Homemade Artisan Bean to Bar Chocolate Making process

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  • čas přidán 13. 11. 2016
  • Andrew Frongello shows us his artisan bean to bar chocolate making process. Everything from bean selection, roasting, winnowing, formulation, refining, conching, tempering to molding. Important note below!
    Quick Note: The subtle dusty swirls in my finished chocolate occured because I heated to 92 instead of 90. Although all good crystals are killed off at 93....a good enough amount of them are compromised between 90-92. I have had perfect tempering since keeping my reheat temp to 90 as per the powerpoint slide indicates in the middle of my presentation.

Komentáře • 172

  • @firstlightfarm
    @firstlightfarm Před 3 lety +2

    This is the best explanation of tempering I have found. Thank you!!

  • @muhac80
    @muhac80 Před 2 lety

    The best chocolate video I've ever watched so far. Thank you far all the details and sharing this knowledge with us.

  • @divyajnana
    @divyajnana Před rokem

    Great video Andrew, your winnowing system is amazing, and you're a real genius, you didn't make a mess on the cooling slab, and you pour it right from the melanger into your molds, dude!

  • @emilyyemayacamille8334

    Great vid! I like your style! Chocolate looks amazing~

  • @vineizm1368
    @vineizm1368 Před 3 lety

    You gain my respect man! thanks for sharing your knowledge

  • @yadav-r
    @yadav-r Před 2 lety

    Very informative & inspiring. Thanks for sharing man, more success to you.

  • @kristofferlove43
    @kristofferlove43 Před 7 lety +5

    It's so informative. Thanks mate!!

    • @andrewfrongello4453
      @andrewfrongello4453 Před 7 lety

      Thanks for the support Kristoffer. Let me know if you ever need any help in your attempts.

  • @valdsmt
    @valdsmt Před 6 lety +1

    Fantastic video. I can't imagine how much time went into editing and making it so fun and easy to watch. Kudos.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Thanks Val. I tried to keep it as short as possible. Hard to do. Glad you enjoyed.

  • @Betypuppet
    @Betypuppet Před 4 lety

    Awesome dude! Thanks for sharing

  • @janetmensah5670
    @janetmensah5670 Před 6 lety +1

    excellent and detailed info

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Thanks Janet. Glad you enjoyed.

  • @hiramyawicks1287
    @hiramyawicks1287 Před 6 lety +7

    Excellent video! Thank you so much and Bless you for sharing!

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks a lot Hiramya. Glad you enjoyed.

  • @shakashakazulu6513
    @shakashakazulu6513 Před 4 lety

    Hi, i live in France and i love what you do!

  • @PIAK_08
    @PIAK_08 Před 3 lety

    great video. thank you for uploading.

  • @thebig3864
    @thebig3864 Před 5 lety

    Man I love the work you did
    I wished it was more details about the machine you made
    Great job all the best

    • @snackhouse2390
      @snackhouse2390 Před 4 lety

      That is called us "Grinder" you can get one from India in where it is super cheap.

  • @bryonyrogers6253
    @bryonyrogers6253 Před 7 lety +4

    Thank you so much for this video

  • @melvindsouza4162
    @melvindsouza4162 Před 5 lety +2

    Good job...

  • @ArunaKhudan
    @ArunaKhudan Před 6 lety +1

    Love your video. Thanks for sharing :)

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Thanks for the praise Aruna. :-) Glad you enjoyed.

  • @monsoondrops9346
    @monsoondrops9346 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge.👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @suni9625
    @suni9625 Před 3 lety

    Wanna make some chocolate to sell at San Valentino, to fund my studies! Thanks so much for this extensive video💜

  • @rays7756
    @rays7756 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for the info.. such a nice video... I wonder why you don't make more.. goodluck brother..

  • @12345680033
    @12345680033 Před 6 lety +1

    COOOOL! Keep it up!

  • @PIAK_08
    @PIAK_08 Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much for this video...

  • @andresgomez8563
    @andresgomez8563 Před 4 lety

    Great video sir, Im starting my own business here in Colombia with awesome raw materials. Can yu please tell me, in which oart of the process do you suggest to add the ingredients as sugar? I saw people using small mills so they can grind the nibs almost into powder before puting it inside the melanger for refining, it takes the refining and counching time to 20 -22 hours, of course there are the huge mills which give you almost liquor paste ready for the refiner.

  • @cherylnorise420
    @cherylnorise420 Před 5 lety

    Very nice.

  • @kouamerogerlandrykonan9018

    Thank you for this excellent video. Can you tell me where I can buy the melanger?

