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Dark Chocolate Ratings |
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Topic: Dark Chocolate RatingsPosted: 18 August 2010 at 04:32 |
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After reading several threads about chocolate and the ensuing discussion, I decided it was time to consult the professionals and post the ratings for dark chocolate, chocolate chips, and milk chocolate. The winners may surprise you!
![]() Published January 1, 2008. From Cook's Illustrated. Does spending more for "gourmet" chocolate buy richer, more complex flavor and yield better baking results? products tested (listed alphabetically)
Just a few years ago, selecting dark chocolate for your dessert
recipe seemed pretty simple: You went to the supermarket and bought a
bar of baking chocolate. These days, there are dozens of choices, and
you can spend hours poring over the cacao percentages and exotic
provenances on the labels. You can pay a lot more, too. But does any of
it really matter? Does spending more get you better chocolate flavor?
And can your choice of chocolate change your baking results? Chocolate BasicsFirst, we looked into the definition of "dark chocolate" and discovered it's a pretty loose term. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration doesn't distinguish between bittersweet and semisweet chocolate—it simply requires that products by either name contain at least 35 percent cacao (the cocoa solids and cocoa butter from the cacao bean). Companies use the names cacao and cocoa interchangeably, but in general, when there is more cacao in the chocolate, there is less sugar, and bittersweet chocolate tends to be less sweet and have more cacao than semisweet. Even darker chocolates, with higher cacao percentages, will be correspondingly less sweet (100 percent cacao chocolate is completely unsweetened). Any number of variables—the type of bean, where it's grown, and when it's harvested; the length and conditions of fermentation; the roasting and grinding methods; and the quality and quantity of any additives (such as vanilla)—can contribute to differences in flavor and texture. Chocolate makers claim that every detail is critical—and are loath to share too many specifics. We'd heard a lot about the type of cacao bean being extremely important. There are only three types. The most prized (and expensive) bean, the criollo, grown mainly in the Caribbean and Central America, makes up less than 2 percent of the world's cacao. Most chocolate is made from forastero beans, generally from Africa. These beans are harvested from hardier trees, which makes them cheaper. The third, trinitario, is a hybrid of the other two beans and comprises about 5 percent of the total harvest. The Cook's Chocolate-60 Percent CacaoTo choose chocolate for our testing lineup, we ignored "bittersweet" or "semisweet" nomenclature and concerned ourselves with chocolate containing roughly 60 percent cacao—the type that most recipes calling for dark chocolate have been developed to use. We asked twenty-four members of the Cook’s Illustrated staff to taste 12 dark chocolates, sampled plain, in chocolate pots de crème, and baked into brownies. So which chocolates won favor with our tasters? The results were surprising. The chocolates with the fanciest pedigree in our lineup fell to the bottom of the pack. Our two top-rated chocolates came from blends relying primarily on the inexpensive forastero bean. Our second discovery also defied expectations. We assumed that if one brand of chocolate is 60 percent cacao, it would be pretty similar in sweetness, chocolate intensity, and creaminess to another brand's 60 percent cacao chocolate. Not so. When chocolate makers grind shelled cacao beans, known as nibs, to create the thick paste called chocolate liquor, this paste contains both cocoa solids and cocoa butter. Most manufacturers then add even more cocoa butter, in varying amounts, to help create the texture of the final chocolate. A few, like our winner, also add extra cocoa solids to intensify the chocolate flavor. Ultimately, however, the cacao percentage on the label of a chocolate bar is a total that includes both cocoa solids and cocoa butter—meaning that different chocolates can have different proportions of each and still share the 60 percent cacao designation. As our lab tests showed, the cocoa solids in our lineup ranged from about 17 percent of a bar's total weight to more than 30 percent, while fat ranged from a third of the weight to nearly half of it. Sugar levels varied by nearly 20 percent as well. So would the chocolate with the most cocoa butter make the biggest splash, bringing richer, extra-creamy flavor to your desserts? No. In fact, our lab results revealed that the chocolate with the lowest fat won the day, while the one with the most fat came in dead last. And would having the most cocoa solids make a chocolate superior? Again, no. Our tasters preferred chocolates with only a moderate amount. Sweetness wasn't the explanation, either: Chocolates in the middle range of sugar levels were preferred over those with the most sugar, though overall the top half of the rankings had more sugar than the bottom half. In the end, we preferred dark chocolate that achieved the best balance of all three major components—cocoa butter, cocoa solids, and sugar.
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Go ahead...play with your food!
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Posted: 18 August 2010 at 17:19 |
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Well this is interesting, since I thought that the more cocoa and cocoa butter made for a better dark chocolate, but my experience agrees with the experiment.
Definitely go with Ghirardelli's as the best, followed by Hershey's extra dark. I've tried Lindt as well; not so hot. The rest I haven't tried and can't get them. Thanks for a nice survey!
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