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  • This video is brought to you by my own cookbook. Yes

  • So I'm currently driving to La Chapelle in Paris,

  • Which is the Indian district and probably the only place where I could find the missing piece of my puzzle.

  • It's the only way I can make good chocolate.

  • In 200 meters you will arrive at your destination.

  • Hey, guys. Salud! Welcome back to the chocolate series. In the previous episode, I successfully tempered and

  • casted or molded my own chocolate bar.

  • The thing is, there's a comment that I've seen quite a lot, and it's "You're not making chocolate Alex. You're just tempering.

  • Making chocolate would start from cocoa beans." Now to some extent this comment is absolutely NOT absurd.

  • Unless of course,

  • you had access to the series structure that I had in mind. Let me explain...

  • I have been building this series upside down.

  • The first episodes were in fact about the end of the process,

  • tempering and molding.

  • Now in the next episode I would go even further and roast and crush cocoa beans and turn them into nibs.

  • And of course I can go even further upstream,

  • fermenting and drying cocoa beans, and then - why not - harvesting cocoa pods?

  • Someday.

  • Now, this episode will be about grinding cocoa nibs and turning them into cocoa liqueur - just rough chocolate.

  • That is usually the input on step 5.

  • Ah, voila. These are cocoa nibs.

  • It's those broken pieces of the seeds located inside the cocoa beans that are going to turn into that beautiful, silky smooth chocolate at the end.

  • Now if the subject of this video might sound a bit simple, even simplistic maybe,

  • just turning roasted cocoa into a chocolate paste,

  • but it's not the case. It's way more complicated than what you thought.

  • The problem really is related to the smoothness of chocolate.

  • It's gonna be very hard to get rid of those super tiny particles of cocoa nibs.

  • With a food processor, you stand no chances. With a high speed blender, then you have enough power, but it's too aggressive. Pestle and mortar -

  • technically could work. The only problem I see is that I'm producing one video a week, not like once a year.

  • And that leaves us only one tool we could be using to grind those cocoa nibs properly,

  • a wet grinder.

  • Well, if you've never heard of a wet grinder before, don't panic.

  • It's just not that common to be honest, at least in the Western world.

  • I'm saying Western world because it's quite common in Indian cuisine.

  • This is called Medu vada, it's a south Indian fritter made from black lentils and the only way you can make this

  • silky smooth, without any grain inside is to use a wet grinder

  • Hi, Alex. We love your cooking. Awesome.

  • Wait. Yeah!

  • Wheee

  • I've got my wet grinder. I've also got a little extra Indian sweets. I love those.

  • Okay, let's head back to the studio.

  • So on the right you've got a big fat motor

  • that drives a two-liter stainless steel bowl

  • and inside you've got three elements made out of stone.

  • You've got two millstones and a bottom slab. Plus you've got this scraper.

  • So basically when you turn it on, this starts spinning and the stones inside - they start grinding.

  • Just need to get my ratios right between the cocoa nibs, cocoa butter, and sugar

  • because these are the only three ingredients you technically need to make chocolate.

  • Now instead of just guessing at random the proportions,

  • I'm just gonna use this chocolate that I really enjoyed as a reference between the nibs and the cocoa butter.

  • I need to be at 70% cacao.

  • For 100 gram of chocolate of end product, I need 40 grams of fats, 27 gram of sugar.

  • Mass sugar, nibs, cocoa butter; 100 grams.

  • But I also know something else.

  • Half of the nibs plus cocoa butter; 40. It is based out of something I read online.

  • 50% of the nibs' mass is in fact fat, and from that

  • we get that the mass of cocoa butter is seven gram and the mass of cocoa nibs is 66 grams.

  • Well, basically if you don't give an F about these,

  • just remember that you need 66 grams of cocoa nibs, 7 grams of cocoa butter, and 27 grams of sugar.

  • To make the job easier for my wet grinder, which is definitely not commercial grade, I'm going to give a quick blitz to those nibs.

  • wha, the smell is incredible. Super chocolaty smell.

