Forum Activity for @Brad Churchill

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
01/20/14 02:18:04
527 posts

Chocolate Drinking Machine Recommendations


Posted in: Geek Gear - Cool Tools

You're welcome Larry;

There isa LOT of flavour variance from various types of beans and roasts. I currently import 5 different varieties of beans, and have found that only one of them makes an appealing drinking chocolate. The other 4 are too fruity (while I can roast out the fruitiness, it simply makes more sense to celebrate that characteristic in another way, and find a bean that works betterfor drinking chocolate)

In the meantime, your use of unsweetened baking chocolate (aka liquor) is a BIG improvement from cocoa powder, even if the liquor isn't as good of quality as that from premium beans. I'm sure you even noticed the difference right away.

The drinks I have created (and am currently working on) have become so popular that they represent almost 1/3 of each store's revenue, and are great for filling the sales void between "chocolate seasons". Combine that with some simple baked goods using our own in-house made liquor and it makes for pretty good months all around.

Cheers

Brad

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
01/17/14 19:02:39
527 posts

Chocolate Drinking Machine Recommendations


Posted in: Geek Gear - Cool Tools

So Louise, did you try the recipe I supplied?

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
01/13/14 23:35:50
527 posts

Chocolate Drinking Machine Recommendations


Posted in: Geek Gear - Cool Tools

Louise;

Cornstarch is balanced between the ratio of milk and sugar and liquor. More liquor and sugar and less milk, and the drink ends up thick enough that you don't need cornstarch. In our case, our drinking chocolate is not dark at all, and a bit sweet, so with the lack of liquor we need cornstarch. Here is my base recipe. The trick here is to mix the cornstarch into the sugar first so it doesn't clump up, and then bring the milk/sugar/cornstarch mix to a boil before adding the liquor.

4L homogonized milk

450g liquor

900g sugar

60g cornstarch

Have fun, and into each 200ml add 1/2 tsp cinnamon and 1/8 tsp cloves, then top with whipped cream and a good sprinkle of nutmeg. (make sure you're sitting down when you try it. Your knees will go weak!)

Cheers

Brad

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/25/13 23:37:08
527 posts

Chocolate Drinking Machine Recommendations


Posted in: Geek Gear - Cool Tools

Your milk products are going rancid. The temperature of your contents needs to be above 165 degrees F to stop bacteria growth. Anything less, and you are essentially creating a one gallon petrie dish.

The problem with the types of machines listed here is that if the temp is too low, your milk product is souring. If the temperature is too high, your product is separating and you are getting a skim of cocoa butter on top (not appealing to look at). I have a couple of them, and stopped using them. Now, my staff creates a "base", refrigerates it, and then just steams it as needed. This is much safer from a pathogenic perspective, and there is almost no waste, as a refrigerated product lasts longer than our demand allows it to.

It is VERY possible to create an absolutely fabulous drink by steaming it. Here are 150+ online reviews of our drinking chocolates in a recent competition we won: http://yychotchocolate.com/omg/

Oh... if you want to make a very nice sour cream, just leave a litre of buttermilk on your counter for 8 hours, and strain off the thin liquids. I do that quite often instead of buying it in the store.

Cheers.

Brad

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
02/01/11 01:23:17
527 posts

Chocolate Drinking Machine Recommendations


Posted in: Geek Gear - Cool Tools

I have a better idea:

Premake your drinking chocolate base using a scaled up recipe of 1 part liquor, 2 parts granulated sugar, and one part powdered sugar. We make 16 litres at a time, heat it to 165 degrees F and put it in a fridge to cool. It's important to NOT bring it to a boil, but heat it high enough to kill pathogens.

Then when a customer orders, we portion out 200ml and use a cappuccino steamer to heat it. It only takes a few seconds, and at that time the cornstarch in the powdered sugar thickens the drink, making it very rich and creamy.

We also have one of the drink dispensers, but there are challenges with it:

1. You have to throw out what you don't use at the end of the day (waste).

2. For higher volumes, 5 litres doesn't take you very far, so you have to keep refilling it.

3. It limits the types of drinking chocolates you can offer (one per machine)

4. If you use a true cocoa liquor and nobody buys a drinking chocolate for a while, you end up with a skim of very unattractive oil (cocoa butter) on top of the drink in the machine.

5.Multiple machines take upspace

6. Most dispenser binsare made of plastic, not glass. The plastic begins to look ratty after a being cleaned out a number of times.

