Updated on: 17/05/2024
Conching chocolate is a fundamental step in the Chocolate Manufacturing process. Read the following blog to learn all about it, or navigate this content menu and find answers to your questions:
For many consumers, little is known about how much is done to a cocoa bean before it can be turned into chocolate. More than a mystical metamorphosis, this transformation brings nature, science, and art together. To bring a chocolate couverture to life, fermented and dried cocoa beans are selected, winnowed, roasted, ground into cocoa mass, mixed (with other ingredients), refined, and finally conched.
Continue reading below to discover more about the process behind Luker’s chocolate products:
Rudolph Lindt, a Swiss chocolate maker, discovered the conching process in 1879. Having accidentally left a mixer containing chocolate running overnight, he woke up to realise that this had changed the chocolate’s flavour and texture. The name of the equipment, the conche, is derived from the Latin word ‘shell’, as the traditional conche used in chocolate manufacturing resembled a conch shell.
Nowadays, the conching process is the final step in the manufacturing of chocolate. Whether it’s milk or dark, it is an essential process that contributes to developing viscosity, final texture, and flavour. For Luker especially, conching is a magical process. This is an opportunity for us to work with clients and our development team’s expertise to build various flavour profiles. With just a little help from technology, you can start with one flavour and completely transform it into another.
Conching is a vital part of chocolate making. It entails the continuous mixing, grinding, and kneading of chocolate mass over a prolonged period. The conche, a machine specially designed for this purpose, is used in the process. This machine is essential to refine chocolate, ensuring a smooth and consistent texture.
The chocolate is heated and stirred during the conching process while undergoing mechanical shear forces. This process achieves several essential objectives consistently.
When we are in this step of the chocolate-making process, we must remember that there are two ways of performing the conching process: Vertical and Horizontal conching.
The type of conching to use depends on various factors, including:
The main difference between these conching types is how the conch machine’s axis is set up. Both of them get the work done. However, the horizontal one has the advantage of completing steps in the dry and plastic phases, which helps enhance the development of flavour and rheology.
Amongst the chocolate-making industry, we discuss ‘cocoa solids’ as particles that carry a chocolate bar’s colour, taste, and nutritional value. However, these particles also have intense bitter and astringent notes, which are given by polyphenols or antioxidants in cocoa. Additional off-flavours, such as acetic acid, are also leftover from the fermentation process.
This processing step, which consists mainly of mixing, shearing, and aeration of the chocolate mass at a specific temperature and for a certain amount of time, is considered a critical step for two main reasons:
Amongst the scientific community, different researchers have put forward differing opinions on how many phases there are in the conching process. Some researchers define conching as a two-phase process. In the first stage, known as the ‘dry phase’, the moisture level is reduced. All solid particles have fat on their surfaces, which removes some volatile acids like acetic acid that result from cocoa fermentation. In the second stage, called the ‘wet phase’, homogenous and paste-like fluid mass is obtained by adding more cocoa butter and emulsifiers.
Some say that this process has three phases. This is also what we believe and perform at Luker Chocolate, which can be described as follows:
The chocolate mass is transferred from the refiner, generally as flakes, to be heated, mixed and aerated. The primary objective of this stage is to allow the evaporation of some of the volatile acids from cocoa liquor and the water originating from the chocolate components. The total concentration of acetic acid after the dry conching stage remains approximately constant, as no free water acts as a vapour carrier.
Next, the mass which is mixed, sheared, heated and degassed, enters the second phase that we call the ‘long step’. At this stage, flavour characteristics are developed through chemical reactions (Maillard reaction and Strecker’s degradation) based on the process’s time and temperature conditions. This is another important step in reducing the volatilisation of acetic acids due to cocoa fermentation.
It is called the ‘plastic phase’ because of the physical change that occurs to the mass, turning from flakes into a paste and becoming more liquid as the cocoa butter covers the solid particles. Time and temperature play a key role in this stage. The temperature is more closely related to the type of chocolate being manufactured (dark, milk or white). Time has to do with factors dependent on the quality and variety of beans used to produce the cocoa liquor.
This phase is the shortest, and it is where the viscosity and flow properties undergo the final adjustments with the addition of cocoa butter and emulsifiers.
The technology used is extremely important (i.e., actual conching machinery designs are more efficient in energy and time). In the conching process during the plastic phase, normally, milk chocolates are conched at around 50°C to prevent the caramelisation of the product. Should the temperature be any higher, this causes lumps and sandiness in the mouth when eating the final product.
Some dark chocolates, on the other hand, can be conched up to 90°C because of their intense load of volatile by-products from fermentation. However, conching time is a big discussion point at this stage, because it is here that the quality, type and origin of the beans play a determinant role.
Throughout the years, Luker Chocolate has built extremely close relationships with Colombian farmers, sharing knowledge and experience. This guarantees exceptional quality characteristics by the end of the fermentation process and the drying of the cocoa beans. Supported by the ‘Colombian ‘Fino de Aroma’ cocoa beans, which are naturally complex in their flavour profile with delicate fruity, floral, and herbal notes, we take great care in applying temperature and conching time for every chocolate couverture we produce. Luker can deliver finished products to customers worldwide with unique, high-quality flavour experiences.
Here at Luker Chocolate, with state-of-the-art technology and our Colombian Fine Flavour cocoa beans, our conching process ranges from 2 to 7 hours. This length of time makes us different in terms of processing conditions during chocolate manufacturing. There is more to keep, such as the aromatic compounds of vanilla or the fruity or caramel-like flavours than to take away from the original product. Parallel to this, we must develop the fluidity and mouthfeel of the product to maintain a luxury experience.
During this period, it’s also important to remember that the senses of taste and smell are in the form of volatile molecules. During the conching process, these molecules are responsible for the aroma and flavour. However, like a perfume, if left open for a long period and shaken about, you will lose the original aroma.
Other companies around the world that manufacture chocolate couvertures, working with bulk cocoa beans, can apply conching processes from 12 to 78 hours. This is due to the high levels of acetic acid and other compounds that can have a negative impact on the final flavour of the chocolate. A disadvantage in terms of production efficiency is due to the long heat treatment and high sheer (costs and energy), as well as a less indulgent and delicious sensory profile than one would expect from chocolate. With an exquisite profile such as the Fino de Aroma cacao, we don’t want our cocoa to taste plain and lose all its beauty! So, by using high-quality products and shorter periods, we don’t have to compromise all the amazing characteristics during the process.
We hope that with this information, the next time you eat chocolate, you can close your eyes and pay attention to the texture as the chocolate melts in your mouth. Take a slight breath of air to assess the flavour and remember that behind that complexity, the joint work of science and nature is the magic behind your new sensory experiences.
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What changes occur in chocolate during conching?
Conching & refining chocolate