ohhh yes, i love ittttttt. :D now Im following this post for answers! :D
vegan milk and white chocolate
@lailalauren
04/18/17 01:15:45
23 posts
Hi there. Javier from Chaqchao Organic Chocolates from Arequipa Peru.
We have been making Organic White and Milk vegans chocolates for over two years now. Our white chocolates are made with either organic coconut MYlk, brazil nut MYLK and Lucuma powder.
We also make 40% and 55% percent vegan milk bars with the same options.
We use organic Panela ad our form of sweetener which makes our white bars a brownish color.
All our bars ingredients come from Peru including our beans from Cusco, Peru.
We have had bis big success with our bars in the peruvian market. If you would ike us to send us some samples let us know as we would be happy to
Our email si chaqchao@gmail.com
updated by @chaqchao: 12/08/16 19:48:29
@sacred-steve
12/07/16 18:05:00
116 posts
Hi, I make a VEGAN MILK and VEGAN WHITE chocolate that you may be interested in. I sell it in bars, bite sized pieces, and 5 lb blocks.
http://www.sacredchocolate.com/mylk-raw-chocolate-heart-bar/
http://www.sacredchocolate.com/white-passion-raw-chocolate-heart-bar/
updated by @sacred-steve: 12/07/16 18:11:07
@martin0642
12/06/16 15:51:34
3 posts
Martin - Thanks for sharing!
My pleasure The commercial product I found was vile....my Vegan customers seem very happy with this one and so do I! Tastes pretty good actually
@clay
12/01/16 15:22:02
1,680 posts
Hi all - I was going to make a new thread on this but decided to revive this one instead...seems to make more sense.
I am a relatively new chocolatier in the UK - I make my own chocolate (for bars and some of the molded chocs) and I've just started doing a vegan filled chocolate line. I have to say I'm apalled at the quality (or lack thereof) of vegan chocolates....just wow. I found an acceptable vegan milk chocolate made by Plamil foods in the UK; but the white chocolate was awful. They make it with rice powder and rice syrup in place of teh dairy. It is a nightmare to work with...it forms a crust in the bowl when melting (on the bottom of the bowl and no matter how careful I am with temperature) and sets up slightly sticky. Nice...not.
So I made my own using cocoa butter, sugar (from beets) and coconut milk powder. It does have a coconut flavour but it's not overpowering at all and the chocolate tempers beautifully...had great success moulding shells with it.
The key thing i've found is that most recipes for vegan chocolate do not include a proper grinder like the santha or (in my case) premier tabletop grinder. It is absolutely essential to grind it o get the proper consistency and avoid the graininess. I grind it for about 20 hours - works like a charm.
Anyway....figured I'd share in case anyone else read this and wanted to have a go
Martin - Thanks for sharing!
--
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@DiscoverChoc
@martin0642
12/01/16 08:36:54
3 posts
Hi all - I was going to make a new thread on this but decided to revive this one instead...seems to make more sense.
I am a relatively new chocolatier in the UK - I make my own chocolate (for bars and some of the molded chocs) and I've just started doing a vegan filled chocolate line. I have to say I'm apalled at the quality (or lack thereof) of vegan chocolates....just wow. I found an acceptable vegan milk chocolate made by Plamil foods in the UK; but the white chocolate was awful. They make it with rice powder and rice syrup in place of teh dairy. It is a nightmare to work with...it forms a crust in the bowl when melting (on the bottom of the bowl and no matter how careful I am with temperature) and sets up slightly sticky. Nice...not.
So I made my own using cocoa butter, sugar (from beets) and coconut milk powder. It does have a coconut flavour but it's not overpowering at all and the chocolate tempers beautifully...had great success moulding shells with it.
The key thing i've found is that most recipes for vegan chocolate do not include a proper grinder like the santha or (in my case) premier tabletop grinder. It is absolutely essential to grind it o get the proper consistency and avoid the graininess. I grind it for about 20 hours - works like a charm.
Anyway....figured I'd share in case anyone else read this and wanted to have a go
@adriennne-henson
11/07/14 19:23:05
32 posts
Look at Charm School chocolate
I tried both their vegan white and milk made with coconut and they were good.
@julie-ehrentraut
11/05/14 13:32:18
8 posts
I am also in Upstate NY and am looking for a company that makes white chocolate that can be tempered. I am in the process of formulating a vegan full fat milk powder that I am hoping can be used to make a vegan white chocolate that has a comparable taste and texture to traditional white chocolate. Do you know any small batch processors that may be interested in giving it a try?