  • @jeffshannon5410
    @jeffshannon5410 Před rokem

    Wow you're like a one-man processing plant dude! That's awesome keep up the great videos

  • @SenthilKumar-he7zh
    @SenthilKumar-he7zh Před 5 lety

    Hi friend, very nice video...and u gave good tips...i have few doubts. I am planning to use my wet grinder for grinding the cocoa nibs, if i want to grind for 2 days, should i run the wet grinder 2 days non stop? Or shall i give break to my wet grinder like 4 hrs running 1 hr cooling? And what should be the room temperature when grinding? Should i grind it in airconditioned room? When we run grinder continously chocolate liquir wont get heatedup ?and the taste wont spoil because of this wet grinder heat?.

  • @LK-on6rw
    @LK-on6rw Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Andrew
    How do you develop your different recipes (“Glenda” etc)?

  • @jazzygodfrey
    @jazzygodfrey Před 4 lety

    Great vid,would you share your ppt? I would like to learn more on tempering temperatures

  • @michaellinnebur7694
    @michaellinnebur7694 Před 5 měsíci

    Wow deep in .alot to learn.great to see a human not doing nothing. Great way to spend time 👍😯

  • @g.b.forall
    @g.b.forall Před 5 lety

    Hi Andrew, nice video, I would like to know where you got your MOLDS, would you have a link or a company where you got them?

  • @samisiddiqi7814
    @samisiddiqi7814 Před 6 lety +2

    I like how you just *casually* said that some people have found live ammunition among their beans.

  • @guillermodenjoy
    @guillermodenjoy Před 6 lety +1

    Hi Andrew thanks it is excellent great job man. please do you have a blue print of your winonnowing device and method and would you agree to share it?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Sorry Guillermo. No blue prints. I built it up over time. See my videos though on winnowing to get some ideas and guidance.

  • @AlexSilva-do6uh
    @AlexSilva-do6uh Před 4 lety

    Hi andrew could you share the major component to assemble your nibs and husk separator.Where did get the major component that you don't find anywhere.Thanks

  • @cafims93
    @cafims93 Před 6 lety +2

    Hi, where do you source your cacao beans from? I cant seem to find a good selection of cacao beans for home-based chocolate making

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +4

      www.chocolatealchemy.com ..... just curious ....did you watch my video? I talk about this in first 20 seconds of my video...lol. I'm not mad at cha. :-)

  • @HaydenPeddle
    @HaydenPeddle Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome video! How many Grams of nibs did you use in this recipe and how many bars did that give you? (also how many grams are i each bar)? Just trying to figure out the price of making bars this way!

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 5 lety

      Hayden bar is about 50-65% cocoa nibs based on my recipes. But the chocolate we all grew up on (you know the one) is only about 20%.

  • @laurengonzales1323
    @laurengonzales1323 Před 6 lety +1

    Loved this video it was so informative. Where do you get your cocoa butter? And do you add it melted or in powder form?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      Hi Lauren. Thanks for your praise. Lately I have been putting my nibs directly into the melanger to grind them up rather than using the champion juicer. If my recipe includes cocoa butter, I will melt my cocoa butter in a double broiler (just a steel bowl over a pot of simmering water) and put the melted cocoa butter into my melanger that I've warmed gently with a hot air gun or warm oven. This melted cocoa butter put in first helps provide some instant liquidity to the warm nibs that I eventually add. Without the added cocoa butter, the nibs will still break down to liquor but it just takes a while longer because the nibs take awhile to release cocoa butter. My way, I start with a more liquid mix and it mixes faster in the melanger as I add my nibs. Be careful if you use a double broiler to wipe bottom of bowl with a towel....any drops of water in your chocolate will seize and ruin it.
      I bought 50lbs of food grade cocoa butter from www.bulkapothecary.com. Make sure it is food grade and safe to eat.

  • @NikitaTwist13
    @NikitaTwist13 Před 5 lety

    Good day! Please tell me which computer program you use chocolate in your video?

  • @jencduke
    @jencduke Před 3 lety +1

    That's an impressive diy contraption! Did you come up with that on your own or did you find a blue print for that?

  • @kanchanabatuwana8552
    @kanchanabatuwana8552 Před 18 dny

    Youv reached sri Lanka.thank you for this video.much ❤

  • @danielled-s9083
    @danielled-s9083 Před 5 lety

    Nice job on the husk seprator Andrew. Btw your very handsome.

  • @brizius81
    @brizius81 Před 4 lety

    What's the best material for molding? Thanks

  • @maybrad5260
    @maybrad5260 Před 6 lety

    What?!! You are professional. This is not an easy to follow recipe but thanks for the info

  • @emilyyemayacamille8334
    @emilyyemayacamille8334 Před 6 lety +1

    Can I ask you about percentages of ingredients? I typically use about 10-15% cocoa butter but I want to start experimenting with sunflower lecithin due to humidity where I live.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Emily,
      I've been getting a lot of questions about the recipes and percentages. I will make a video shortly and get that up there shortly. Give that a chance to address your concerns and if that doesn't do the trick we will talk. Cool?

