Tips from Edouard Morand (42): Chocolatier shows how to create the perfect chocolate

class=”sc-29f61514-0 icZBHN”>

1/8
Make your own truffles: Blick editor Katja Richard.
Blick_Portrait_1053.JPG
Katya RichardSociety Editor

Using my wrist, I spread the liquid chocolate in circles on the marble slab with a scraper: pulling it apart and putting it back together. “This changes the temperature and consistency,” explains Edouard Morand (42). “An important factor in processing.” The Frenchman is a professional in the field of high chocolate and creates handmade products from exquisite chocolates for the Jacot factory.

Hailing from Noiraigue NE at the foot of Creux du Van, the Jacot Haute Chocolaterie factory was founded in 1949 by confectioner Marcel Jacot and now jumps directly over Röstigraben to the best location in Zurich for the first time. : In Münsterhof. Jacot already has an excellent reputation in French-speaking Switzerland; for example, the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Geneva, the Hotel Beau Rivage Palace Lausanne and as a supplier of watch brands such as Omega, Breitling and Audemars Piguet.

more sweet
Fruity but not too sweet
artwork jam
On a sweet mission
Sweet art from the Swiss confectioner's dream couple
This is how they conquered German television
Sweet art from the Swiss confectioner’s dream couple

A delicate craft

“Haute Chocolaterie is not very different from Haute Horlogerie, that is, watchmaking,” explains Morand. “This comes down to high-quality ingredients, i.e. ingredients. Then let’s move on to sensitivity, which for us is time and temperature.” Jacot mainly uses Criollo. Rare quality cocoa comes from sustainable permaculture from the African island state of São Tomé. The chocolatier briefly explains the production process as follows: “The important thing is fermentation, for this, cocoa beans are laid on banana leaves and stored for about 4-5 days.”

The fermentation process causes bitter substances to evaporate and a particular protein to produce amino acids. “They allow the typical cocoa flavor to develop during roasting,” says Morand. Temperature and time are also important. “To get the best flavor, we roast the beans at 110 degrees maximum for about 35 minutes,” he says. During industrial preparation, this process is accelerated by more heat.

Once in Switzerland, the beans are peeled and ground for at least six hours. This accounts for about half of the cocoa butter and liquid raw cocoa mass. But the cocoa nibs aren’t fine enough: “When gently heated and stirred constantly, they become a creamy mass, so you no longer feel anything crumbly on your tongue.” This is how liquid chocolate is mixed with the nougat mixture and then stuffed into the truffles; With a professional and homemade ingredients by your side, it’s actually not magic at all.

Source : Blick

follow:
Malan

Malan

I am Dawid Malan, a news reporter for 24 Instant News. I specialize in celebrity and entertainment news, writing stories that capture the attention of readers from all walks of life. My work has been featured in some of the world's leading publications and I am passionate about delivering quality content to my readers.

Related Posts