Like many women, I love chocolate, and chocolate truffles hold a special place in my heart. The bitter taste of cocoa powder on my tongue turns sweet as I bite through the rich chocolate center. Only special occasions deserve such special desserts.
When I was little, living in the Soviet Union, I remember both my mother and my grandmother hiding chocolates. They did not hide them from me. Rather they saved these difficult-to-obtain chocolate covered wafers to serve them to guests.
While there is no shortage of chocolates in the United States, I still save the particularly fancy desserts for a special occasion. Several years ago, when someone gave me a box of chocolate truffles, I put it away. I wanted to treasure it until a particular gathering warranted such a fancy dessert. Unfortunately, no occasion seemed important enough, and nearly a year later the treasured truffles still lingered in the back of my pantry.
It is indecent to serve a year old dessert to anyone, let alone special guests. So one night when other chocolate supplies have dwindled in our house, I opened the box on my own. Instead of pretty balls of chocolate ganache covered with cocoa powder, thick brown liquid spilled out of the box. I almost threw this chocolate mess away, but I could not bare to part with it. Instead, I indulged in liquid chocolate truffles for the next several months—one spoonful a night.
Eating chocolate truffles with a spoon is not something people imagine often, and even Nick found it a bit odd. So next time someone presented me with a box of truffles I was determined to use it while the truffles were still in a solid state.
Alas, it was not meant to be. A few days ago, I opened the box only seven months after receiving the gift, and it revealed the familiar sweetly bitter thick chocolate liquid. So I am back to eating my liquid chocolate truffles every night, this time out of a glass jar—still one spoonful at a time.
Helen! Every expensive chocolate shop I've ever visited has insisted that for maximim flavor and texture, you have to eat truffles within a few days of buying them, because there are no preservatives in "fancy" chocolates. [Even controlling for the shop's self interest in having you eat up your chocolates quickly, I could see how this claim is true.]
ReplyDeletedon't forget the cafe fleuri chocolate buffet starts again next month! ;)
ReplyDeleteI will take the freshness issue into account next time I am faced with a new box of truffles. These were a box of Truffettes de France, sold in Trader Joes and many larger supermarkets as well. Ingredients are: partially hydrogenated copra oil, sugar, low fat cooa, whey powder, coca powder, emulsifier: soya lecitin, natural flavor vanilla. I bet the variety of ingredients might be lower in truffles from a fancy chocolate shop. No?
ReplyDeleteThe refrigerator might help with this issue...
ReplyDeleteI think the problem with storing chocolate in the fridge is that chocolate absorbs the smells and flavors around it. Maybe you could store it in a totally empty fridge?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, eating your fresh chocolate truffles right away is a "rule" I'm always happy to follow, so I guess that's why I've never questioned it too much. : )
Truffettes de France in Trader Joe's? Could you please tell me the store's location? Truffettes de France is sooo good, but i've only found them online sofar.
ReplyDelete