Cooking with Chocolate: Cooking Tips &
Delicious Chocolate Recipes
Chocolate and
Cocoa Recipes and Home Made Candy
Recipes
CHOCOLATE
PEPPERMINTS
Melt a little fondant and
flavor it to taste with essence of peppermint; leave the
mixture white or tint very delicately with green or pink
color-paste. With a teaspoon
drop the mixture onto waxed paper to make rounds of the same
size—about one inch and a quarter in diameter—let these stand
in a cool place about one hour. Put about a cup of fondant in a
double boiler, add two ounces of chocolate and a teaspoonful of
boiling water, then stir (over hot water) until the fondant and
chocolate are melted and evenly mixed together; then drop the
peppermints, one by one, into the chocolate mixture, and remove
them with the fork to a piece of oil cloth; let stand until the
chocolate is set, when they are ready to use.
FIG-AND-NUT
CHOCOLATES
-
5 figs,
-
3 or 4 tablespoonfuls of water
or sherry wine,
-
½ a cup of English walnut
meats,
-
Powdered sugar,
lFondant,
-
3 or 4 ounces of Baker's
Chocolate,
-
1 teaspoonful of
vanilla.
Remove the stem and hard
place around the blossom end of the figs, and let steam, with
the water or wine, in a double boiler until softened, then add
the nuts and chop very fine. Add powdered sugar as is needed to
shape the mixture into balls. Melt the chocolate, using enough
to secure the shade of brown desired in the coating and add to
the fondant with the vanilla. Coat the fig-and-nut balls and
drop them with the fork onto a piece of oil cloth or waxed
paper in the same manner as the cherry bon-bons. These may be
dipped in "Dot" Chocolate instead of
fondant.
CHOCOLATE
MARSHMALLOWS
Cut the marshmallows in
halves, and put them, one by one, cut side down, in chocolate
fondant (as prepared for almond and cherry chocolate
creams), melted over hot water and flavored to taste with
vanilla. Beat the chocolate with the fork, that it may not
crust over, lift out the marshmallow, turn it and, in removing
the fork, leave its imprint in the chocolate; sprinkle at once
with a little fine-chopped pistachio nut meat. To prepare the
nuts, set them over the fire in tepid water to cover, heat to
the boiling point, drain, cover with cold water, then take them
up, one by one, and with the
thumb and finger push the meat from the skin.
MAPLE FONDANT
ACORNS
-
2 cups of maple
syrup,
-
1 ¾ cups of granulated
sugar,
-
¾ a cup of cold
water,
-
Confectioner's
sugar,
-
2 or more squares of Baker's
Chocolate,
-
1 teaspoon of
vanilla,
-
About ¼ a cup of fine-chopped
almonds, browned in the oven.
Make fondant of the syrup,
granulated sugar and cold water, following the directions given
for fondant made of granulated sugar (cream of tartar or other
acid is not required in maple fondant). Work some of the
fondant, adding confectioner's sugar as needed, into cone
shapes; let these stand an hour or longer to harden upon the
outside. Put a little of the fondant in a dish over hot water;
add Baker's Chocolate and vanilla as desired and beat till the
chocolate is evenly mixed through the fondant, then dip the
cones in the chocolate and set them on a piece of oil cloth or
waxed paper. When all are dipped, lift the first one dipped
from the paper and dip the base again in the chocolate, and
then in the chopped-and-browned almonds. Continue until all
have been dipped.
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About
Chocolate
From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
Historically significant
chocolate makers: J. S. Fry & Sons
(UK) (first eating chocolate
manufacturer), Lindt & Sprüngli
(Switzerland) (Sprüngli developed
conching).
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