By premaking a base, and using a steamer to heat individual portions, you can offer a multitude of drinking chocolates with different infused spices, because you add the spices to the drink just before you steam it in the cup. This steeps it just as if it were a tea.

Try this recipe:

1 oz good cocoa liquor

1 oz powdered sugar

2 oz granulated sugar

1/2 tsp Indonesian Cinnamon

1/8 tsp ground Cloves

Sweetened whip cream with a touch of vanillaon top with a sprinkle of fresh ground nutmeg.

My two bits for what it's worth.

Brad

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
12/19/12 00:04:01
527 posts

Creating Detailed Moulds


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

The only way I know of to get the detail you are looking for is to create your molds via injection-molded polycarbonate. I have never once seen a vacu-formed mold have the detail that a polycarbonate mold can produce.

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
08/04/10 15:09:54
527 posts

Canadian Chocolate Company Bernard Callebaut Forced into Bankruptcy


Posted in: News & New Product Press

In my opinion, there's much more to it.Banks don't want to own property, and the Courts here in Canada don't want to shut businesses down. They want the banks to to hold mortgages and they want their mortgage holders to pay the monthly installments. Here in Canada, all parties will in many cases be quite flexible with co-operative mortgagees / business owners in order to avoid costly legal fees and job loss ramifications here in Canada - especially with a well known and respected businessman such Mr. Callebaut.Monthly installments on a property such as that would be around $40,000 per month - something that could easily be absorbed by the cashflow generated by 30+ stores.Having said that, if he liquidated the property for a $3M loss, it would offset his taxable gains and drop his monthly payment to around $25,000 per month - a number that's easily doable, given the fact that the loss would be declared to Revenue Canada and offset the taxes he would pay from company profits. Essentially, the bank would get their money, and Revenue Canada would get $150,000 less tax revenue.The challenge is that Chocolaterie Bernard Callebaut is a privately held company. He's under NO obligation to provide public financials, and as a result can feed the media with whatever BS he wants in attempt to shift blame, or smooth things over. All we as readers, can do, is accept what he's telling the media as the truth.However, as a successful businessman, I know that you don't get forced into receivership by a creditor holding a small portion of the assets of the business, unless that creditor has significant inside information to warrant risking asset liquidation and even distribution among OTHER creditors of the company by the appointed receiver in order to secure their equity....just my thoughts, and goodness knows I've been receiving calls and thinking about this for the past 24 hours. After all, my shop is his primary competition here in Calgary.Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/16/10 22:38:52
527 posts

Why is my chocolate so shiny but soft and pliable?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Your chocolate wasn't in temper when it went into the molds.The temperature ranges for proper crystalization of the cocoa butter are non-negotiable / unflexible. 120 degrees is irrelevant. Any temperature between 115 and 140 is fine. We use 120 in our shop to be safe.What most likely happened is your chocolate got too warm when you brought the temperature back to the working temperature from the cool down state.It's important to remember that when you hit that magic 78/79 degrees and then begin reheating the chocolate to make it more fluid, only a small percentage of the correct crystals have formed. It takes time for the crystals to keep seeding themselves so that the majority of your chocolate is properly crystalized. If you hurry the reheating process, or go too high right off the bat (higher than 90 degrees), you risk destroying the few proper crystals that are in place.Give your chocolate a few minutes to seed itself at 90 degrees, STIR STIR STIR, pour it, and then because your kitchen is warm, throw it in the fridge to cool it quickly. Just remember to remove it from the fridge relatively soon, or run the risk of condensation / sugar bloom.Hope this helps.Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/11/10 00:11:01
527 posts

Help me bling my bonbons!


Posted in: News & New Product Press

Thanks everybody for your help.I've just ordered a bunch of Disco Dusts from Sunflower.I'll be sure to get some photos of our progress!Cheers.Brad
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/08/10 16:14:54
527 posts

Help me bling my bonbons!


Posted in: News & New Product Press

LMAOUp here in Canada, we have the equivalent of Dunkin' Donuts. It's called Tim Horton's.All police go through mandatory training. One of their core courses is Donuts 101!God forbid they should ever take their shirt off!Cheers, and thanks for your help!Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/08/10 14:29:24
527 posts

Help me bling my bonbons!


