What’s
the difference between bittersweet chocolate and semisweet chocolate?
Can I use Dutch cocoa in all my recipes calling for cocoa? Understanding
the difference in chocolate and how they are used is essential to baking.
In this guide, we’ll identify the characteristics of those chocolates
used in baking.
Cocoa is the dry chocolate powder derived
from chocolate liquor. It comes in two types: natural and Dutch process.
Dutch processed cocoa is processed with an alkaline. It is slightly
darker, smoother, and more easily dissolved than natural cocoa. In many
recipes, natural cocoa and Dutch cocoa are not interchangeable. Natural
cocoa is slightly acidic and will therefore chemically react with baking
soda to create carbon dioxide bubbles and some leavening power. Dutch
cocoa is slightly alkaline, will not react with baking soda, and must
rely on baking powder for leavening.
Bitter (unsweetened) baking chocolate
is made from pure chocolate liquor. By specification, it must contain
50 to 58 percent cocoa butter though with inferior products, vegetable
oil may he added. Depending on the producer, milk solids, vanilla, or
salt may be added. I have a package in front of me that contains only
chocolate and milk solids.
Unsweetened chocolate has a bitter taste and relies on sweeteners in
the recipe to make it palatable.
Sweet baking chocolate--bittersweet, semisweet chocolate--has
sugar added. These products must contain 35 to 50% cocoa butter but
may have as little as 15% chocolate liquor. Because unsweetened chocolate
has twice the chocolate liquor, we prefer to use unsweetened chocolate
in most of our baking.
Bittersweet and semisweet chocolate
can be used interchangeably in recipes though there is a difference
in flavor. Often, bittersweet is a more expensive chocolate and to many,
a better, richer-flavored chocolate.
Milk chocolate is made with ten percent
chocolate liquor. It contains a minimum of twelve percent milk solids.
Because it has such a low percentage of chocolate liquor, rarely is
it melted and added to batter or dough.
White chocolate contains no chocolate
liquor but is made with cocoa butter. Historically, the FDA has not
regulated the manufacture of white chocolate so you need to read labels
carefully. If the product was made with vegetable oil instead of cocoa
butter, it will not perform the same as a product with cocoa butter.
Chocolate
chips are made with chocolate liquor with only minimal amounts
of cocoa butter. Instead, they are made with vegetable oil and stabilizers
to help them hold their shape. Without the cocoa butter, chocolate chips
have a different taste and mouth feel. Chocolate chips will have a firmer
set in puddings, pie fillings, and sauces than baking chocolate. Chocolate
chips can be purchased in milk chocolate and semi-sweet chocolate.
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