French

Recipe#8459

Title: Chocolate Truffles (french-style)

Maurice Bizzarri

Chocolate Truffles (french-style)

      Yield: 5 pounds

3 lb Chocolate (semi-sweet

-or semi-bittersweet)

1 qt Cream, very heavy

1/2 lb Butter, sweet (i.e.

-unsalted butter)

Cocoa powder

Melt the chocolate in the top of a double boiler. Do not cook the

chocolate. This should be done SLOWLY over minimum heat.

Boil the cream. Once the chocolate is completely melted and the cream just

boiled, combine in the top of the double boiler. Take off the top pan from

the water, and (off heat) mix until completely combined. Keep stirring

until it is relatively cool. Allow to sit until it is cool enough to put

into a refrigerator.

Refrigerate overnight (NO SHORT CUTS HERE!!!).

The next morning, melt this wonderful mixture again in a double boiler.

When it is completely melted again, mix in the butter until it is

completely absorbed. Whip, either with a hand whisk or a very slow electric

gizmo, until the butter is completely absorbed and the mixture is cool

again. This can take an hour or longer, depending upon the chocolate, etc.

Let cool and refrigerate overnight once more (this is not as critical as

the first cooling; a few hours will be enough).

Heat once again and whip until cool. Refrigerate until it is thick enough

to pipe through a pastry bag. Using a 1/2 nozzle, make little balls on a

big piece of parchment paper that has cocoa powder spread on it. Roll in

the powder. Keep chilled until just before serving. Let them return to just

above room temperature before eating.

NOTES:

* French-style chocolate confectionery -- For those of you who are crazy

enough about chocolate to go to the extremes that I do, here is the recipe

for the chocolate truffles that I make. The formula is taken from Paul

Bocuse's "French Cooking," but the directions are my own.

* If you like Grand Marnier or Kahlua or rum or whatever in your

chocolate, the last melting step is the time to add. I think it's a small

but forgivable sin myself.

* I recommend Guittard chocolate. You can buy their semisweet chips in 12

ounce bags. You can also buy it in 10 pound bars. You can also buy

10-pound bars of Guittards "French Vanilla Semi bittersweet" which is so

good you might eat all of it before you cook with it. Guittard makes 5

types of bittersweet if you like you chocolate really bitter. I use

Hershey's Cocoa. Still the best for my taste.

* Use genuine, real-live, honest "heavy cream" and not ultra-pasteurized

whipping cream. Try a wholesale dairy. I only use Challenge Sweet Butter.

Under no circumstances should you use anything but unsalted butter in this

recipe.

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