Posted in: News & New Product Press

LOL, No Ilana, I don't really want to use it. The glitter is bloody messy, and in some respects, in my mind it cheapens what we're trying to do.Having said that, I must adhere to the single most important rule about business, and that is: "find out what your customers want, and then give it to them." As long as the glitter doesn't affect the quality of texture and taste, I really see no difference between blinging them out, and wrapping them in the very shiny foil that we currently use.I just need to be sure the truffles are presented in an elegant and professional manner, and not by some show-girl in a tight outfit with her boobs hanging out all over the place. ....maybe a fireman with his shirt off??? ROFL.Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/08/10 01:47:35
527 posts

Help me bling my bonbons!


Posted in: News & New Product Press

Hey everybody;

The other day, a customer referred me to the following website: www.bedazzlemybonbons.com

They wanted to know if I could bling out our truffles in the same fashion with similar colors.

I visited the site, and must admit that in true redneck fashion, I was immediately attracted to those shiny little things, so I ordered their sample package and checked it out. LOL

I was far from impressed with the confections, and it was pretty clear to me that the centers of their truffles all used artificial flavors. (I never did get past the hazelnut, which, in my opinion, really sucked).

HOWEVER...

They nailed the glitter down. It's not a fine dust. It's actually an edibleglitter which has almost NO texture whatsoever, and it's very sparkly (oh... and it gets all over EVERYTHING!)

Does anyone know where I could get edible glitter like that which you see on that site?

I'm hoping someone could help me out with this one!

Thanks.

Brad.


updated by @Brad Churchill: 04/10/15 02:44:34
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/07/10 20:47:05
527 posts

what cacao butter should/should NOT look like ...


Posted in: Chocolate Education

As far as I can tell, the first and third photos look like normal alkalized cocoa butter. Not all cocoa butter will arrive "in temper". In fact none of the cocoa butter I use arrives "in temper". This means that it will often exhibit ALL of the characteristics of improperly tempered chocolate. After all, improperly tempered chocolate is exactly that - cocoa butter which hasn't crystalized properly - just like what you received in the bags.The cocoa butter in the second photo (#80), I'm not sure about, but looks to me as if it's natural pressed, non alkalized and non deodorized cocoa butter - which is why it still has a darker tinge to the color. Again, it's probably not tempered.Without tasting or smelling it, all I can really tell you is that it looks pretty normal.Hope that helps.Brad
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/07/10 15:23:10
527 posts

Chocolate without Soy Products


Posted in: News & New Product Press

I don't believe that Art Pollard at Amano Chocolate uses Lecithin, and his chocolate is fabulous. www.Amanochocolate.com Hope this helps.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
06/12/13 08:48:06
527 posts

Summer shipping tips & tricks?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Call me all the names in the world you want. I'm not the jack wagon using medical industry trash to package my customer orders, and if I did I certainly wouldn'tpublicly advertise thatI did regardless of whether it had stickers or not!

I LOVE donuts, but please don't send me any.

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
06/11/13 23:43:12
527 posts

Summer shipping tips & tricks?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Does anybody else findScott Moore's first Fridaypost incredibly disturbing???

My little inside voice is screaming "A guy has to be a real special kind of stupid to take styrofoam coolers used to transport biologically hazardous products to an from a medical facility - coolers that were destined for the dump FOR A REASON - package their customer's food into it and ship it to them."

Are you kidding me?

Wouldn't YOU just love to get your order of chocolates shipped in a container like this?????

WOW WOW WOW....

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
05/15/10 23:49:23
527 posts

Source of single origin beans


Posted in: Classifieds F/S or Wanted

David;A grower, by the name of Jim Lucas posted a reply to your query. I've been using his cacau since my shop first opened, and it's by and far the most popular of the varieties I use.He has to date shipped me some of the best quality beans I've seen yet.Feel free to contact me at 403-472-8701 (my direct number) if you have any questions.Brad Churchill www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/29/10 18:28:30
527 posts

rich creamy fillings without the cream


Posted in: Opinion

I don't think it's a no-no to ask for recipes. The whole purpose of an online forum is to share ideas and help each other.Having said that, I would revisit your decision to use butter rather than cream. Butter goes rancid too. Having said that, you could use clarified butter, which will prolong the life of your product somewhat, while at the same time still give you a "melt in the mouth" center.I would experiment with a ganache recipe, and instead of using cream to soften the chocolate, use clarified butter (just not with a 1-1 substitution!). You will need to experiment a bit.Just watch your overall fat content. It can get VERY high.Cheers,Brad www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/28/10 17:53:34
527 posts

