PLASTIC CHOCOLATE
This chocolate dough can be rolled out like a fondant, or molded to form roses, leaves or whatever. It's very simple to make, and quite impressive. This can also be made with white chocolate.
Provided by HBIC
Categories Desserts Candy Recipes Chocolate Candy Recipes
Time 5h15m
Yield 16
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- Melt chocolate in a large metal bowl over a pan of simmering water. Stir occasionally until smooth. Remove from heat, and stir in the corn syrup. The mixture will become sticky, but keep stirring until very well blended.
- Spoon onto a piece of plastic wrap, and wrap tightly. Let stand at room temperature until firm before using. Overnight is best. Use unsweetened cocoa powder on work surfaces to prevent sticking.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 183.5 calories, Carbohydrate 27.8 g, Fat 9 g, Fiber 2 g, Protein 2 g, SaturatedFat 5 g, Sodium 9.5 mg, Sugar 18.1 g
MODELING CHOCOLATE
A modeling chocolate recipe that has no lumps, is smooth and easy to work with. Can be made from candy melts or real chocolate. Used by the pros.
Provided by Elizabeth Marek
Categories Dessert
Time 3h
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Melt candy melts in a plastic or microwave-safe bowl in the microwave or stove-top sauce pan.
- Warm corn syrup and add food coloring. Remember that your final product will be lighter than the color of your corn syrup. You can also add color later if you want.
- Fold mixture together with a spatula until mixture starts to seize and resembles soft serve ice cream.
- It is important to not over-mix or your modeling chocolate will get oily.
- Wrap in plastic and let set until chocolate is firm but still pliable. Usually a couple of hours depending on how hot it is in your room.
- Unwrap chocolate and knead until smooth, smashing any hard lumps with your fingers.
- Re-wrap chocolate and place back in plastic wrap to set up until hard.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 5548 kcal, Carbohydrate 760 g, Protein 44 g, Fat 301 g, SaturatedFat 179 g, Cholesterol 95 mg, Sodium 656 mg, Fiber 25 g, Sugar 719 g, ServingSize 1 serving
WHITE CHOCOLATE PLASTIQUE
This white chocolate plastique makes the perfect modeling chocolate, and the ivory color is beautiful on its own or can easily be combined with food coloring for colored flowers, leaves, and holiday decorations. It works very much like the dark chocolate version (opposite page), but it needs a smaller amount of corn syrup and a little cornstarch.
Yield makes 1/2 pounds plastique
Number Of Ingredients 3
Steps:
- Melt the chocolate over in a stainless steel bowl over a saucepan of simmering water, and stir in the corn syrup, then the cornstarch. Allow the mixture to come to room temperature, stirring occasionally. If your room is warm, put the plastique in the refrigerator for 10 minutes or so for it to firm up. If you plan to add food coloring to part of the batch, this is the right time to knead it in. It should come together with the consistency of a pie dough or a slightly melted Tootsie Roll, and it will become more flexible as you work with it. Store the plastique wrapped in plastic or in a sealable plastic bag.
WHITE CHOCOLATE ROSES
Steps:
- Soften the white chocolate plastique so that it is malleable. Knead the mixture on parchment paper as if it were bread dough. It should feel dry to the touch like Play-Doh, and you should be able to mold small chunks of it without it sticking to your fingers. If it is too sticky, you can sift some cornstarch over it to dry it up. Divide the dough into 3 or 4 different disks if you plan to knead in food coloring. To color the plastique, use parchment paper over your work surface and latex or vinyl gloves. Add a few drops of food color to each disk of white chocolate plastique to create different hues for roses and leaves. Knead the color in until it is fully incorporated and you achieve the shade you like.
- For the roses, roll out a disk of the plastique on parchment paper with a rolling pin as if it were a pie dough. Roll it until it is thin, about 1/4 inch. Then, make small circles using the back of a pastry bag tip. If you don't have a pastry bag tip, you can use a bottle top from a milk jug or anything that will cut uniform circles about 1-inch in diameter. Separate the circles (which we will now call "petals") on the parchment paper, and flatten the outer edges of each petal with the back of a spoon to make them almost transparent.
- Peel up the first petal off the parchment paper (a small offset spatula helps with this job) and roll it tight, like a cigar. Pick up the next petal and wrap it around the first one. Each petal should get successively looser and wider, mimicking the way a rose in full bloom opens. You can attach as many petals as you like to create the style of rose bouquet you want. Place each completed rose on a plate covered with parchment paper, wrap the plate with plastic wrap, and put in the refrigerator until you are ready to use them.
- To make leaves to round out your bouquet, add a few drops of green food coloring to a disk of the white chocolate plastique, roll it out thinly as above, then use a paring knife to cut free-form leaf shapes. Once you have completed a number of roses and leaves, you can form a bouquet in a plastic cup that fits inside a flower vase.
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