  • @taibabuildingcontracting6415

    Continuous running of machine will not damage it? Or its ok to to run continuously?

  • @jwcspb
    @jwcspb Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing! How could I do this without a chocolate melangeur machine? Thanks!

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Jorge,
      Unfortunately you will never have smooth chocolate without a melanger. Some people are okay with gritty chocolate and argue it is more rustic and authentic, although I am not a fan. To make this chocolate you just need to coarsely grind the beans. This could be accomplished with a champion juicer, colloid mill, mortar and pestle, or various types of coffee grinders. The key here is you would have to at a minimum grind the beans until they release the cocoa butter. You will know this happens when the ground beans enter into a liquid state.
      Andrew

  • @predonitraian6451
    @predonitraian6451 Před 5 lety

    Hello. Please, can you tell me what is the name of the machine that spin the chocolate?

  • @marvinmendoza6263
    @marvinmendoza6263 Před 4 lety

    Buen dia, que porcentaje de manteca de cacao usas, gracias

  • @sashavingardt1063
    @sashavingardt1063 Před 6 lety +1

    any thoughts on how to turn nibs into liquor without the champion juicer? (it runs too hot)

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Sasha,
      For smaller batches I just throw the nibs in a warm stone wet grinder/melanger. This method works especially well if you are also using additional cocoa butter. In this instance I would melt the cocoa butter in a double broiler and then warm up the first portion of nibs right in the cocoa butter in the double broiler. This would be a good place to start by adding this warm mixture to the melanger and then slowly over time adding more nibs every 15 minutes or so until all the nibs are in.
      I just don't like this method if I am doing a large quantity of chocolate. When I am processing a lot of beans I like to take the load of crushing off my melanger and use the champion. If I ever start my business I will be using a colloid mill.....google it. Those are pretty amazing but run about a thousand dollars.
      Andrew

  • @guille0219
    @guille0219 Před 4 lety

    Great Video Andrew. Do you know what's de chocolate size (in micrones) after 2 day's conching

    • @guille0219
      @guille0219 Před 4 lety

      Another question what's the output (chocolate) in lbs for 1lb of cocoa beans ?

  • @marilynreno7510
    @marilynreno7510 Před 6 lety +2

    I look forward to the new video and hoping a few questions will be answered. For instance, cocoa butter is naturally occurring so I'm wondering why you are adding more. Also would coconut oil be a replacement for the cocoa butter? Any suggestion for dairy replacement? Thanks for your video, it's an eye opener.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +2

      Thanks Marilyn.....I put a recent video out there addressing recipes. Check it out. Coconut oil sounds like it might work as a trace complement to chocolate but I wouldn't recommend trying to completely replace cocoa butter. It is the magical stuff with the right properties to allow tempering and hard state of cooled chocolate. Cocoa butter is also better matched to body temperature to melt in the mouth. So I am not opposed to trying something new but what you are talking is not actually chocolate. It will be a cocoa flavored fatty substance that is entirely new and may or may not be desirable on it's own merit.

    • @marilynreno7510
      @marilynreno7510 Před 6 lety

      I hear you Andrew..thank you.

  • @MoosaIslamic
    @MoosaIslamic Před 4 lety +5

    With tempering, I really recommend you use the "sous vide" method. Essentially, you use a precise PID controlled water bath and set it to desired temperature. Then you take your chocolate and heat it up uniformly to that specific temperature. And tempering is accomplished! A lot less mess, manual labour and active time input. Win-win!

    • @Husaingr
      @Husaingr Před 2 lety

      Sir where do u work

    • @ML-ov7wo
      @ML-ov7wo Před rokem +1

      Totally unnecessary and more work than tempering by hand.

  • @PIAK_08
    @PIAK_08 Před 3 lety

    did the wet grinder was continuously running for 2 days?

  • @rakeshandrai
    @rakeshandrai Před 4 lety

    Andrew can you make one video exclusively for tempering

  • @alfredo151000
    @alfredo151000 Před 5 lety +1

    Hello Andrew. Where i can get this machines for making chocolate
    Please let me know.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 5 lety

      Order a wet grinder on amazon.

  • @BlasSanchez92
    @BlasSanchez92 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you very much for this video!

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Thanks partner. Glad you liked.

  • @paulojnr182
    @paulojnr182 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video! Thank you very much where to buy these forms? are 60 grams?

