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White chocolate and "dirty tuxedo" peanut butter cups |
This year, I'm boycotting Valentine's Day. I'm not in the spirit. The only thing I will miss is all the chocolate, even though I'm not generally the one receiving it. So, not being one to deprive myself, I decided to make some chocolate. And not just any chocolate, but chocolate peanut butter cups.
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Beginning the tempering process |
Last time I tried to make chocolate peanut butter cups, they came out like a chocolate cow turd. I didn't temper the chocolate properly and used a mold that was way too big. So, as always, I started researching the chocolate making process, endeavoring to find what I had done (or not done) wrong. As it turned out, my mistakes were pretty small, but made a huge impact on the final product.
I went to a local restaurant/bakers' supply and picked up a candy thermometer, along with a smaller mold. You see, the trick to making chocolate "snap" when broken and hold its shape is called "tempering."
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Beautifully tempered chocolate |
For an in-depth breakdown on what tempering is or how it's done, click
here. Long story short, you slowly heat the chocolate in a double-boiler until it reaches about 110-115 degrees. You then cool it to around 95-100 degrees. Never EVER should your chocolate be heated above 130 degrees, which causes scorching and disgusting tasting mucky chocolate. Trust me, I know first hand. You'll note the thermometer in the photo above-- very necessary item.
I also picked up a piping bag, commonly used to apply frosting to cakes and such. I set one bag up with my tempered chocolate and the other with some peanut butter. Simple enough, right?
So here's how it went down:
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Peanut butter added to mold |
- Temper chocolate
- Pipe small amount of chocolate into the base of each mold
- Allow it to set in the freezer for about 5-10 mins
- Pipe in peanut butter, making sure it stayed relatively flat and in the center of the mold
- Pipe chocolate on top
- Allow it to set in the freezer for 10 minutes
The first batch came out terrific and I was feeling motivated, so I decided to make a couple of other kinds: white chocolate with semi-sweet drizzle and "dirty tuxedo." The dirty tuxedo consisted of a dark chocolate base, white chocolate top, and a butterscotch drizzle.
Needless to say, I was feeling pretty accomplished! I mean really, how many guys do you know who actually make (not "buy" but "make") chocolate for you on Valentine's Day?!
Answer: None. They're not for Valentine's Day and they're not for you! They're Anti-Valentine's chocolates! ;)