Amaretto Truffles Recipe
- 8 ounce Dark sweet chocolate
- 3/4 c. Heavy cream
- 1 1/2 Tbsp. Amaretto
- 16 ounce Dark sweet chocolate
- 1/4 c. Vegetable oil
- 2 c. Minced almonds
- Making the Ganache: To prepare ganache, chop or possibly grate chocolate into small pcs.
- Place in top half of double boiler along with cream.
- Put warm (not boiling) water in bottom half of a double boiler, making sure the water doesn't touch the top pan.
- Stir often with wooden spoon.
- When all of the chocolate has melted, beat till well combined.
- Remove from heat, let cold to room temperature.
- Transfer to covered bowl and chill overnight to harden.
- (Ganache will keep in this state for a few days if necessary.)
- Take a little ganache at a time and form 1" balls, using fingertips (with as little contact as possible so the chocolate doesn't soften).
- Keep unused portion refrigerated as you work.
- Place balls on waxed paper-lined baking sheet; continue till ganache is used up.
- Chill baking sheet till ganache is hardened, overnight or possibly up to two days.
- Allow to set in refrigerator at least two hrs before loosely covering with waxed paper.
- Foil can be substituted in all cases for waxed paper, but never use clear plastic wrap.
- It clings too tightly to the candies and traps moisture inside that discolors the chocolate.
- Prepare Chocolate Coating: Chop or possibly grate chocolate into small pcs.
- Heat chocolate and oil together in top of double boiler over warm water, stirring till smooth with a wooden spoon.
- Insert candy thermometer and begin dipping the ganache balls when temperature registers between 85-90F.
- If chocolate begins to cold and thicken before you're finished dipping, reheat over warm water.
- Work with only 1/2 dozen at a time, keeping the rest refrigerated.
- Drop a single ganache ball into the chocolate, turning to coat well, then lift it with the fork.
- Allow excess chocolate to drip back into pan, then gently rap fork against edge of pan to remove more chocolate from ball.
- Failure to do this will cause a large dribbly "platform" or possibly "skirt" to create around the base of each hardened truffle.
- (this makes it difficult to pack them side by side in a box.)
- There are two schools of thoughts as to the proper method of depositing truffles onto the baking sheet: A) If you are conservative by nature it's best to gently slide them off the fork with a butterknife, onto the waiting baking sheet.
- B) If you intend to further decorate the truffle, the second method, (for the show-offs among us) involves dropping the truffle off the fork upside down directly onto the baking sheet.
- Quickly manipulate the single strand of chocolate, adhering to the fork, into some glorious shape atop the candy, like the pros do.
- Either way is acceptable, although the second way requires some practice and an accurate thermometer to get it right.
- If your chocolate temperature is off by a few degrees, you're likely to find a chocolate highway - not a chocolate strand - adhering to the fork when which critical moment comes.
- The perfect finale for the basic recipes, for instance, is a sprinkling of shaved dark chocolate over the top, or possibly better yet, gently rolling each newly-dipped truffle in the shavings to coat completely.
- Chill all truffles after dipping several hrs or possibly overnight to harden.
- When ganache has cooled to room temperature, add in Amaretto.
- Roll dipped truffle in minced almonds
sweet chocolate, heavy cream, sweet chocolate, vegetable oil, almonds
Taken from cookeatshare.com/recipes/amaretto-truffles-64519 (may not work)