  • @eastbeekeeper1208
    @eastbeekeeper1208 Před 3 lety

    Hi! Is this melangeur machine getting hot? Because my melangeur getting hot very much in the process. I have machine like yours. Is it normal?

  • @hermenegildosomeros5000

    Good day sir how to buy this material for timpering the seed of Cocoa

  • @samiajre6852
    @samiajre6852 Před 6 lety +1

    hi there , first of all, very nice video with lot of info
    i have 2 question
    how much excactly pure liquor can you get from 1 kilo coca beans
    did you try it with honey instead of sugar ?
    Thank's

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      Sami,
      Thanks for your praise.
      Liquor from beans = about 70% bean weight. 1kg beans will yield .7kg of liquor. This is a rough estimate....because beans vary in husk weight, moisture given off in roast, your winnowing efficiency, etc.
      Sami you can pretty much use any sweetener you want....but NEVER add moisture or water to chocolate. A single drop of water can ruin a batch of chocolate. Any moisture whatsoever will seize up a batch of chocolate. This is a very serious warning. I've learned this the hard way. Once I wasn't careful using a double broiler and a single drop of water dripped from the underside of my bowl into my chocolate. I had to throw the whole batch out.
      You would have to completely dehydrate honey if you wanted to use this.
      Exception to this water rule is heavy cream but then you no longer have chocolate....you'll have ganache that never sets hard into real chocolate.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      Sami,
      This is the reason chocolate last sooooo long at room temperature. There is no moisture in the chocolate for any bacteria to grow.
      Andrew

    • @samiajre6852
      @samiajre6852 Před 6 lety

      thank you for your detailled response , technical details are welcom
      and by the way , one guy did actually try chocolate with honey , link of his experience below if you are curious to see his result ,
      chocolatealchemy.com/blog/2017/8/17/ask-the-alchemist-216
      Have a nice day

  • @VicToria-sd1dn
    @VicToria-sd1dn Před 6 lety +2

    Dear Andrew, I appreciate your patience and hard work. I have Cocoa beans all around me but I'm a lot discouraged from the time it takes to make the liquor. I saw the little quantity that took 2 long days to turn to liquor. I wonder at the electric bills, time, etc. Is it still worth it? Please I'm speaking from a concerned heart.
    I was elated when I saw a video of the juicer turning the Cocoa nibs to liquor. But I learned from you now the pitfall. I'm glad I saw your video before buying the juicer. But then, that melanger though... takes too long.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      Victoria, Thanks for the note. You don't need the juicer. And frankly you can have edible chocolate in about 6 hours in the melanger. It might be slightly gritty but still delicious. I am a little fanatical. After one day in the melanger you will have smooth chocolate. I go 3 days because I believe the difference in chocolate produced after 3 days is worth the increased value versus the cost of the electricity. And for the record I do enjoy Hershey chocolate, which is gritty and cheap. However, my motivation in producing my own chocolate is because I am convinced when I am done that the chocolate produced is of the highest standard humanly possible. I don't believe there is a better chocolate out there and I put a very high premium on my finished product. So long story short.....although I am wasting electricity I more than make up for it in the value of the end result. My chocolate is heavenly smooth when properly tempered is unmatched by any I've ever tried.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +2

      I'm also going to make another video at some point about what I consider the hallmarks of fine chocolate. In my opinion there are a lot of "artisan" chocolatiers out there commercially that produce garbage.

    • @VicToria-sd1dn
      @VicToria-sd1dn Před 6 lety

      Aight then thank you.

  • @jeevithasakthivel3090

    Sir how do you printed 50% Coco and 61% Coco in label. How do we know that percentage of ingredients sir.

  • @MonseM12
    @MonseM12 Před 7 lety

    super!

  • @rob26b
    @rob26b Před 4 lety

    What are the benefits of buying the beans, roasting and winnowing instead of buying nibs which are already roasted and winnowed?

  • @studentschool8547
    @studentschool8547 Před 4 lety

    Hi bro..can u help me.? Plj.i want to make this grindar

  • @saadamiens
    @saadamiens Před 6 lety +1

    Hello Andrew, what ingredient should be more present in the recipe in order to keep the chocolate liquidy and avoid it to harden at room temperature so that I can use it as a spread ?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      The only semi-liquid substance that should ever be in chocolate is cocoa butter. Which, unfortunately for you means chocolate will always be solid at room temperature.
      What you are interested in is Ganache. Ganache is simply melted chocolate with heavy cream whisked into it. Heavy cream is the only fluid that mixes well with melted chocolate. You will no longer have chocolate though....you will have ganache. The more heavy cream you use the more fluid your ganache will be when it cools. Experiment and you will have a chocolate spread that is the consistency you seek. Good luck.
      Andrew

    • @telejeff
      @telejeff Před 6 lety +1

      If you grind in different types of nuts, they have oils of lower melting point. This will give you a nut-chocolate spread that won't harden at room temperature. I've tried this with excellent results with almonds, coconut, and hazelnuts. Coconut chocolate will stay hard at a cool room temperature or in the fridge but melt at warm room temp. Awesome stuff. You can put these right in at the grinding process if you want it all to be a spread. You could also just add vegetable oil to the chocolate to keep it liquid at room temperature. That's how they make the shell chocolate that you dip ice cream in.

