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Chocolate Tasting & Terminology Links
Chocolate
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Chocolate Tasting & Terminology
 
 
Chocolate Tasting & Terminology

Chocolate is made by roasting beans, which are actually seeds from the cacao tree that are ground and processed into many chocolate products.  Chocolate is usually mixed with sugar, vanilla, cocoa butter and spices or other flavor infusions.
 

     
 

Tips for tasting chocolate:

  1. Make your favorite coffee, pour favorite wine, or make your favorite hot cocoa.  Everyone’s taste buds are different, so you will never truly agree on which is the best chocolate, which means it really doesn’t matter what you’re drinking, as long as it goes well with chocolate.
  2. Buy specific kinds of chocolate – dark, milk, nuts & chews, buttery mixtures, fruit, liquors – and create flights of chocolate from different manufacturers or brands.
  3. Each flight should have at least 4 kinds of a similar chocolate, so you can compare one chocolate to another.
  4. Keep your chocolate at room temperature for at least 2-3 hours before your tasting.
  5. Each taste of chocolate should be no more than a bite-size piece.  If you buy a piece of chocolate from a candy store like Sees, cut each piece into fours.
  6. If you buy white chocolate, make this your last flight and bring out a bottle of champagne or dessert wine (yum).  See our chocolate & wine pairings.
  7. Anyone can taste chocolate, but if you want to sound like an expert or connoisseur, here are some words and adjectives used to describe chocolate-tasting:
 
 
     
 
     
 

Glossary

 
 
Alkalinization – used to describe the acid taste of cocoa.  A technical term for adding alkali potash to cacao is called the “Dutch process” or “Dutching.”  How acidic is your chocolate?

Aroma – the smell or scent of your chocolate denoting “inherent character”; sometimes referred to as chocolate “nose” or “bouquet”

Attractive – chocolate that is uniform in size, color, sheen and texture

 
 

Brut or bitter – an unpleasant, caustic taste usually found in cooking chocolate

Body – a chocolate, which coats your mouth, having fullness and flavor

Bold – can denote rich flavor

 
 

Cacao – used to describe the cacao plant and the intensity of chocolate

Chocolate liquor – commonly known as unsweetened chocolate, also referred to as cocoa liquor

Cocoa butter – a complex hard fat made up mostly of triglycerides

Complex – a chocolate that has many flavors or smells

Common – a chocolate with no distinct flavor

Compound coatings – Vegetable fat, whey powders and whey derivatives may replace cocoa butter and dairy blends.

Couverture – a term used to describe a chocolate with a high percentage of cocoa butter. The extra cocoa butter allows the chocolate to form a thinner coating than non-couverture chocolate
 
 
Dark – Refers to the color of the chocolate and must contain 43% cacao.

Dry – brittle chocolate – does not melt well

 
 

Earthy – can either mean flavor or body.

 
 
Flavor – an extension of character

Fondant – pure dark chocolate – opposite of milk chocolate

Fruity – a description of some chocolate

Full – a good combination of strength and color

 
 

Ganache – a rich, silky chocolate mixture made by melting chocolate, or by combining chocolate with warm cream, resulting in a balance of smoothness of flavor and the intensity of the chocolate

 
 

Milk chocolate – chocolate made by combining chocolate liquor, cocoa butter, milk or cream, sweeteners and flavorings

 
 

Plain – chocolate that is lacking desirable characteristics

 
 

Quality – describes the most desirable qualities

 
 
Raw – a bitter, unpleasant taste

Rich – flavorful chocolate

 
 

Semi-sweet – a chocolate blended with sweeteners and cocoa butter

 
 

Truffle – a chocolate made with a ganache, butter, sugar and, occasionally, liquor.

 
 

White – not a real chocolate because it contains no cacao, but rather cocoa butter.



 
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