chocolate shop name


Posted in: Opinion

This is just off the top of my head:Design a really cool, modern, single color symbol which, upon looking at it, lets the viewer know they are to think of chocolate, and leave it at that - no name, no nothing. Just the really cool symbol.To me, THAT stands out as much as a seeing purple painted guy wearing a speedo at a tuxedo show (and no I'm not smoking drugs!).Another option would be to play on the evolution of today's peer to peer communication, using terms that are very quickly becoming mainstream - terms such as OMG. Then create a logo out of that, with the word "chocolate" in tiny letters under the OMG.We've named our base drinking chocolate "OMG" and everyone giggles just before they order it, taste it, and then say "oh my god."In my opionion (and this is just mine), the chocolate industry in general is stodgy and pretentious. There's no rule saying you can't do something refreshing and modern while at the same time making a fabulous product!Cheers.BradChoklat
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/28/10 10:18:16
527 posts

chocolate shop name


Posted in: Opinion

Waleed;There's more to a name than just a name. You are creating a local brand for yourself, so you want it easily recognizable, and memorable.Your business name is also a logo, and with a logo you can use basic images, symbols, and cool fonts.Coming up with your business name/logo can be one of the most difficult steps of getting your business open, but is also one of the most important....and why does it have to sound European? It's your business. It can sound however you like it to.Cheers.Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/28/10 10:09:32
527 posts

How long do I have before chocolate sets?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

LOLWhen I read your post Lisa, I had to laugh. I'm a neat freak, and have never been able to keep the area clean while using molds. This is one reason why I only do truffles. The other challenge is that the ACMC's bowl is very small for pouring the chocolate back into.As far as tempering goes, it sounds like you're getting crystalization using the seeding method. Keep in mind that chocolate will continue to crystalize while you're using it. If you find it getting thick, raise your working temperature a couple of degrees at a time, until such time as it flows like you want it. The working temperature of the chocolate in the ACMC machines we use in our shop is usually around 92-94 degrees once the chocolate is well crystalized (which yours appears to be). It's good to note here too that, our staff are always tweaking the temperature of the working chocolate to ensure a consistent viscosity, as it will vary with how much product is dipped, how much it's being stirred, how cool the room is, etc.Cheers, and happy mess making!LOLBrad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/27/10 12:21:24
527 posts

How long do I have before chocolate sets?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Lisa;If you've got polycarbonate molds and a machine such as the ACMC, then definitely the way to go is with Clay's suggestion.The squeeze bottle is great for decorating, or the home hobbyist molds.Just remember: Stir, Stir, Stir.Cheers.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/27/10 11:32:53
527 posts

How long do I have before chocolate sets?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Clay;There may be some challenges with your method if Lisa isn't using polycarbonate molds, or the hard thermoformed molds from, say, Tomric. There are millions of inexpensive molds on the market, but they don't lend themselves to the method you've outlined, as they are too flimsy, and often have ridges around the outside which prevent scraping. I have some of those exact molds in my basement, from when I was doing this as a hobby in my home.If the only way to make her confections is to partially fill the mold, put the fondant in, and then fill it the rest of the way, I would like to suggest an alternative to piping with a baggie (which we also do in our shop for decorating brownies, and so forth):Go to a restaraunt supply store and buy the CLEAR version of the red and yellow ketchup and mustard squeeze bottles we've all seen in at one time or another. They hold approximately 1 litre of chocolate (about 2lbs), are much thicker, and hold the heat better, while at the same time insulating the chocolate on the sides from your hands. You can snip the tip to allow whatever volume you like out, and while pouring, you can roll it, and squeeze it to circulate the chocolate and prevent swirling. When refilling, dump out the chocolate that's in it, stir your ACMC chocolate, and then refill it. When done, put it in the fridge for a few minutes, then when the chocolate has set, roll the bottle thereby breaking the chocolate inside, and dump it back into your ACMC. You'll end up with a clean bottle that's ready to use again!We make thousands of sampling callets this way, and they turn out great!This is a great option for those who have/use home hobbyist styles of molds, and it allows for a much cleaner shop because it isn't as messy as a piping bag.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/27/10 08:57:21
527 posts

How long do I have before chocolate sets?


