I was making peppermint bark last weekend, a treat this very website has described as “incredibly easy,” and I messed it up. I had poured a layer of perfectly-tempered dark chocolate onto a parchment-coated sheet pan, and then I mixed peppermint oil into my white chocolate. Just as I was about to pour the white chocolate onto the dark, I noticed something: liquid.
When water gets into chocolate, the chocolate will never be the same. (And yes, for our purposes here, white chocolate counts as chocolate.) I stirred the mixture, hoping that my eyes were deceiving me, but it seized up. Instead of glossy, melty goodness, the white chocolate was the texture of cookie dough. Its dreams of becoming peppermint bark were over.
Seized chocolate will never pour or harden properly, but it still tastes amazing. So I plopped the stuff into a mixing bowl and added a little bit of heavy cream. (For 20 ounces of chocolate, I eyeballed about a quarter cup of cream.) This makes a ganache, the creamy-textured stuff that makes a great filling for truffles. Jazz it up with add-ins, if you like: I mixed in some of the candy cane bits that were supposed to go on the peppermint bark.
Refrigerate the mixture to help it firm up, then scoop the mixture into little balls. You can finish the truffles by dusting them in crushed candy canes, ground-up nuts, or cocoa powder. Or, if you’re brave, temper another batch of chocolate and dip them in it to coat. Better luck this time!
This article was written by Beth Skwarecki on Vitals and shared by Beth Skwarecki to Lifehacker from Lifehacker and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.