  • Well, to the taste it's more complicated.

  • It's slightly bitter, you know - very distant chocolate layer behind it.

  • So, I'm going to add them to the wet grinder, but just super gradually.

  • The magic is starting to happen -- slowly starting to happen.

  • So basically every time I'm adding something to the bowl

  • I'm waiting for the noises to stabilize, because it goes BL BL BL and then Bl bl bl...

  • Which basically means that the particles have been incorporated. It's not smooth, but it's getting there.

  • So I'm about an hour in the process. This is what I got so far

  • You can definitely feel that grainy texture.

  • It's starting to taste like chocolate. It's lacking the roundness. It's also a bit astringent.

  • But it's not bad. [chuckle] Not bad.

  • Now I need to let that machine work on its own and do its own magic.

  • It's basically reducing down the size of the cocoa particles which are becoming chocolate.

  • An interesting fact - the tongue is an amazing sensor, as it can detect particles down to the size of

  • 20 microns. A micron, just for the record, is a millionth of a meter.

  • So, thb thb thp, ha ha.

  • This is amazing. From what I've read online, the machine needs at least

  • 12 hours just for the grinding process. Then there's something else.

  • Right, so it's basically the next day.

  • I let this machine run overnight. Luckily for me, I don't sleep here.

  • Neighbors! I'm thinking the grinding process should be over by now.

  • Neighbors!

  • ..so let's just give it a quick test.

  • Silence is just beautiful.

  • anyways...

  • Ah, the smell is just warm and sweet and powerfully chocolaty.

  • whaaa. aah.

  • It's extremely shiny. It's it's... I can see my face in it!

  • I'm a bit distorted, but I can see my face.

  • The smell is very pleasant. mmm

  • A deep chocolate flavor, I can't feel any particles anymore.

  • It's smooth, but it's not round, if that makes sense.

  • It still has quite a lot of astringency, and that probably has something to do with the next step in fact,

  • cause after grinding chocolate, we should be cun-shing it or conching it.

  • I'm not sure exactly how to say this...

  • maturing the chocolate, developing the flavors,

  • rounding, smoothening the chocolate out. So I guess let's just wait another few hours,

  • but this time, I'm gonna make a sequence like

  • beautiful B - rolls. (film/television term - supplementary footage)

  • The oppression is a bit complicated because it weighs a ton because of the big granite slab inside.

  • mmmm. F

  • I probably got 750 grams right there.

  • Now, basically, this could be seen as a base for tempering again and then molding again that chocolate.

  • This is probably something I'm gonna do, but not right now

  • since it would take ages and I've got more important things on the stove at the moment.

  • Nada bosh

  • The thing I can share with you though is that chocolate has become way smoother over the whole process; first the nibs -

  • they were a bit acidic and also bitter and astringent. Then of course, by grinding them along with sugar and cocoa butter,

  • I induced a bit of roundness. I added some sweetness to the whole thing

  • And then the luxurious experience has come over time while the chocolate was

  • maturing, and from an astringent, silky liquid,

  • I got that smooth, but also round and

  • satisfying

  • soft

  • experience

  • It is a dark chocolate, at the end of the day, so it keeps bit of astringency, but it's nothing overwhelming.

  • It's just very enjoyable

  • its pleasant.

  • [chuckles]

  • So I guess it still is very cocky, but I'm gonna say it anyway: I now know how to grind and mature chocolate,

  • which is one step that I wanted to check.

  • In the next episode. I will start one step ahead.

  • So we are going upstream, remember, and this time I will start with fermented cocoa beans and should hopefully end with

  • roasted, broken, cocoa nibs without the husk.

  • Trust me. It's way more complicated than what you think. Sounds easy...

  • Well, you know the ending of all this.

  • Thank you for watching. Take care, bye-bye. Salud!

This video is brought to you by my own cookbook. Yes

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B2 中高級

我把可可豆磨成巧克力酒24小時。 (I Ground Cocoa Nibs into Chocolate Liquor for 24hrs)

  • 7 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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