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Melted Chocolate

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Sparkles62 | 20:36 Sun 27th Jul 2014 | Food & Drink
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Yesterday I had some chocolate that had gone soft and I popped it into the fridge to harden up again.
It now has chocolate bloom, white spots on it, it doesn't look very appetising.
Will it still be ok if I melt it and use it to make tiffin?
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Yes it will be fine.
Absolutely Sparkles.
Perfectly fine:)
Sparkles....some professionals prefer to bake with chocolate that has bloomed....don't know why it improves it but it's supposed to....doesn't last long enough to bloom here....x
It will still be fine to eat if you ignore the white spots, it will still taste the same.
-- answer removed --
Question Author
Thankyou all, I shall bake with it tomorrow either tiffin or cup cakes, I haven't decided yet. X
Booze in the Tiffin?
Question Author
I've never made it with booze in before gness, does it work?
I usually use all the broken biscuits from the tin, crushed, with raisins , cherries, coconut, etc all thrown in with melted chocolate.
Sparkles....I soak the fruit in some booze....sherry, brandy....whatever I fancy for a few hours before making....plumps up the fruit nicely and it's squidgy to bite...

I make Tiffin for a friend who doesn't touch alcohol so I use orange juice...

Wonder if a mint cordial would work? Must try that....x
Question Author
I will give that a go tomorrow gness, and let you know how i get on. X
While still fine to eat I do find that sometimes chocolate that has a bloom tends to have a different less smooth texture .
It does, Brinjal....but is seems that melting it returns the smooth texture...x
Try making chocolate shards.

Melt the chocolate in a bowl over a pan of water, then mix in whatever you want i.e. glace cherries, stem ginger, cranberries, sultanas etc (all of which must be finely chopped into small pieces. Take a baking tray and cover it with grease proof paper/baking parchment. Pour the chocolate onto the tray in a very thin layer. Stick it in the fridge until the chocolate has firmed up and then break it up into bite size shards. Ideal for nibbling on.

If I am invited to someones house for a meal I usually make three lots of this using white, dark & milk chocolate, all with different bits in. I arrange them in a lined basket or container and then spray them with a gold food spray. It makes an easy and cheap gift.
You domestic goddess, you...
^^^^^ im going to do that^^^^ cept it wont be going anywhere as a gift.....

i fancy stem ginger with dark choc & one with cherries
It makes an easy and cheap gift.


you'd never guess she was a Yorkshire lass, lol.
Hmmmmm, I should have said

"It makes an easy and inexpensive gift"

glares at tony
Definition of...Shard:

Something broken and typically having sharp edges.......

I love your style, MrsO...always go armed......☺
Yes, Sparkles62, the white stuff is only the natural fat in the chocolate. If you melt it for cooking with, the chocolate will resume its normal, glossy colour.

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