This week I have tried, tasted and tested a few of the baking chocolates that are available in the supermarkets in the UK. We are very lucky really to be able to choose from and buy several different brands.
Namely, I have tried Varlhona, Dr. Oetker, Lindt, Green & Black and Sainsbury's Belgian chocolate chips.
All of them contain 70% cocoa except Dr. Oetker's Extra Dark Chocolate that is 72%.
My rule: If you don't like the chocolate don't bake with it. You can really taste the difference between cakes that are made with cheep or good quality ingredients, especially chocolate. By the way, you can eat cooking chocolate, it is not only for cooking.
So, let's see what I have discovered.
The second one was Green&Black's Organic Dark Chocolate 70% Cocoa. It didn't look as dark as the Lindt and it was a bit more bitter to taste, it was sharper and it had a bitter aftertaste. Hmmm, I thought, interesting. I expected something better from Green&Black. But let's see the rest of them.
Then I tried Sainsbury's Taste The Difference Cook's Belgian Dark Chocolate Chips 70% Cocoa. I had to put 3 chips in to my mouth to get the real flavor. It was quite smooth but quite bitter.
The next one was Valrhona's Noir Guanaja 70% Cocoa. This was a big block of chocolate and found it hard to break a piece off but when I tasted it I liked it very much. It tasted very smooth, silky and bitter but not sharp at all. Very nice chocolate.
At this point I was really confused because I had had expectations before I tasted them. I had judged them just by their packaging or their price.
So, I had to taste them again and this time I was quite quick, I ate the pieces one after the other and it was clear which one I preferred the most.
- Green&Black's came fifth because of its sharp, bitter aftertaste. Good thing though that it is organic.
- Sainsbury's Belgian Chocolate Chips took the fourth place, they had a very bitter taste too.
- Third place went to Dr. Oetker's Extra Dark Chocolate, I expected a bit more from this chocolate, however, this could be a really good budget ingredient if you make cakes for your family.
- Second place went to Valrhona. Very nice, smooth chocolate, very expensive and not widely available. If I made something very special, i.e. chocolate ganache for my chocolate macarons or chocolate brownies, I would use this chocolate. If quality means a lot to you I can really recommend this one.
- And the winner is Lindt's Cooking Dark Chocolate. I loved this chocolate for its smooth, silky texture, for its very dark colour and its subtle bitterness. It is a lot less expensive than Valrhona and widely available.
I have also learned that bitterness is the most sensitive of the tastes. In our mouth the taste buds for "sweet" are on the tip of the tongue; the "salt" taste buds are on either side of the front of the tongue; "sour" taste buds are behind this; and "bitter" taste buds are way in the back. That's why, when you eat a salted caramel macaron or a bitter orange macaron it feels like something very strange is happening in your mouth, you can't really describe it but you love it and you want some more of it.
This is only my view of cooking chocolate, everyone is different so you might find this won't work for you.
Happy experimenting with chocolate and flavors!
Pondtail Bakery
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