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Chocolate (rec.food.chocolate) all topics related to eating and making chocolate such as cooking techniques, recipes, history, folklore & source recommendations. |
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I know what I make won't be as good as what I can buy, but I haven't found a
pre-maid chocolate that meets my needs. I am allergic to milk protein and am on a low carb chocolate. I am looking for a dairy free, low-carb chocolate, that doesn't have sugar alcohols. What I am currently making is a modified low-carb chocolate recipe. 2 oz bakers chocolate 4 tbs coconut oil (solid at room temperature) 2/3 cup splenda 2 tsp vanila 2 tbs soy creamer 2oz nuts I think that is it. It isn't the best chocolate, but it isn't bad. I was hoping the cocoa butter would be a little firmer at room temperature. Plus, the coconut flavor is a little strong for my taste. Billy (sorry about the Cox News name, I quickly setup outlook express for a new news account and thought I typed Cox News in the name field rather than account name.) "Alex Rast" > wrote in message ... > at Tue, 02 Nov 2004 20:10:25 GMT in >, > (Cox news) wrote : > >>None of the local stores seem to carry cocoa butter, and I wanted to buy >>some to make my own chocolate. Is there a good online source? >> > > Chocosphere (http://www.chocosphere.com) carries it, but how much do you > know about making chocolate and how prepared are you for the enormous > amount of time and labour it entails? I have made exhaustive posts on this > in the past and if you look through them you'll see that making your own > chocolate at home will turn out to be a lengthy, tricky, equipment- > intensive process requiring both ingenuity and skill and generally leading > to poor results initially, which you can refine into good results only > after multiple attempts. It's definitely an *advanced* process, and if you > are attempting this in order either to improve on the chocolates you've > tried to date or to introduce some unique feature you haven't found in > chocolates you know about, know now that your experiments will probably > meet with little initial success. You'll quickly discover that it is best > to buy a chocolate from another manufacturer, and be aware that most > special dietary needs (diabetic, allergic to nuts, soy products, dairy) > can > be met with chocolates being produced today. This is more of a project for > those genuinely interested in learning about the process than those > looking > for immediate results. > > -- > Alex Rast > > (remove d., .7, not, and .NOSPAM to reply) |
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