Lessons From Chocolate Processing
Lessons From Chocolate Processing
by J. Peter Clark
Blending chocolate
Photos courtesy of Barry Callebaut
and chocolate products mostly used as ingredients by other food companies and in foodservice by chefs. Benson says that his company trains about 500 chefs a week in the culinary use of chocolate. One lesson, then, from chocolate is the potential for market segmentation, as contrasted with the more common objective of consistency in avor.
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[PROCESSING]
Steps in Processing
Chocolate avor development begins shortly after harvest. Cocoa beans are found in a eshy fruit that is collected from trees about twice a year. The fruits are cut open and the seeds spread in a thin layer on the ground to ferment and dry in the sun. As the fruit esh disappears and the seeds dry, their color changes and their characteristic aroma develops. The seeds are
In food processing, there usually is one best way to accomplish some desired end. With regard to chocolate, this is not the case.
typically packaged in 60-kg jute bags and sold through cooperatives, government agencies, or directly to manufacturers, depending on the country and local practice. Depending on whether a single-origin or certied product is being made or not, beans from one or several sources are blended according to a companys recipe before roasting. The cocoa beans consist of a hard shell and a softer nib on the inside. Beans can be roasted before or after removing the
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other avors can be added to make a nal product. To get additional cocoa butter, chocolate liquor is ltered under high pressure (because of the neness of the particles), yielding cocoa powder as press cake and cocoa butter as ltrate. It is important to reduce the cocoa butter content of the cocoa powder as much as possible, because it is the more valuable product, so the press cake may be extracted with solvent or it can be ground up to yield a cocoa powder with a
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as slabs or blocks, as drops or small pieces, and in other solid forms. For most uses, chocolate must be tempered, which means heating carefully to a high-enough temperature to melt all forms of cocoa butter, which can crystallize in two forms, one of which is unstable and can cause visual defects in candy. Chocolate is then maintained at the proper temperature in use by circulating through double-walled tubing heated by hot water. Storage tanks are also double walled, agitated slowly, and heated.
while smaller companies buy from rms such as Barry Callebaut, Blommer, and others. However, there has been a growing trend for larger companies to outsource their chocolate supplies, allowing them to focus resources and assets on their consumer brands and their marketing, according to Benson. Some of the processes used by candy companies include shell molding, enrobing, panning (discussed in the Processing column last month) and molding. For less-expensive uses, such as enrobing baked snack cakes or cookies, compound coatings are made by mixing cocoa powder, sugar, emulsiers, and a compatible vegetable fat that has melting properties similar to those of cocoa butter. Such fats are made by partial hydrogenation or fractional crystallization. In Europe, it is permitted to add up to 5% of such
fats to chocolate, primarily as a cost reduction, and still call the product chocolate. There is a movement to allow this practice in the United States, which is controversial. Some manufacturers want to offer their customers a choice and the potential cost advantage, while some users, such as Mars (which is also a manufacturer), have stated their opposition. Another lesson might be that standards of identity can be contentious. Chocolate is not only one of our favorite avors, an important article of international commerce, and a healthy indulgence, but also a fascinating subject of complex processing. FT
J. Peter Clark, Contributing Editor, Consultant to the Process Industries, Oak Park, Ill. [email protected]
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