@eileen-smith
11/14/13 14:22:58
5 posts
Thank you, Lagusta, for your response. It's certainly not as easy as I thought it was going to be. The recipe given on the internet was said, on the same website, to be easy and delicious. I suppose that coconut sugar didn't melt because each granule was surrounded with oil and fat although that didn't affect the regular sugar. I wonder why the person compiling the recipe didn't get the same result. And thanks for reminding me about the gelatin, I'd forgotten that. Maybe if I continue with this experiment I will try the agar-agar but right now I am disillusioned. From what I have read on this website it will be a very hard slog to get a good vegan white chocolate. Thanks again.
eileen
@lagusta-yearwood
11/14/13 13:10:09
13 posts
Hello Eileen!
We make a version of what you're making that we use for fillings and things. You can't really use it as a "ganache" without adding so much cocoa butter that it tastes terrible, or so much sugar that it's way too sweet, but it works as a thin piped filling. Instead of coconut sugar we use a vegan powdered sugar and whip it all up in the food processor with lots of vanilla. It's nice. I definitely wouldn't use gelatin to the mixture, because that would make it not vegan, but you could experiment with agar-agar, which is a vegan gelatin derived from sea vegetables.
@eileen-smith
11/14/13 13:01:43
5 posts
Hi: I did a search on that company on the internet and you were right about contacting them. But the computer wanted me to open an Outlook account for emails and when I wouldn't the notice appeared saying the address was incorrect! Anyway, regardless, I got around it and sent the email off.
Thanks again for your help.
eileen smith
@eileen-smith
11/14/13 12:05:48
5 posts
Me again. I tried that email address and was told it was incorrect so it didn't go through. What did I leave out? By the way, thanks for your help.
eileen
@eileen-smith
11/14/13 11:47:55
5 posts
Thanks, I will.
@eileen-smith
11/14/13 11:44:11
5 posts
Yesterday I tried to make the vegan white chocolate using a recipe I found on the internet and which called for coconut oil, coconut butter and coconut sugar. I first of all melted the cocobutter and then added the oil to it and mixed them thoroughly together. I then added the coconut sugar and that's when it all went down the drain! The coconut sugar would not melt into the mixture, and an hour or so later it still hadn't melded. It just lay there in the bottom of the bowl, and six hours later it still had not changed. I then tried the recipe again using icing sugar this time and I had no problem at all, it came out in a hard block. The problem came when I thought I would use it as a ganache and added some liqueur to some of it, mixed it all together very well, and then put it into the fridge to set. I took it out this morning and tried to scoop some to make a truffle but I found that the mixture had separated, the liqueur was underneath a hard layer of the 'white chocolate' mixture. If I add gelatin to the mixture do you think that would help keep it all together? I also tasted the stuff and it retained no taste at all of anything.
@lagusta-yearwood
08/23/13 09:25:19
13 posts
Hello! How nice to meet another vegan organic chocolate company!
And what a bizarre experience with the Callebaut rice milk chocolate, wow. I'll look out for it, even though it sounds rather odd. I'm now working with Cacao Prieto, in Brooklyn, to make us some white chocolate--exciting! I'll follow up when I've tried it.
@lagusta-yearwood
08/23/13 09:18:06
13 posts
Fascinating discussion! I like the idea of lucuma white chocolate...
@julie-fisher
08/23/13 08:16:29
33 posts
Have you got a website/shop. I am only across the water in the Netherlands...
@julie-fisher
08/23/13 06:15:12
33 posts
Sorry, my mistake, but then the lucama or cashews are used instead of the milk? I see your point then, but then it is not a milk chocolate but a Lucama chocolate. That is going to taste very different, isn't it? Where can I buy your chocolate, I would really like to try that.
@julie-fisher
08/23/13 04:38:44
33 posts
Using Lucuma and coconut, or cashews, might make an interesting bar... but it is not really chocolate anymore. However I am curious how is the cacao butter produced for such raw products, I could find nothing relevant on SacredChocolate, and they don't sell cacao butter, but do sell cashew butter etc.
I am a chocolatier in London. I make Raw chocolate (shoot me down in flames)!
Without dwelling on the 'raw thing' to much...I make a 'white chocolate" with Lucuma, cacao butter, coconut oil and coconut sugar.
