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Pure Cocoa Hot Chocolate

Pure Cocoa Hot Chocolate

Sweet, bitter or white, hot chocolate is the ultimate hug in a mug. It is warm, luxurious and, most importantly, contains a rather popular stimulant about which you may or may not have heard. Personally, a rich and bitter hot chocolate appeals to my inner desires, so for this recipe pure (100%) cocoa paste seemed in order. Though the recipe includes both milk and sugar – two of three fundamental parts of milk chocolate – pure cocoa helps lift this rendition above the attempts of most cafés. Indeed, insipidity reigns supreme in the world of hot chocolate – time to turn things around.

Pure Cocoa Hot Chocolate

Cocoa solid was first used as far back asc.1100 BC. However, it is believed to have come into widespread use around a millennium later at which time it came to form an important part of Mayan spiritual events – both as an offering and as a drink. It was not until the Nineteenth Century that the process of emulsification was unearthed and chocolate became solid, signifying the invention of the modern day chocolate bar. Of course, this recipe is about as authentic as fake tan – sugar and milk were ingredients unknown to the Ancient Mesoamericans – but it’s still gratifying to return in some way to the bitter roots of drinking chocolate.

Local connection:It can be a little tricky to find 100% cocoa paste, but root around in local delis and I’m sure you’ll stumble across it sooner rather than later. Indeed, I picked mine up fromArch House Deliin Clifton, Bristol – one of my favourite establishments, anywhere. However, if you really can’t find any pure cocoa, 100g of 70-80% chocolate should yield similar results.

Pure Cocoa Hot Chocolate {recipe}

Makes 2

Ingredients:

• 450ml whole milk

• 70g cocoa paste (100%)

• 15g salted butter

• A pinch of salt

• 1-2 tsp light muscovado sugar

方法:

1. Heat half the milk gently in a pan, bring to a simmer. Grate in the chocolate and stir along with the butter and salt. Tip in the remaining milk and bring back to a simmer. It’ll be very bitter at this point so add 1-2 tsp of sugar to taste. Whisk it to a froth and serve immediately.

Cost:100% cocoa paste is pretty expensive – my lump of160g cost around £3.50. However, it goes so far that this really isn’t particularly problematic. A chunk of that size is enough for 4-5 hot chocolates. Two of these little delights should set one back no more than£2.20– the price of one hot chocolate from a café!

71 replies on “Pure Cocoa Hot Chocolate”

What I really love about this recipe is that you can adapt it so easily. I, personally, love a kick of spice and would mix some homemade chai concentrate into the equation but the problem that I have is sourcing the cocoa paste or as Mr Randy says 100% cocoa solids in cocoa butter (neither of which occur naturally on trees in the greater Launceston area in Tasmania ). I dare say it would be in every corner deli on mainland Australia but we have to work that little bit harder for our degustatory delights here in Tasmania (the farthest flung outpost in the South…sigh…). I can veganise this recipe by using a nice thick nut milk and our sugar is vegan here in Australia (for once we come out on the top in vegan stakes! ). Another feather in your cap Mr Frugal…you are starting to look like a Mardi Gras Peacock!

Hi Narf! Up here in Bris, we have a vegan grocery store called the Green Edge. I won’t post a link in case wordpress thinks I’m spamming, but it’s very easy to Google, they deliver everywhere in Australia and they have an 85% and 87% chocolate. Not quite 100% but you can be assured that everything in the store is vegan at a minimum, plus lots of fairtrade and organic products. I love them for tricky ingredients.

Great post. I always make my hot chocolate with proper chocolate. So much better than the powdered stuff. I am also an Arch House Deli fan! Are you a Bristol lad?

Well – I’m originally Welsh, but I went to uni in Bristol and currently live in Bedminster!

There is nothing like a “real” hot chocolate. Sometimes, if it’s very snowy and we’ve all struggled to get into school in the morning, our chef instructor will raid the pastry kitchens for their glorious chocolate and whip us up a hot drink. Nothing beats it!

Yum, this sounds amazing I love the idea of butter in hot chocolate. I’ll have to try and source some cocoa paste, but I think good-quality dark chocolate would be easier to find.

我同意从咖啡馆是平淡的热巧克力and I’ve stopped drinking them because they are just not worth $4-5.

That looks so velvety and rich. I’m dreaming that I have this cup of cocoa in my hand and sipping it. I can only dream, right?

I’ve never thought of using butter in cocoa. I bet Paula Deen is so proud.

The wonderful thing about cocoa paste is that it is corn free and peanut free so those with allergies can enjoy. I use Belgium Chocolate for mine with a hint of nutmeg and cinnamon and it is so good. With my corn allergy I can enjoy a few pleasures I used to have to give up. Thank you for sharing. I wish there was a recipe converter I could find that would help to American weights. I am slowly collecting them.

There really is nothing better than a good cup of hot chocolate in the snow, and we’re supposed to get a foot of snow tonight. I do believe I’ll be making myself a cup (or three) of this decadent drink! I think coconut oil in place of the butter will make a nice flavor contribution, too!

I made something like this the other day but used 100% cocoa powder, with a little sugar, a pinch of salt and whole milk – divine! And as you say, it’s so far from the “insipid” stuff served everywhere these days.
I’ve not seen cocoa paste, but I’m guessing Willie’s Cacao – sold all over – would work nicely too?

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