solids and butter from separating once the chocolate is solidified.


You know when you have a chocolate bar for a really long time and it gets that white powdery coating on it? That's the cocoa butter separating out from the solids and slowly oozing to the surface. If you ever see that on your chocolate, do NOT throw it away! It's fine, it's still good, it tastes exactly the same. Would you throw away a salad dressing if the oil and water separated? No, you wouldn't. So don't throw away your chocolate!

To bring our recipe up to 100%, we added in 27.4% sugar. And that's it! Cacao bean, sugar, and a touch of lecithin. We put the other ingredients into the refiner with the cocoa mass, and it ground them up and smoothed them out right along with the chocolate.

For the remainder of the first day, we tried tempering chocolate by hand on the large marble table they had there, and we made some bon bons with some chocolate they had made the day before. I'll explain more about tempering in the Day Two post.

I'll get Day Two posted ASAP! Maybe I'll squeeze in a hot chocolate before that, though.