For me, using cane sugar alternatives is as important (if not more) than using raw beans.
The best 'white' chocolate i ever tried was sacred heart. PLEASE try it as your mind will be blown. I promise
I only wish I could make a product that good! http://www.sacredchocolate.com/white-passion-raw-chocolate-heart-bar/
They use cashews for the creamy texture.
@pure-lovin-chocolate
08/22/13 23:23:19
2 posts
Hi!,
My mother and I have a small chocolate business in Victoria, BC Canada. We are also fully organic, fair trade and vegan. We are also soy and gluten free. We use Cocoa Barry organic, fair trade 71.7% dark chocolate for all of our products. This has been a great product for us, and it is made without soy lecithin, meaning we can keep our products soy free, which seems to be an increasing issue for people, and especially children. We have a lot of parents very excited about our products because their child is allergic to soy!
We have also been on the lookout for vegan milk and white chocolates. We have only tried one, and that was the Callebaut "Nolac" milk chocolate. The only reason we got our hands on this was because I have managed to form a relationship with the Callebaut rep for Western Canada. When I explained to him what our company was about, he sent us a roughly 5kg sample of it! It came to us in a bubble mailer envelope with no labels or packaging. Its 'milk' ingredient was rice powder, and it did contain soy lecithin, but we were still keen to try it out. At first taste, I wasn't that impressed, it almost had that 'chalky' taste of a low quality chocolates. I tried to make a ganache with it, as our main focus is truffles, but it did not work well at all.. It melted well, but as soon as we added the hot coconut milk, it turned very dark and grainy. Even after it set, it was almost as dark as our normal ganache, it seemed as it had lost all of its milkiness! I then melted some and mixed it with hazelnuts and gluten-free rice crisps to make a veganized version of a 'Ferrero Rocher', this worked very well, and the additions seemed to completely get rid of the 'chalky' taste I first noticed. I tempered some to coat the 'Rochers' with my Rev 2, and though it did temper well, it was very thick. We sold these at our annual Vegan Fest, and were a huge hit! We continued to make them until we ran out of the chocolate.
We were not sure if we wanted to keep this as a regular item, as it did compromise our no-soy policy, but I reached out again to our rep to get the pricing info just in case. He informed us that there are temporarily pulling the Nolac line. He said because they are currently producing the chocolate on machinery previously used to produced dairy milk chocolate, and because they are calling it Nolac (for no lactose) they are concerned that they may run into legal issues because it may actually contain trace amounts of lactose. But he did tell us that they are going to switch over to using dedicated equipment and relaunch it in a few months, and (bonus for us!) they are going to start producing it without soy lecithin as well! We will definitely try it again when it comes on the market. In the meantime though, we will probably try out some other products and would love any recommendations!
@lagusta-yearwood
08/22/13 08:26:58
13 posts
Thanks, I'll look into them. To my palate, soy is not my favorite milk...and many of my customers are looking for soy-free chocolates. But if they taste good, that's what matters!
updated by @lagusta-yearwood: 09/09/15 05:41:47
@lagusta-yearwood
08/22/13 08:25:52
13 posts
Lovely! Will do right now.
@julie-fisher
08/22/13 07:43:42
33 posts
I'm not Vegan, so please accept my apologies for anything stupid I may say. All alternatives to cow milk are going to taste different. So is there a particular reason that you are not looking at soy milk. And if soy milk is acceptable then have you looked at Zotter. He produces a soy milk and a soy white chocolate. Both are actually quite tasty, though clearly different from non soy chocolates.
@david-senk
08/17/13 22:00:49
17 posts
We were in the same boat a couple of years ago and spent a LOT of time working on a recipe for what wefelt would qualifyas anartisan class vegan white chocolate and vegan milk chocolate. I think what we came up with is an order of magnitude better than anything else on the market (we've tried all the same ones you have, I sustpect). We're in the midst of a move this week and next, and we're right in the midst of launching our business (taking it from a 'hobby' to a legit business), but if you're interested, contact me privately and we can send some samples your way once we get settled back in...
@andrea-bauer
07/08/13 17:17:31
92 posts
@brad-churchill
07/08/13 16:53:53
527 posts
You want a good laugh?
Check out this thread on another forum. Only after I got nasty with "littleblue" did she go do her homework to prove me wrong, and find out that SHE was being misled. We've now kissed and made up! LOL
http://chocolatetalk.proboards.com/thread/1267/raw-chocolate
Cheers and happy reading!