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Lisa;Without a much more detailed explanation or photos of what you're experiencing, I can only guess. However, my best guess would be that you are getting bloom and swirls on your last few trays.If that is the case, the reason is that you're not keeping your working chocolate agitated. As a result, the chocolate on the surface while it's sitting and waiting to be used some more, is crystalizing differently than the chocolate in, say... the center of the bowl.If you do not have a machine that can continually agitate your chocolate, you need to either:a) have someone stirring your chocolate for you while you are working with the molds, orb) when you're done with one mold, stir, stir, stir, and then when you think you've stirred enough, repeat, and THEN mold up some more.I hope that helps.Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/17/10 00:16:44
527 posts

The Business of Chocolate


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Jeff;Here are some numbers that will help you greatly with your calculations:1. Estimate that the average North American (assuming you're in North America) eats about 6lbs of chocolate per year. Multiply that by your local population, and you have rough local consumption stats.2. Average food cost in the food service industry is around 27-30% of Gross Sales. The chocolate industry is usually less - around 20% of gross sales. If you're positioning your business as an elitist in your local market, you can go as low as 15% of gross sales.3. Average labour cost in the food industry is 35-40% (yup, very high). Make sure to calculate your time into your labor costs. Too many business owners fail to do this, and create skewed financials. Remember: If you weren't going to do the job of running your business, you'd have to pay someone else to do it, so make sure to pay yourself. Also note that labour costs drop drastically with the introduction of automated equipment for certain tasks, but those costs are offset by the investment in the equipment, paired with amortized depreciation costs on that equipment (provided it's new).These numbers aren't written in stone, but are very good benchmarks to use when putting together your pro-forma financials.Also don't forget to account for such things as business licenses, business taxes, employee remittances, development permits, food safety training for staff, and utensils that one always seems to acquire over time.Remember: The Devil's in the details!Cheers;Brad Churchill www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/18/10 00:16:37
527 posts

Functional Candy - Making Chocolate (Candies) Healthy-er


Posted in: News & New Product Press

So it's basically back to maltitol then...That's what's commonly used in sugar free chocolate already.Inulin sounded promising.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/17/10 04:43:07
527 posts

Functional Candy - Making Chocolate (Candies) Healthy-er


Posted in: News & New Product Press

Robert;I'm interested in learning more about the use of inulin with chocolate. To date I haven't produced any "sugar free" chocolate, as it's very difficult to get maltitol here in Canada, and to date I'm not convinced that's the best solution for diabetic friendly chocolate.Can you explain more about the use of inulin as a sweetener for chocolate, and what your experience has been?I noted that in Wikipedia they make mention of it being about 10% as sweet as sucrose. How accurate is this in your experience, and how much volume does it add to the chocolate to attain the same level of sweetness?Thanks in advance for your reply.Brad.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/13/10 18:43:03
527 posts

Tempering untempered chocolate


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Krysia;In our shop, we work with untempered chocolate all of the time, and don't bother with seeding. Even though we have several pieces of equipment that temper our chocolate, I've trained my staff to temper dark chocolate by hand the following way, and it works every time:1. Heat the chocolate over a double boiler to 120 degrees F. A deep 8 Litre bowl works best for this application.2. While the chocolate is melting start a cold water bath in your sink. Use icecubes if you can't get the water cold.3. When the chocolate has hit 120 and is COMPLETELY melted (no chunks), transfer the bowl to the cold water bath, and stir, stir, stir, always pulling the chocolate off the side of the bowl. DO NOT STOP STIRRING until the chocolate hits 79 degrees. At that point it will have begun to thicken, and will have started to adhere to the side of the bowl regardless of how much you have been pulling it off with your spatula. This should only take a couple of minutes. The cold water will cool even 6-8lbs of chocolate very quickly.4. Transfer back to the double boiler and stir and heat until 90 degrees. Stir, Stir Stir.5. Once all of the chocolate has melted and is fluid again, there you have it, perfectly tempered chocolate.Try this and let me know how it works.As an aside, I've noticed that very soft, high quality cocoa butter requires lower temperatures to temper. You may not be hitting the right "bottom" number, and as a result you're getting the wrong type of crystalization. Our chocolate when set before we temper it in our shop is grainy and crumbly just as you mentioned in your post.Hope this helps.Brad www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/11/12 23:48:53
527 posts

Belgian Chocolate Makers


Posted in: Opinion

Callebaut is definitely a Swiss company. In fact, if one were to split hairs, they should be called a Canadian company moreso than a Belgian company. Callebaut's factory in St. Hiyacinthe here in Canada produces 1.6 BILLION lbs of chocolate a year - far, farmore chocolatethan the Belgian factory.

Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/10/10 17:36:23
527 posts

Belgian Chocolate Makers


Posted in: Opinion

Just thinking out loud here: I wonder if any of the 1.6 Billion lbs of chocolate made Callebaut's factory here in Quebec Canada every year gets labeled as the finest belgian chocolate made....Further to that, and again thinking out loud: Did Cocoa Barry have a factory in the heart of Belgium BEFORE they bought the Callebaut factory from Toblerone in 1986 +/- a year or two, then changed their name, or have they only been able to claim making chocolate in Belgium since they acquired the factory....
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/09/10 10:30:30
527 posts

Belgian Chocolate Makers


Posted in: Opinion

My understanding is that Barry Callebaut is Swiss, not Belgian, and have spoken to representatives from Puratos (They own Belcolade), who claim that Belcolade is the only remaining Belgian owned Belgian chocolate company remaining in existenced.I could be wrong though...
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
04/29/10 22:56:32
527 posts

Working Chocolatier Q&A


Posted in: Opinion

You know.... I had to chuckle when I read your post Wendy. In the past couple of years I've had a lot of people tell me I should write a book about my career path and how I've arrived at where I am today. I might even do that some day!Until then, I'll keep playing with my daughter, playing with chocolate, playing on the computer, and playing in the mountains.Life's too short to "work".Cheers everyone!
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/08/10 13:17:01
527 posts

Working Chocolatier Q&A


Posted in: Opinion

1. How did you get into chocolate and when did you actually start your business?I got into the industry because I was a disgruntled chocolate customer. It seems that every chocolate shop I walked into had their product on display, but didnt give me the ability to select what I wanted for my purchase. Everybody had the Henry Ford mentality when it came to selling: Well sell you any color of car you want, as long as its black..When I tried seeking out a chocolate company that would let me buy what I wanted, I then found out that nobody actually made the chocolate I thought they made. It was then I decided to make my own.2. What was your original strategy?My original strategy was simply home recreation. I found John Nancis site, purchased some equipment and beans and for the next several months had fun making chocolate. I had a number of other business ventures on the go at that time, so this was my life balance activity.3. How did that change and why?A number of things came together. I sold my furniture manufacturing firm. However before I did that, I used my fabrication shop in my furniture company to designed a better home melangeur similar to the one that Mr. Nanci sells on Chocolate Alchemys website. I also began making contact with some people very high up in the world chocolate scene. At this point however I was still treating my passion for chocolate as recreation. I have a book called El Toppo Secreto, which has recorded in it all of my recipes and versions of each both for the chocolate my company makes today, and also for the confections Ive tried. Some were successes while others have big red NFG written over them4. What did you think would happen vs what really happened?As a software architect (that was my primary career), I had hoped to design The Home Chocolate Machine an iteration of a Santha lentil grinder except all computerized with a number of features that are needed to properly conche chocolate. However, it was going to cost me somewhere in the range of $3 million to get the machine finished, CSA and UL approved and into stores. I didnt want to spend or raise that kind of money, so I looked at other options. I assembled a team of advisors colleagues with specialties in various areas and bribed them with all the chocolate they could eat for some candid advice. We sat down over a couple of evenings, drank wine, ate chocolate and I listened to what they had to say.In the end it was decided by all, that I would shelve the home chocolate machine idea for the time being, and focus on opening a business that had some incredibly unique offerings, unheard of in the chocolate industry.5. What is your vision?The vision for Choklat is very simple: Use only the finest and freshest ingredients that money can buy. Make ALL of our chocolate in house. Celebrate the flavour of the cocoa bean, and make a dark eating chocolate from each variety that we import. Let people taste the difference that the cocoa bean plays in the flavour of chocolate. Focus on truffles, and make them fresh only when the customer orders them. Find out what people want, design recipes that the like, and then give it to them.6. Who is your target market?Our target market is an affluent adult clientele. We never offer novelty products, such as molded bunnies, or hearts, or Santas, or anything like that. We focus on two things only: flavour and service. We do offer a very limited selection of truffle toppings for kids, but other than a couple, everything is the best that we can get, and if we cant get it, we make it in house (such as our graham wafers and marshmallows).7. How did you figure out how much money you needed to start?Lots of planning and research about a year of it, 8 hours per day. Mid Six Figures.8. Was it enough?Yes. More than enough.9. How long did you think it would carry you? Did it? If not, why?The money carried the business until the day we opened our doors. I actually saved money by planning all my purchases and vendors prior to approaching them. Instead of going back multiple times, I put together equipment lists for each vendor and negotiated discounts from all of them. This approach saved me approximately $30,000.10. How long before you were in the black?We had a soft opening on August 8, 2008, and generated profit day one. All equipment and inventory was paid for in cash in advance, so the company carried no debt, other than to me directly.11. What was the best advice you received regarding your business?The best advice? LOL, Ive already been attacked in a very nasty fashion on this forum for giving it. All I can do is reiterate that if you are independently wealthy and dont care if you sell a single confection, make whatever the heck recipes you want and proudly flog them. However if you NEED to make money and CHOOSE to make chocolate confections to pay the bills, you are at some point going to have to compromise and make something which caters to tastes that differ from yours. If people dont like what you sell, they wont pay for it at any price. Thats just the simple, harsh reality of life.12. What are the most important lessons you learned about the business side?Lesson 1: Nothing takes the place of sound, pragmatic, planning and research. When planning a business, set your emotions aside and be realistic.Lesson 2: Business is about making money. Period. The bills HAVE to get paid.Lesson 3: When it comes to your business, put a dollar value on your time, then closely manage and track that time. For example: When I was working in the software industry, I billed my time at $100 per hour. I needed a fence made, and paid someone $15 per hour to make my fence, while I sat in the house and wrote software. My father thought I was crazy, having someone build my fence while I was at home. I had to explain to him the economies of making $85 per hour while my fence was being built for free. YOUR TIME IS WORTH MONEY. If you dont think it is, try and find someone to do your job for free.13. How big a price did you have to pay to learn that?In 2001 I took an Internet company public on the NASDAQ stock exchange, and because of bad hiring practices, and bad management decisions, I lost everything and had to start over in 2003. My losses were in excess of $15 Million dollars. When I moved back to Calgary, I had $150 in my pocket to start over with. The last 7 years has been a very hard road and a lot of hard work, but Im back to having fun with life. Some of that fun even makes me money! By this loss, I learned that life is too short to burn the candle at both ends in pursuit of that big pot of gold the big win. Plan a bunch of small wins, and have fun building on those.14. Knowing what you know now, what would you do differently?I will never give control of any of my companies to anyone, unless it is to sell it to them lock stock and barrel. At that point Ive got my money, and they can drive it into the toilet for all I care. Until that time however I will always have the final say in all business decisions related to that venture.15. What do you like the most and the least about your job/business? Was that a surprise?What I like the most: first of all, I dont look at my job/business as a business. I take a whole life approach. I wake up every morning with the intent to have fun and make the most of the day. I understand however that at some point in time I have to make some money, so I figure out how to have fun and make money at the same time. Case in point: I have fun making chocolate, and make money doing it. I have fun racing motorcycles, and make a modest amount of money doing that too (it pays for itself). I also have fun snowmobiling and skiing, but those dont make me money. I also have fun with my daughter. In a nutshell, I look at life with the understanding of balance. My daily focus is to have fun. Some of my activities pay the bills, and other activities are simply fun.What I like least: Nothing. If I dont like something I simply dont do it.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/06/10 02:44:49
527 posts

