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So, I'm here with bowl of white chocolate. And you can see I've set it over a double
boiler. What I'm about to do is temper the white chocolate and I'm going to use that
as decorations for my cakes.
So, you can see all of my chips are in the bowl. And I have the heat on, I'd say, medium
or medium low. The goal is if you see all this steam happening, steam is very bad. Avoid
steam.
What that does is all that condensation could end up back in your chocolate and you don't
want the chocolate to seize. What that is is when chocolate mixes with a little bit
of water it will kind of firm up very hard. And you don't necessarily want that.
So, all I'm doing is gently melting my chocolate. And the purpose of tempering is really to
create what's known as like snap and sheen.
If you've ever have, you know, pieces of white chocolate or dark chocolate and you can kind
of snap them in your mouth and they have that beautiful glossy finish, the chocolate has
been tempered. Because without it your chocolate would just kind of be limp and melt in your
hands, not in your mouth.
So you can see I just melted it about two thirds of the way. This way it's not going
to stay too hot. I'm almost cooling it down with some of the seeds that aren't melted
yet.
And I'm just turning my bowl and using my rubber spatula. I'm just bringing it together.
Now the goal is to cool it down to the point where it's about body temperature. If you
find that it's still too warm when all your chips are melted just set it over a bowl with
ice water and give it a little bit of a stir and then remove it. And just kind of stir
it and stir it until it's nice and cool and ready to work with.
And that's how you quickly temper some chocolate.