Brad
@lagusta-yearwood
07/08/13 16:40:23
13 posts
Yeah, the baker in our shop did a bunch of research on sugar a while ago, and she says all organic sugar is vegan, so that's nice!
@lagusta-yearwood
07/08/13 16:39:35
13 posts
Well that definitely happensparticularly with "raw" and "organic." As someone who truly does use organic chocolate (it's my understanding that most cacao plantations don't really use pesticides anyway, so I'm not sure how helpful the designation is, but it's important to our market, so we do buy organic), and pays through the nose for it, it's awful for me when other companies use it recklessly. Ugh.
"Raw" though--that designation can just go away, as far as I'm concerned. Who decided raw chocolate is a good thing? God, it's awful. We're always trying to educate people about it, since we get a bunch of health-foodie types in our shop who equate raw with less sugar and healthfulness and somehow think our chocolate is evil because it's not raw. Ah, fads!
@andrea-bauer
07/08/13 16:33:36
92 posts
@brad-churchill
07/08/13 16:32:58
527 posts
I'm not trying to trick people at all. You wouldn't believe how often "raw" and "organic" and "vegan" are thrown around by clueless morons who don't take the time to research their ingredients, (or in some cases out right liars who just want to use the words to sell more product).
kudos to you for doing your research. It's people like you who make a big difference in an industry so full of deceptive practices.
Cheers
Brad
@lagusta-yearwood
07/08/13 16:13:47
13 posts
Ha! Thanks for the gotcha question. Of course we know that! I've had long talks with TCHO, and their sugar is most definitely vegan. In our shop we use Wholesome Sweeteners sugar, which has a lot on their site about how it's vegan. It's always so funny to me when nonvegans try to trick vegans. We're all trying to do our best, remember. : )
@brad-churchill
07/08/13 16:11:10
527 posts
I'm wondering how many of you vegan "purists" know that most granulated sugar used in chocolate is FAR from vegan? Take LanticCorporation (Roger's Sugar) for example. In Canada, they have three factories. TWO of them use Bone Char (charred, carbonated, bones from the livestock industry) to help whiten the sugar. Both factories process sugar from cane. The third factory, here in Alberta processes sugar from sugar beets, and doesn't need whitening, so bone char isn't used. There is nothing on the packaging that tells the consumer that bone char is used, other than to know which code comes from which factory.
If you're so in love with TCHO, where does their "vegan" sugar come from, and is it processed with bone char? A good question I would ask given that 1/3 of chocolate is sugar....
Cheers.
Brad
@lagusta-yearwood
07/08/13 07:45:29
13 posts
Wow, sounds like you've got a good thing going on!
For our white chocolate, we blend cocoa butter, scalded coconut milk, powdered sugar, lots of vanilla ex and vanilla bean, and a little saltit's not temperable, but we use it as a filling, so that's OK. It's pretty nice, but "real" vegan white chocolate would be nicer, that's for sure.
@andrea-bauer
07/07/13 18:11:35
92 posts
@lagusta-yearwood
07/07/13 17:44:34
13 posts
Aww, thanks! Vegan ganache is not tough at all! Ours is a classical ganache recipe, but with full-fat coconut milk and coconut oil--if you use the deodorized kind, I promise you you won't be able to taste the coconut flavorparticularly if you flavor the ganache, but even with our plain flavor no one could detect coconut. Now, what was tricky for us was caramel and toffee recipes! The tough thing with coconut oil is using less of it than you would buttersince it's all fat and butter is only about 80% fat (I think?), you need to use less otherwise your stuff will get oily. It's a process of trial and error, like everything, I suppose.
I am still marveling about the tofu in that formulation. It really didn't have such a bad snap, is the weird thing. We try so hard to live down the 1970's lentil loaf-esque perception of veganism that we use almost no soy and I'd sort of cringe having "tofu" on our labels. Sigh.
Do you have a shop? I'd love to see your stuff!
@andrea-bauer
07/07/13 15:50:41
92 posts
@lagusta-yearwood
07/05/13 17:11:39
13 posts
Yeah...really not a fan of theirs, which is sad because it's also made near me, in Upstate NY, and their cashew ice creams are nice. Their white chocolate isn't temperable, I don't think, but Charm School says theirs are. I'm wary of theirs because the second ingredient is....TOFU!! Which weirds me out.
Yes, will definitely let you know if I find anything!
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