Working Chocolatier Q&A


Posted in: Opinion

If you'd like to learn a little more, here's a good video and links to others about my business. The video is at the bottom of the article, and starts after a 24 second commercial. http://www.calgarybeacon.com/2009/10/video-inglewoods-choklat-an-ex...
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/05/10 22:04:19
527 posts

Working Chocolatier Q&A


Posted in: Opinion

Wow. Such rudeness.The original question was to incite advice from people to help those who are starting out in the business.I gave advice, and it's VERY GOOD advice.I love chocolate. I love making chocolate. I love the fact that people rant and rave about how good my company's products are. Just google "Choklat" and "Calgary" and you'll find hundreds of unsolicited posts of people saying it's the best they've ever had - even better than one of the most prolific chocolatiers in Canada - Bernard Callebaut. It's a feat to be proud of. In fact my little shop has been named as one of the top 25 food destinations in Calgary (a city of over a million people) for 2009, whereas Mr. Callebaut's was not.I reiterate that business is about finding out what people like, and then giving it to them.I also believe that life is about balance. As long as a person understands where the line is drawn, there's nothing wrong with making money. I've burned the candle at both ends on businesses, and have looked back at the 5 years that have passed, and asked myself: "Where did it go?"I take a very different approach now: I design the recipes. I test the recipes. I get customer acceptance (or rejection) from them. Then, I have my staff make them for the customer, and go practice a life balance exercise by playing in the mountains.A person doesn't have to make every single truffle to be equally proud of what they've created.Remember: THIS THREAD IS ABOUT HELPING PEOPLE SUCCESSFULLY SELL THEIR WARES.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/03/10 23:11:02
527 posts