    • @saadamiens
      @saadamiens Před 2 lety

      @@telejeff Thanks a lot, when i grind the nibs they tend to give a strong smell and flavor to my spread, I heard that adding sugar early on affects the chocolate taste, if this is true, when do you add sugar (after one day) ? and also do you grind nibs first then add hazelnut or do you start first with hazelnut and then grind the nibs ? thanks

    • @telejeff
      @telejeff Před 2 lety

      @@saadamiens Good question, I haven't experimented with the timing of adding sugar and nuts. I have heard that the grinding of nibs and sugar together does change the flavor, it's a process called conching, and in professional applications it can take a very long time. I just mix stuff together and eat it and it tastes good enough for me!

  • @3scnam845
    @3scnam845 Před 6 lety +1

    What I do I just make sure the chocolate is at 115 degrees then I just let it sit there until it is 81 degrees then I turn on the my malonger again until it gets to 90 Fahrenheit then I put it in the refrigerator

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Wow amazing man.... I always got the impression that time was a factor. Are you equally successful tempering if you do this same exact process over varying lengths of time? For example, do the results differ if the temp journey takes 4 hours versus 1?

  • @MrWnw
    @MrWnw Před rokem

    Do I really need to run the grinder for 2 days? Why is not 12 hours enough? I cant feel the particles anymore

  • @angelsledge4207
    @angelsledge4207 Před 3 lety

    How l can have one of those labels of the nutrition facs

  • @erickakattymunoz6984
    @erickakattymunoz6984 Před 7 lety +1

    I feel like this video should have more views, likes and comments.... I loved it so do you sell this chocolate online? I would totally be up to buy some they look delicious..

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 7 lety

      Ericka...thanks for the feedback. Online store hopefully in a couple of years. In Connecticut you can't sell chocolate made at home, you have to prepare it in a commercial kitchen so we are looking into it. More videos soon. :-) This is sooo much fun.

    • @erickakattymunoz6984
      @erickakattymunoz6984 Před 7 lety +1

      Thanks for the reply, I’ll keep watching your videos and hope you one day get a Commercial Kitchen so you can sell the chocolates online.... Best of luck ;-)

  • @polavink9323
    @polavink9323 Před 2 lety

    first person mentions lecitin. I try to make chocolate bar where lecitin supposed to hold all of the ingredients together. Thanks

  • @indianfoodstories8644
    @indianfoodstories8644 Před 6 lety +1

    Could you please share exact measurements of cocoa nibs n cream powder, soy lecithin, milkpowder, sugar, cocoa butter etc..

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Hey partner I was a little hesitant to post my recipes because honestly they change subtly quite frequently. I will say that currently I use cocoa liquor (which is just ground up cocoa nibs), cocoa butter, sugar, clarified butter, whole milk powder, heavy cream powder, salt(I know is this odd but a very slight amount), and sunflower lecithin. 8 Ingredients.
      And you can look at my chart midway through the video to get a rough idea of percentages for my recipes.
      A spreadsheet is really necessary.....I always aim to have a total cocoa butter percentage of 35% and a total fat content somewhere in the mid 40% range. You can simplify things by starting without lecithin, clarified butter, heavy cream powder and salt. This leaves cocoa liquor, cocoa butter, sugar and milk. To further simplify things you will be mixing a ratio of a dry ingredient mixture of sugar and milk (roughly half and half but varies to taste) and a melted cocoa mixture of nibs and cocoa butter. Honestly, I wish we could just use cocoa nibs and the dry mixture (of roughly half milk powder and cocoa butter) all the time but you will find that when you start making milk chocolate there will not be enough cocoa butter to make the mixture fluid. Thus the necessary addition of rather flavorless cocoa butter (it really has a neutral bland flavor) and I only add enough as necessary to get me to 35 % cocoa butter in my batch.

    • @indianfoodstories8644
      @indianfoodstories8644 Před 6 lety

      Andrew Frongello brother if you don't mind to give me your email i will ask some questions in email its quite personal regarding chocolate only ...

