Bittersweet chocolate.....?

Are there any cooks on here who would kindly explain what Bittersweet chocolate is please? Many Thanks!

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Re: Bittersweet chocolate.....?

I've googled and got this from Nigella's site

From the nigella team:

Dark or plain chocolate is chocolate made with cocoa solids, sugar and cocoa butter (or vegetable oils in cheaper chocolates). The quality of the chocolate is judged by the percentage of cocoa solids in the chocolate - the higher the better. Under the UK and Australian terms of "plain" or "dark" chocolate the proportion of cocoa solids varies quite a lot, though generally the minimum is 35% cocoa solids. In the US dark chocolate is usually divided into 2 categories - semisweet and bitterswet. Bittersweet has a higher proportion of cocoa solids (and hence a lower proportion of sugar) than semisweet so it tastes slightly more bitter.

Nigella, and may other cooks, prefers to cook with chocolate with a high proportion of cocoa solids as this chocolate tends to have a deeper flavour. Conveniently many of the better quality chocolates now have the percentage of cocoa solids printed on the packging (if it is not on the front of the packaging then look in the ingredients list). We would suggest looking for a dark/plain or bittersweet chocolate with a minimum of 62% cocoa solids and preferably with 70% cocoa solids. 

It is possible to buy chocolates with higher percentage of cocoa solids (anything up to 99%), these are often labelled as "unsweetened" or "baking" chocolate. However we would avoid these for Nigella's recipes as they are quite bitter and could leave the finished dish tasting too bitter.

 

and this from another site

 


Bitter chocolate has a high proportion of cocoa solids (70-80%) and is quite bitter because it contains little sugar. So either enjoy it for this intense bitter taste or team it with something quite sweet.

Bitter-sweet chocolate contains 60-70% cocoa solids and has a good balance of flavour between sweet and bitter. This is a good all-rounder for most recipes.

 

Hope this is helpful. Looks like you'd need a good quality plain chocolate for cooking.

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Re: Bittersweet chocolate.....?

Thankyou Brynteg, that explaination is great!!

Take care

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Re: Bittersweet chocolate.....?

WILLY WONKA WHERE ARE YOU??????????.

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