Working Chocolatier Q&A


Posted in: Opinion

In my opinion and experience (and I have a LOT of experience), if you are making confections for your own consumption I agree. However if you're making confections to earn a living, this is the absolute worst piece of advice a person could give and/or receive.Business is about money. Period. Money is made by finding out what people like, will buy, and what price they will pay, and then giving them what they like, will buy, and at the price they feel comfortable paying.Case in point: Personally, I hate coffee and anything related to it, but my customers LOVE our espresso truffle centers, made with a recipe I designed and tested on focus groups. This month my staff will most likely sell several thousand espresso truffles, and at $1.99 each I'll happily call myself a whore.Why?Because while other chocolatiers are barely scraping by, or struggling to sell their wares at every rinky dink farmer's market in their area (no offence to Debby. I added this post and then read hers below. She has some good advice!), I'll be skiing, snowmobiling, hiking, and generally enjoying life. And then when I'm done playing, I'll have enough money from whoring my espresso truffles, to pay a staff to do the grunt work of my business for me, blow on a $160 15ml bottle of Rose Atto to experiment with Turkish delight, and then maybe I'll impulse buy $1,000 worth of cool silicone molds to experiment with too, just because I can.Yup. I'm a whore, but I'm a happy whore, and I still get to make whatever I want, whenever I want, and let my staff clean up the mess!Cheers.Choklat's Happy 'Ho!
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
02/23/10 14:05:08
527 posts

Stainless steel parts for santha 10 lb melanger


Posted in: News & New Product Press

Contact John Nanci at www.ChocolateAlchemy.com He sells the Santhas and various "OEM" parts.
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
03/22/10 00:12:56
527 posts

liqueur filled chocolate


Posted in: News & New Product Press

Bob;One great resource for getting you started on small scale chocolate production is a website called www.ChocolateAlchemy.com . John Nanci (the owner), sells everything you need to take chocolate right from the cocoa bean to the bar.I found his site about 5 years ago, and at that time started making chocolate recreationally with no formal training at all.His forum also has a wealth of information if you wish to pursue making chocolate yourself.Making chocolate really isn't that hard. The best part is that you get to savor all of your mistakes!CheersBrad Churchill www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
02/19/10 11:50:43
527 posts

ALOHA ~ turning cacao beans and/or nibs into liquid for chocolate making ... techniques/equipment etc ~ MAHALO


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Deedee;The best way to use your Santha, is as follows:1. Preheat the Santha bin and granite wheels with a blow dryer, or hot air.2. While your bin is heating, melt the cocoa butter, then add all ingredients into it, and gently heat the entire mass until it's about 120 degrees.3. Remove the tension cap from the Santha, turn it on, and SLOWLY add the warm ingredients. This process will take about 10 minutes to complete.It's important to note that while the Santha CLAIMS to make chocolate, it's primary original design was in fact NOT to crush cocoa beans. the motor is underpowered, and the belt will stretch and wear out very soon after a couple of batches.You will need to tinker with the machine eventually, so be prepared for it.I say this with utmost sincerity and 4 years of experience with that type of machine. (I completely re-engineered mine, and even though I have proper industrial chocolate equipment today I still use my modified one to evaluate samples of beans I receive).Cheers.Brad www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
02/16/10 11:01:44
527 posts

Cocao in Haiti ?


Posted in: News & New Product Press

Last summer I received a sample from some guys who claimed to be "up and comers" in the Haiti cocoa scene. The beans were dried well, but completely unfermented. When I replied by email, saying that I won't buy unfermented cocoa, their reply was "Fermentation? What's that?".That was the last I heard of them.Other than that, I haven't received any other samples from Haiti, and won't let the experience with one grower cloud my judgement. If there are others, and they ferment their beans properly, and care for them during the post harvest process carefully, I would be very interested in reviewing samples, and possibly buying several tons on a regular basis.Brad ChurchillChoklat. www.SoChoklat.com
Brad Churchill
@Brad Churchill
02/15/10 22:06:07
527 posts

Equipment Suggestions


Posted in: Tech Help, Tips, Tricks, & Techniques

Charlie;Don't waste your money buying a third roaster for cacao. As long as you can turn the temperature down to about 300 degrees, your coffee roasters will work just fine.Remember: Cooking anything is about heat and airflow. If your cooking instrument creates both, then you can cook anything you want in it.Case in point: we use a commercial electric convection oven in our shop, roast a few hundred lbs of beans every week, and also toast our coconut, roast all of our nuts, bake brownies, cupcakes, cookies, and other pastries.Cheers.Brad.
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