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Shoaib.....I put my graphic up there as a rough guideline. I hope you understand I don't want people necessarily "copying" my recipe....I'd rather they use it as a guide and discover their personal blend which will be most likely just as good but different. I will be putting a video together about crafting a recipe to give you guys more guidance. Stay tuned....give that a chance and if that doesnt' work for you send me an email and we can discuss further. Andrew@Frongello.com

  • @suigeneris2663
    @suigeneris2663 Před 2 lety

    Have you ever considered sourcing the pods instead?

  • @riyantosakasyndo9416
    @riyantosakasyndo9416 Před 2 lety

    istimewa itu bos..
    bisa kirim ke Bali?

  • @Thofi2011
    @Thofi2011 Před 6 lety

    Hey Andrew, would you share the chart of the percentages with us? as in the video at 4:40. Thanks Thomas

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Thomas,
      I hope you understand.....I gave the charts so that those interested can get a rough idea of the proportions. I do want to keep my recipes somewhat of a secret. I will say that the most fun I've had with chocolate is coming up with my own recipes. This is a step I really wouldn't want to discourage anyone from. I can give you some pointers.
      1) Start with Cocoa beans and sugar. You want always at least 35% cocoa butter in your recipe.....and considering beans are half cocoa butter....this means 70% by weight beans and 30% by weight sugar.
      2)To make a milk chocolate you will want to reduce the cocoa beans and incorporate enough cocoa butter to get you back up to 35% cocoa butter. You will need a spreadsheet. The remaining % weight will be a dehydrated milk /sugar blend.
      3) The sugar milk blend should be roughly half and half. But to your taste you can make this more sugar or more milk. You pick the right balance of creaminess to sweetness.
      4)Later on you can add some lecithin, salt, vanilla in small percentages. I add a little clarified butter and dehydrated heavy cream powder. I aim to have my total fat over 40%.
      There you have it. Three ratios to play with 1)the Cocoa bean/cocoa butter blend , 2)the sugar milk blend and 3)The ratio of 1 to 2. Aiming to have total cocoa butter over 35% by weight. From these rules you can come up with infinitely many and acceptable recipes.
      If you want to send me your recipe....I can verify for you whether it will work or not.
      Andrew
      Andrew@frongello.com

    • @Thofi2011
      @Thofi2011 Před 6 lety

      Hi Andrew, I understand your thought. And I am very thankful about your starting-up-first-step-tips. I will calculate my recipe and try to get the right mix for my needs. I am very impressed, that you took your time for the Infos. Thank you very much. Thomas

  • @deilynrivas8739
    @deilynrivas8739 Před 6 lety

    Saludos, puedes facilitarme la barra de ingredientes ?? frongello chocolate bar ingredients ??

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/Jy6Q_UIETrg/video.html

  • @sunnyw4040
    @sunnyw4040 Před 6 lety +1

    Is that chart available anywhere that shows the ratios? Thanks!

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +2

      Sunny....this is basically a simplified presentation of my recipes.
      czcams.com/video/Jy6Q_UIETrg/video.html
      I also put a trace percent (not more than 2% each) of clarified butter, salt, lecithin, and heavy cream powder.

    • @sunnyw4040
      @sunnyw4040 Před 6 lety +2

      Thanks Andrew. I did watch that video. I am very new to this. I became interested in trying to make my own chocolate after I had bought a bag of cacao nibs during a chocolate tour in Costa Rica. It's been a steep learning curve.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Don't give up. I came very close to giving up and sooooo glad I stuck with it. Use me as a resource for any troubles you have. My pleasure. Andrew@frongello.com

  • @saadamiens
    @saadamiens Před 3 lety

    Hello Andrew, note that you don't need to temper your chocolate on a marble slob, you can use the sous vide technique which is way more precise

    • @ML-ov7wo
      @ML-ov7wo Před rokem

      It isn’t more precise. No professionals use that method. Table method is so much easier and faster once you grasp the technique.

  • @jeevithasakthivel3090

    Is this homemade bean to bar is coverture chocolate??

  • @edgarbarbosa8802
    @edgarbarbosa8802 Před 2 lety

    Pleace the price, this equipment, send a espeficiations, capacity, voltage. Regards.

