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Don't want to mention the company, but they have a product that is pure powdered vanilla (contains maltodextrin, whatever that is). They say it prevents melted chocolate from seizing. Does that sound right?

Thanks

JustRightMenus
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apaderno
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2 Answers2

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I just reviewed the Nielsen Massey website and under their FAQ's they suggest that vanilla powder be used for "liquid sensitive products". The powdered nature of the vanilla would allow you to add it to melted chocolate without causing the melted chocolate to seize up. While vanilla has a unique and characteristic flavor of its own, it also helps to heighten and intensify other flavors, chocolate being one of them.

When chocolate seizes the emulsion of cocoa butter and cocoa powder has been interrupted by the introduction of a small amount of moisture. You either need to keep all liquids out of melted chocolate or add in a significant amount.

So...it only prevents it from seizing if you were going to be adding vanilla in extract form but no other liquids. It would not be something you add as a preventative measure.

Prevent the seizing through proper procedures in the first place:

  • Do not allow water in the water bath to touch bottom of the bowl that you're melting chocolate in.
  • The steam produced by the water is what's doing the melting so as long as wafts of steam are rising from the surface it's hot enough. The water doesn't even need to be simmering - cocoa butter starts to melt around 83-85 degrees F.
  • Make sure all utensils are dry so water droplets aren't introduced
  • Make sure the bowl you're using is large enough for the edges to flare out beyond the edge of the pot. If the edges just meet the edge of the pot then steam will condense on the edge and get into the chocolate causing it to seize.
Darin Sehnert
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    Thank you for the tips on preventing seizing. Your responses go that extra step and I appreciate it. – apaderno Jul 27 '10 at 21:18
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    @Cinque: You're welcome. Thanks for the feedback on the responses. I figure more information and background is better than assuming people already know. Even if the person asking knows, chances are others will not. – Darin Sehnert Jul 28 '10 at 02:21
4

I'm not familiar with the anti-seize property, but I can tell you what (tapioca) maltodextrin is. It is a modified food starch with the amazing property that it thickens fat instead of water-based liquids. If you have ever eaten at a restaurant that does the molecular-gastronomy schtick and had a powdered olive oil or coconut oil, e.g., that is how it is made.

Michael Natkin
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