Whenever I see a Glossette’s Raisin or a chocolate-covered almond or something like that, I notice the chocolate covering is smooth all around and glossy and just generally perfect.
Question: How do they do that? If you covered the almond with choclate and it was sitting on something, it should be flat on one side when it dries. But it isn’t. What do they do to make them look so perfect and tasty?
The chocolate coating is easily thick enough to compensate for the flat side of the almond if the Glossettes are made, like many chocolates, using two halves of an oblong shaped mold, or partially filling an oblong mold before adding the nut.
Dr_P, that doesn’t seem right. Molds leave marks around the seam, and we don’t have any mold marks here. Molding would be pretty inefficient for such small pieces, too.
The best I can think of is to cool the dipped pieces in the air by dropping them down through an upward cool wind. Or maybe spray them with chocolate as they fall.
How do they make them perfectly smooth and shiny? It depends on the product. I don’t have any glossettes at hand, and I couldn’t find an ingredient list online. However, I’ll go by what this bag of Planters chocolate covered peanuts says.
If you look at the ingredients listed on the packaging, it will probably mention “confectioner’s shellac.” It did on this one, anyway.
Shellac, also called lac-resin, is derived from the lac (Laccifer Lacca). Lac are scale insects, living on trees, mostly harvested in Thailand and India. The secretion produced by these tiny insects to create a hard, protective layer is used to glaze chocolate and fruit. It is also used in paint and varnishes, and floor polishes. This resin was even used to make 78rpm records. Hundreds of thousands of these insects are killed to make this substance.
Here’s a link to more info on the lac insects, how they’re harvested, etc.
(Note: I am not a vegan, and I do not intend to make you guilty by reading this.)
I also looked at a package of smarties, and this listed carnauba wax instead. Carnauba wax is obtained from leaves and buds of the Brazilian “Tree of Life” (Copernica Cerifera), AKA the wax palm. Here’s another link for more info:
Now, without seeing the actual ingredient list for glossettes (raisins or otherwise), I can’t say for sure. Some brands use synthetic glazes as well.