  • @saadamiens
    @saadamiens Před 7 lety +1

    Great video, where can we get you recipes ?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 7 lety +2

      Hey partner I was a little hesitant to post my recipes because honestly they change subtly quite frequently. I will say that currently I use cocoa liquor (which is just ground up cocoa nibs), cocoa butter, sugar, clarified butter, whole milk powder, heavy cream powder, salt(I know is this odd but a very slight amount), and sunflower lecithin. 8 Ingredients.
      And you can look at my chart midway through the video to get a rough idea of percentages for my recipes.
      A spreadsheet is really necessary.....I always aim to have a total cocoa butter percentage of 35% and a total fat content somewhere in the mid 40% range. You can simplify things by starting without lecithin, clarified butter, heavy cream powder and salt. This leaves cocoa liquor, cocoa butter, sugar and milk. To further simplify things you will be mixing a ratio of a dry ingredient mixture of sugar and milk (roughly half and half but varies to taste) and a melted cocoa mixture of nibs and cocoa butter. Honestly, I wish we could just use cocoa nibs and the dry mixture (of roughly half milk powder and cocoa butter) all the time but you will find that when you start making milk chocolate there will not be enough cocoa butter to make the mixture fluid. Thus the necessary addition of rather flavorless cocoa butter (it really has a neutral bland flavor) and I only add enough as necessary to get me to 35 % cocoa butter in my batch.

    • @saadamiens
      @saadamiens Před 7 lety

      Thanks a lot for your detailed response, really appreciate it

    • @pixuno
      @pixuno Před 3 lety

      I started making bars with liquor my cousin sent me from Ecuador. Your process and temperatures helped me to nail it on the first try. Thank you! 🙏🏼

  • @benkeri9033
    @benkeri9033 Před 6 lety

    Hi Andrew, great video. Im in the process of trying to make chocolate. I just have a quick few questions.
    1. What is your room temp while choc is in the mold?
    2. Is it ok to put molds immediately into a fridge set to 20oC?
    Im having huge issues with fat bloom...
    3. If the choc liquor isn't smooth will that affect tempering?
    Thanks so much

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Ben,
      My room temp is usually somewhere between 70-73.
      Do not put molds in the fridge. It is too cold and will invite condensation. I've never used a fridge.
      Yes your choc liquor should be smooth and ground in a melanger...this releases the cocoa butter.
      Your problem is most likely in tempering. Can you please give me more details on your tempering process and temperatures? WIth this info I can identify your problem.

    • @benkeri9033
      @benkeri9033 Před 6 lety

      Hi Andrew, thanks for the response. We grind in melanguer for about 12 hours. It's not liquidy. We temper up 45oC then down 28oC and then up to 31oC using bowl baths. Cold bath around 20oC and hot bath around 40-45oC. We try to stir. Room temperature is around 27oC without AC. I live in East Timor. We added 11g of margarine and that basically stopped the bloom. Choc is still fairly hard. Can we use cow butter?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety +1

      Do not use anything that has moisture in it. Water in small amounts will kill chocolate.
      Margarine? Yuck...lol. No comment. Gross.
      Butter is an emulsion of water and fat and sugars. You can use butter but you must clarify it which means to separate the fats from the water. I love my method best. See video. czcams.com/video/OhOB_c-5zKw/video.html

    • @benkeri9033
      @benkeri9033 Před 6 lety +1

      Hi Andrew. Yes. Wasn't really wanting to use it but it did cut out the bloom. Can we use Ghee (clarified butter) ? Also when you add clarified butter does this help harden the chocolate? Im trying to figure out what to add to help make it stronger. After you make the clarified butter, does it solidfy over time? How to store it? Thanks Andrew.

    • @benkeri9033
      @benkeri9033 Před 6 lety +1

      Hi Andrew. We're phasing out margarine for clarified butter (ghee). What % of butter should we add in? Also i want to add vanilla extract to this chocolate. How much would you recommend? We're trying a 63% cocoa beans mix. Sugar is the rest with a bit of vanilla and ghee. But probably only add a small amount of those things. Also why add soy lecithin in chocolate?

  • @dinoraguzman1179
    @dinoraguzman1179 Před 6 lety

    hello¡ donde puedo adquirir esa maquina?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=wet+grinder
      Good luck

  • @castonadams3147
    @castonadams3147 Před 7 lety +2

    You wouldn't happen to have schematics or at least a few specs on your winnowing machine, would you?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 7 lety +1

      Caston coincidentally I am in the finishing steps of making a video detailing my winnowing design. Check back in a day or two and it will be up. In the video I will go over the critical components and design theory and then you can either copy my design or make your own. Stay tuned and reach out if you want measurements and I'll have no problem giving them to you. Thanks.

    • @castonadams3147
      @castonadams3147 Před 7 lety +1

      Well thats great news! And I will

  • @sebastiankilichowski
    @sebastiankilichowski Před 7 lety +6

    Wow... I love it bro! Do you mind if I message you? I would like to order your chocolate :)

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 7 lety +2

      Sebastian you can email me anytime at andrew@frongello.com. I'm not selling bars currently...but that's changing shortly. Stay tuned. Thanks for the comment.

    • @sebastiankilichowski
      @sebastiankilichowski Před 7 lety +1

      Andrew Frongello thanks! I will msg you.

