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What's the best way to score 3-3.5 oz. chocolate bars?
There seem to be four basic methods: 1. 2 x 4 pieces -- used by Valrhona. 2. 2 x 5 pieces -- used by Villars and Droste. 3. 5 x 7 (?) pieces -- I'm not sure how many rows and columns, because I don't have an example handy. Used by Lindt and Rapunzel (blech!). 4. Diagonal scoring -- only used by Sharffen Berger. Because I'm usually progressing through two bars of different types at once, I eat the same number of pieces from each bar, when the pieces are roughly the same size. For me, the first thing I do when I get up in the morning is eat two pieces off a Valrhona and two pieces of whatever bar I've paired it with (usually SB). When I pair it with a method 2 bar, that means I've got two extra pieces to deal with. That's not a problem, in fact it's more like a bonus. Two extra pieces, for free! I don't eat any method 3 bars, but even if I did, the pieces are too small. I'd have to break them into larger pieces, and (if I recall correctly) the number of pieces in a section is odd -- not good, it should be even so it can be broken into two equal pieces. Method 4 is insane. Whoever thought of this method should be fired. These bars do not break consistently into pieces of the intended size. The SB design lacks a score line in the central area, so that piece cannot be broken into pieces of 1-unit size. I like method 1 the best, because these pieces seem to be the right size. Method 2 is second best, but I wouldn't like to see the whole industry go to method 2, because then I wouldn't get those two extra pieces for free. Method 3 might make sense if you were sharing a bar with a whole classroom of schoolchildren, but it's too small a unit for normal adult use. Method 3 would be better if the rows and columns were all even numbers. Method 4 makes no sense -- it's an example of allowing an artsy design to triumph over the practical needs of chocolate eaters. |
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Alex Rast wrote:
Method 2, because then you have each piece as exactly 10g. A 3.5 oz bar is 100g, and then you have 10 pieces. I hadn't thought about that, but that's a good point. Some people may be dieting in metric, and that would make it easier to calculate. However, some bars (e.g. Scharfen Berger) are 3 oz. IMHO 50g is actually the right size for taste-testing and basic eating (at least, for the non-chocoholic) - enough to get the full experience of the complete spectrum of the chocolate flavours and persistence, not so much that eating it becomes tedious or overindulgent. I don't agree with that. I think half that amount is plenty. But I'll defer to your expertise. 50 g bars should be shaped long and blocky - about as long as a typical 100g bar, 1/4 the width, and twice the thickness. Gee, that sounds like a Godiva bar. (Although Godiva is best known for their chocolate confections, they also produce pure chocolate bars. I had their "Dark Chocolate" bar recently. No cocoa solids % was listed, but it must have been pretty low. I found it too sweet and rather unsatisfying.) Likewise, the 100 g bars should be 1/2 their current width and twice the thickness. The reason is that the existing width is too big to fit into the mouth, resulting in awkward biting - you have to turn your head at an angle, or the chocolate, or both. In the narrower format, you'd score the bar deeply into 10 g chunks, no grid, just a 1x5 or 1x10 set. That would make for easiest breaking and greatest wrapping convenience, if you were to eat only a portion of the bar. We obviously eat chocolate differently. I've never even considered chomping down on the full width of the bar. I always break the bar into pieces before eating. I like the present thickness of bars, and prefer the dimensions of the thinner bars like Sharfen Berger and Villars. But, remember, I eat my chocolate at about 0 degrees C. I want my bar to fracture in my mouth, preferably shatter. A thicker bar feels differently, and fractures in a less interesting way. |
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