Feb 13, 2013

How to of the Day: How to Make Chocolate Dipped Strawberries

How to of the Day
Learn (and occasionally laugh) with wikiHow's, "How-to of the Day". Try a new skill every day after reading these articles with step by step images and videos. Learn new skills, solve everyday problems. From wikiHow, the wiki how-to manual.
How to Make Chocolate Dipped Strawberries
Feb 14th 2013, 00:00

Strawberries already taste awesome as they are, but when you add chocolate: they turn into a gourmet treat perfect for after dinner or as a dessert! It's also a great way to use up strawberries that aren't at their best, such as end-of-season or out-of-season strawberries in need of a flavor boost.

Edit Ingredients

  • Strawberries
  • Chocolate chips suitable for melting (type of chocolate up to you); alternatively, use dark dipping (couverture) chocolate
  • To be a little more creative try and use different colored melting chocolate

Edit Steps

  1. Prepare the strawberries. As with all soft fruits, if actual washing can be avoided, it's best, so the gentlest way to clean them is to lay the berries in a single layer on a damp clean cloth, then roll up the cloth loosely and gently shake. The damp cloth will catch the grit and dirt.
    • If the method suggested above doesn't remove enough dirt, float the strawberries in a large bowl of cold water. Keep them to a single layer. Gently swish your hand around and leave the strawberries in for a minute––this should be long enough for the dirt to fall to the bottom of the bowl.
    • Make sure to leave the stems and leaves intact, as they make the berries easier to grip. It also looks nicer when finished.
    • After cleaning the strawberries, dry them well; the chocolate won't stick if they're wet. To do this, transfer to a colander to drain.
    • Since the chocolate will cover most of the strawberry, you can use strawberries that don't look perfect but make sure to check for bruises and dark spots and either remove those spots or discard the entire strawberry if it's a lost cause.
  2. Line a cooking sheet with wax paper. Parchment paper works just as well; whichever you have in the kitchen is fine. Make sure the cooking sheet is large enough to place all the strawberries on the sheet in a single layer, as well as giving each a few inches of room once placed back on the sheet after dipping in the chocolate.
  3. Melt the chocolate. Use a double boiler to make sure you don't burn the chocolate. If you don't have a double boiler, you can make one by filling a medium saucepan 3/4 full with water. Then rest a smaller saucepan or a heat-proof bowl inside of it and fill it with your chocolate chips. Turn the stove on low heat. Stir occasionally. Be sure to avoid getting any water or condensation into the chocolate or it will "seize", meaning it becomes very difficult to work with.
    • If you want milky chocolate, use milk chocolate chips. Milky chocolate is less strong and possibly more enjoyable for kids.
    • Use dark chocolate for after-dinner strawberries––it's the most elegant and preferred by many adults.
  4. Check the chocolate. When all but a few pieces have melted, turn off the stove; you don't want to burn the chocolate, have it boil over or form condensation in the bowl that drips back into the chocolate. Stir the last few pieces a bit to melt them in the latent heat. Using the wooden spoon, beat until the chocolate turns smooth and creamy.
    • If you have a candy thermometer, measure the temperature of the melted chocolate. Melted chocolate is at an ideal consistency for dipping at approximately 43ºC/110ºF. Alternatively, a small amount picked up on your finger should set immediately (just be careful to do this when the chocolate has cooled enough).
  5. Take a single strawberry and dip it completely into the melted chocolate. Twirl it around to get it completely coated. Put it on the cookie sheet to cool. Repeat until all the strawberries are covered.
    • For a fancy touch, melt white chocolate in the double boiler as mentioned above. Then, put in a press seal sandwich bag and close. Cut off a tiny bit of one corner of the bag, and drizzle a messy zigzag across each berry. Let cool.
  6. Store the dipped strawberries in your refrigerator until the chocolate has completely hardened.
    • If storing temporarily after the chocolate sets (rather than serving immediately), place the set strawberries between pieces of waxed paper in an airtight container. This will ensure the purity of the taste, preventing fridge odors from transferring to the treats.
  7. Remove the set strawberries from the fridge for serving. Gently lift them off the wax or parchment paper without holding the chocolate too much (or your body heat will melt it). Immediately transfer to the serving container.
  8. Serve. Place in a fancy container for serving at the table. Chocolate-dipped strawberries can also be arranged on a plate of dried and fresh fruit, as one of many delicious fruit choices for dessert or a buffet.

Edit Tips

  • These should be made and eaten on the same day. The fruit will begin to shrink away from the chocolate casings within 24 hours, even in good storage conditions.
  • Try double-dipping the strawberries. After they're dry, dip them again. It's fascinating to bite into a strawberry with different colored chocolate and find that there are two colors!
  • When shopping for strawberries, look for clean, fresh fruit with bright green hulls and stems.
  • Experiment! Use different colors of chocolate on the same berry, half and half, or try "tuxedo" strawberries. Tuxedo strawberries are made by dipping the entire strawberry in white chocolate, then, after that has hardened, dipping the sides of the strawberry at an angle into dark chocolate, to create the "sides" of the tuxedo. Using a plastic bag with a very minute hole cut in the corner, add three dots, or "buttons" down in a straight line in the white chocolate.

Edit Warnings

  • Use appropriate care when handling the heated equipment.
  • Dipping wet strawberries into the chocolate makes the chocolate go chunky.
  • After dipping the strawberries, be sure to put them in the refrigerator––not the freezer. If you freeze them, they will get frozen stiff and when thawed they will get mushy and separate from the chocolate. Although if you want to eat them frozen when it's hot out they are yummy that way too. Don't thaw them though.

Edit Things You'll Need

  • Wax paper
  • Cookie sheet
  • Mixing spoon (wooden) for stirring chocolate
  • Double boiler or saucepans
  • Heatproof bowl
  • Cooking sheet

Edit Related wikiHows

Article Tools

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

No comments:

HotModels

Hotgirls

HotPictures

Hottest Women