Sakura Truffle Chocolates
- 100 grams. White chocolate
- 40 grams Heavy cream
- 50 grams Sakura an
- 1 leaf Sakura leaf
- 1 tsp Sakura syrup or liqueur
- 1 dash Pink food coloring
- 100 grams. White chocolate
- 1 tsp Freeze dried sakura blossoms (if not available refer to step 12)
- 1 dash Pink food coloring
- Wash the sakura leaf in water and dry with a paper towel.
- Mince very finely.
- Remove the core part.
- Melt and mix the white chocolate and heavy cream in a bowl suspended over hot water.
- Then add the sakura an and the sakura leaf and mix.
- Next add a little of the sakura syrup and pink food coloring.
- Keep adding until you reach your desired color.
- Line a baking tray with parchment paper and pour the mixture in.
- The photo shows the tray lined with plastic wrap, but this breaks easily so I recommend using parchment paper.
- Leave to cool in the refrigerator for about 10 minutes.
- Once it has reached the consistency where you are able to gather it together with a spoon, scoop it out into 12 parts.
- Line up and cool again for 10 minutes.
- Once they have become firm, quickly round them into balls with your hands and line them up on a piece of parchment paper.
- Leave to cool once again for 10 minutes.
- While they are cooling, melt the chocolate used for the coating over a bowl suspended over hot water.
- Add the freeze dried sakura blossoms and mix.
- Once the balls in Step 6 have become firm, add each ball to the mixture in Step 7 and cover them with the chocolate with a spoon.
- Remove the balls with a fork and remove the excess chocolate back into the bowl.
- Softly place them onto parchment paper.
- If the temperature of the chocolate is too high, the ganache will quickly melt, so watch out!
- Do it as fast as you can!
- Leave them to cool once again.
- Add the pink food coloring to the remaining chocolate and insert into a piping bag.
- Pipe onto the chocolates.
- Once they are cooled and firm you're finished!
- Inside is the soft, cute, pink ganache.
- The flavor of the sakura is great.
- You can make a substitute for the freeze dried sakura blossoms.
- Soak salted pickled sakura blossoms in water to remove the salt.
- Then remove the moisture with a paper towel.
- Heat them in a microwave to dry them out and break the petals in to very small pieces.
white chocolate, heavy cream, leaf, syrup, coloring, white chocolate, blossoms, coloring
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/149265-sakura-truffle-chocolates (may not work)