  • @intanrosa7499
    @intanrosa7499 Před 5 lety

    nice mind

  • @gracelilyyoshua328
    @gracelilyyoshua328 Před 4 lety +1

    👍😘

  • @saadamiens
    @saadamiens Před 7 lety +1

    how long does your chocolate last when you package it ?

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 7 lety

      Chocolate has almost no moisture....a requirement for bacteria to grow. I easily think my chocolate would last a year or more but I've never had any avoid getting eaten that long....lol. I've eaten some 8 months old and it was fine. Interestingly I really think chocolate that has sat for 2 months after molding is ideal. At that point the rare type 6 crystals have formed and chocolate is extra firm.

    • @saadamiens
      @saadamiens Před 7 lety +1

      perfect, I hope I will be able to make my own chocolate like you, regarding tempering, is that necessarry to do it on a marble plan, if I can set my fridge at the right themperature, would that work too ? thanks

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 7 lety +1

      There are three critical elements I've found to tempering : Temperature, time and mixing. Just using your fridge will not work.
      Here are the critical tempering steps
      1)Heating - Chocolate has to be melted to at least something a little over 100 degrees. This will destroy all crystal types and give you a blank slate.
      2)Cooling - You have to cool some portion or all of the chocolate to about 80 degrees while stirring. This will create the best chocolate crystals aggressively (Called type 5 crystals). You'll notice you are successfull because the chocolate will start to thicken. These are the type 5 crystals in action.
      3)Seeding - You have to add this Type 5 rich chocolate back to the melted chocolate. But you have to be careful here. if your melted chocolate is sooooo hot that the average seed chocolate / melted chocolate temperature is still above 93 degrees....all the type 5 crystals will be killed off. Typically you will just remarble the chocolate and seed again and remix to melted chocolate until the temperature of the total mixture is well below 93. For example, my milk chocolate I will melt to 115 degrees. Then I will cool portions of it on the marble to 80 degrees. I will mix this cooler seed chocolate back into my melted chocolate and measure the temperature of this mix. Let's say the temperature is now an average of the two temps ...roughly 97 degrees. I've cooled the chocolate but also killed off all the good type 5 crystals. Then, I repeat the process and table roughly half the chocolate to 80 degrees. Now the average temperature when mixed back in will be about 88 degrees. This is good but I will typically go one more time and get the overall mixture to about 84 degrees.
      4)Reheating - So our mix will have some type 5 crystals growing aggressively but also will have some Type 4 crystals. We carefullly heat to 90 degrees to kill off the type 4 crystals but keep the type 5 crystals healthy. Very important not to go over 90 degrees....if you do you might not have bloom but you will certainly get some dusting. Keep it to 88 or 89 degrees if you can. Chocolate will be thick but fluid.
      To answer your question ... you don't need marble but you do need these steps. The last batch I did I skipped the marble but took the bowl of melted chocolate and put into a ice water bath (be very careful...a drop of water will kill an entire batch of chocolate). I stirred by chocolate constantly until the whole bowl of chocolate approached 82-84 degrees (I'm sure the chocolate on the outside of the bowl cooled first and was successfully seeded to 80). Chocolate was noticably thick. Then I reheated over a pot of simmering water until I got to 89. I had a perfect temper but was a lot of work. Not a lot of equipment but required a lot of stirring.

  • @md.shorifulislam8366
    @md.shorifulislam8366 Před 12 dny

    Does your chocolate taste like Cadbury Chocolate ???

  • @shibarmy9621
    @shibarmy9621 Před 4 lety

    live ammunation lmao

  • @Fitnessonly007
    @Fitnessonly007 Před 6 lety +1

    thank you for the video, and will like to chat with you, i need more help from you.

    • @frongello
      @frongello  Před 6 lety

      Dino,
      We can chat anytime. Andrew@frongello.com
      Andrew

  • @lasoldu1996
    @lasoldu1996 Před 3 lety

    very important video that you won't find it on internet ^^ , bro i just wanna enter in direct contact with you if you don't matter , i have some surprises for you :D

  • @sriramvenkitachalam1089

    this guy is not fucking around

  • @fabriceleblus
    @fabriceleblus Před 5 lety

    Tempering is wrong

  • @roanhopa3069
    @roanhopa3069 Před 3 lety

    Please don't put your food on the floor.
    Thanks

  • @honeybuzzard2843
    @honeybuzzard2843 Před 4 lety

    Good Info...But hope he's nit selling it. I wouldn't eat this dirty ass chocolate. Unsterile environment...chocolate too close, to the damn floor. YUK

  • @hermenegildosomeros5000

    Good day sir how to buy this material for timpering the seed of Cocoa