The Chocolate Life

Discover Chocolate and Live La Vida Cocoa!

Has anybody used Beta 6 crystals for tempering? I just wanted to know how the results compare to other tempering methods (machine, seeding, etc.). What are the advantages/disadvantages?

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I am very intrested in this topic as well... No members have tried the beta 6 crystals?

Here is a couple links to get the discussiong going:
http://www.cheftalk.com/forums/professional-pastry-chefs-forum/1994...
http://www.auiswiss.com/culin_whatsnew.cfm?catid=1237

Reply to This

According to Stephen Beckett in The Science of Chocolate, there are six crystal structures that cocoa butter can take. There are various labels used to describe these forms and Beta 6 is actually a combination of two of them - Beta 1 and Form VI.

Forms V and VI are the most stable, however, Form V is the one that is achievable by the normal tempering process:

Form VI is in fact more stable, but under normal conditions is only formed by a solid to solid transformation and not directly from liquod cocoa butter. This means that chocolate with fat in Form V will, after a period of months or sometimes even years, start to bloom. This is because some of the cocoa butter is still liquid, even at room temperature, and energy is given out as the fat is transforming to the lower energy state. This combination of effects pushes some of the fat between the solid particles on on to the surface.

The Science of Chocolate is a great book. I can't recommend it more highly as a solid reference to the technical aspects of chocolate making and working with chocolate. Click on the image below to order the book from Amazon.

Reply to This

I've used Mycryo a few times for tempering chocolate, and it does work, but I think that it is harder to use than seeding using either chunks or callets because the seed has the thermal mass to help cool the chocolate down. That said, I find it incredibly useful as a substitute for solid cocoa butter since it is a powder and is therefore easier to mix with other ingredients. I use it to mix with powdered colors to make "Paint". I can use it as a binder and mix it with other dry ingredients and then melt everything together. And when I first started using it, Mycryo was actually cheaper then bulk cocoa butter (that may not be true anymore).

Reply to This

Meh, I have Mycro and use it, but it is very expensive compared to bulk cocoa butter. There's no magic to Mycro, all it is, is cocoa buter heated to around 48 C and then sprayed on to a frozen roller, then scraped off. The extremes between the two temperatures "shocks" mycro into pure beta 6 crystals.

I think the prescribed amount is 1%, (1 gram auf every kilogram) melted couveture, but the couveture must be around 35 C.

I still get in the (cheaper) Kessko cocoa butter in the 5 kg pails, but of course it is like cement in a bucket. What I do is throw the whole bucket into a warm oven overnight (around 30-35 C) and then pour the melted butter into cling-film lined trays about 1/2" (2-3 cm) thick. When cold I coarsely chop this in the food processor and use it to thin out couveture or to mix with fat-soluble colours for molding chocolates. This is NOT a substirute for Mycryo as it has no beta 6 crystals, but it is in an easily dispensable form.

Reply to This

One of the best uses of Mycryo is dredging chicken breasts that need to be held for some time before they are baked or fried off for service. The crystals are real stable and because it is solid, it doesn't run all over the place like an oil would. Plus it's real stable at high temperatures (doesn't burn all that easily) and imparts a slightly nutty taste.

Reply to This

I have used Mycryo Powder from CB and Beta 6 from AUI Imports.
Personally I like the Beta 6 a little better. Its a little more tempermental
but the results are amazing. A little better shine and it holds a little better.
Hope this helps.

Reply to This

Is there a taste difference? Can you tell a difference in the product with the beta crystals? Sounds interesting. Nothing more has been developed in this vein, has there? It's been years since some of the articles I have read online. Any more input?

Reply to This

RSS

About The Chocolate Life

Clay Gordon Clay Gordon created this social network on Ning.

Create your own social network!

Special Offers

COCOA BEANS at GREAT PRICES.
More than a dozen varieties of cocoa beans from Venezuela, Ecuador, Madagascar, and more. Organic selections, too.


Exclusive 'Friends Don't Let Friends...' T.


Exclusive 'Compromises are for Relationships ...' T.

Stuff


Add to Technorati Favorites

Read more from Clay at Serious Eats: Serious Chocolate

Creative Commons License
Content on TheChocolateLife is published under a Creative Commons non-commercial, share-alike, with attribution, license. Click the logo to learn more about the terms of this license.

© 2009   Created by Clay Gordon on Ning.   Create your own social network

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service