Here's the recipe for making a real chocolate beverage.
Important steps are in boldface.
Ingredients
- 1-2kg (2-4pounds) of cocoa beans.
- A manually operated grinder.
Instructions
- Sift through the beans removing any impurities (pieces of
grass, leaves, etc).
- Place the beans in a pan (no teflon) and roast them. Stir
frequently. As the beans roast they start making
"pop" sounds like popcorn. Beans are ready when
you estimate that approx 50-75% of the beans have popped. Do
not let the beans burn, though a bit of black on each bean
is ok.
- Peel the beans. Peeling roasted cocoa beans is like
peeling baked potatoes: The hotter they are the easier it is
to peel the darn things, at the expense of third degree
burns on your fingers. (Tip: Use kitchen mittens and brush
the beans in your hands). If the beans are too hard to peel
roast them a bit longer.
- Grind the beans into a pan. They produce a dark oily paste
called "cocoa paste".
- The oil in the cocoa has a bitter taste that you have to
get used to. I like it this way, but not all people do. Here
are the alternatives:
With oil, which gives you a richer flavour:
Spread aluminum foil on a table and make small pies of
chocolate, about 1/4 of an inch high, and 6 inches in
diameter. Let them rest overnight. The morning after they
are hard tablets. Remove them from the aluminum foil and rap
them in it. Store in the freezer.
Without oil, some flavour is gone, less bitter,
weaker (whimper) chocolate:
Put the paste inside a thin cloth (like linen), close the
cloth and squeeze until the oil comes out. If you manage to
get most of the oil out, what is left is high quality cocoa
powder, like Droste's.
What is left now is either bitter tablets or bitter cocoa
powder.
You can now make a nice beverage as follows:
- Boil a liter of milk (or water, like in ancient Mexican
style. Like water for chocolate, "Como agua para
chocolate": you know).
- When the milk is warm (not hot) add a chocolate pie in
pieces. Stir with a blender (but be careful! the blender's
electric cord should NOT touch the pot or any other hot
thing around it).
- When the chocolate has dissolved add 1/2-3/4 cups of sugar
(depending how sweet you like your chocolate) and blend in
fast. Make sure the sugar is completely dissolved in the
chocolate otherwise it would be bitter no matter how much
sugar you may add afterwards.
- Add a teaspoon of cinnamon or natural vanilla
flavour (artificial vanilla flavour with chocolate results
in an awful medicine like flavour) if you like, and blend
again.
- Let the mixture boil, when it starts to get bubbly quickly
remove the pan from the stove top, and rest the bottom
against a soaked cloth. Put again on stove top, it should
get bubbly almost immediately, remove once again and repeat
one last time. This aerates the chocolate which enhances
flavour.
- In a mug, put about 1/2-3/4 of the chocolate mixture, and
add cold milk, until the temperature and/or the
concentration of the flavour is right for your tastes.
Accompany with French Pastries. Yum Yum!!
Enjoy!
See also Misadventures of Home Cocoa Bean Roasting
Comments
Hello Its incredible all
Hello
Its incredible all this information you put it here. For me its great :)
Do you have more of this things of this items ? Thanks a lot
Bye
_____________________
Submited by : Nutricion
Falvour is the correct
Falvour is the correct English and Australian way.
Flavor is the American way...
you spelled flavor wrong.
you spelled flavor wrong. you must have a bad editor. shame on you.
WHOA!!!!!
does it matter? just make sure this recipie works, not how it's spelled. you won't get a delicious taste out of a spelling word.
re: you spelled flavor wrong.
Flavour is the British spelling. The FAQ was originally maintained by Alex
Lopez-Ortiz who is not from the USA.
Some spelling has been changed over the US spelling and some is left in its
original form.
I know it may shock you but the Internet is international.
geek
Listen geek! STOP CORRECTING PEOPLE! Its just a typo...If you want to be that way spelled isn't SPELT like that its pronounced SPELT.
El Oh El?
It's not a typo if you're referring to the original reply. There are 2 ways of spelling Flavour/Flavor as Daniel has stated. The original writer just chose to spell it the way he learned it, he didn't spell it incorrectly.
WOW
Ya'll are way too serious. Relax