Tried Swiss raclette cheese for the first time. An expensive experiment that didn't pay off. I layered it with potatoes, but the finished product had absolutely no taste.

Tried sous vide methodology to temper chocolate. Method worked beautifully, but my use of the tempered chocolate was a failure. I wante d to keep the tempered dark chocolate at 87 degrees, which meant keeping it in the sous vide water bath. But I was trying to dip long pretzel rods and the vacuum bag I had melted the chocolate in had to be kept clamped to the top of the container, out of the water. So some of the pretzel met 89 degree chocolate at the bottom of the bag...but had to pass through 84 degree chocolate at the top >> not a smooth coating. Still tasted good though.
Then I tried tempering by seeding the chocolate. That worked as well and I recoated the pretzel rods. I decided to see if seeding would make a difference with generic coating chocolate discs. I've had a lot of issues with that type of chocolate cooling down too quickly, so I took milk chocolate discs, melted them, then seeded with a chopped 4 oz bar of organic 100% unsweetened chocolate...the real stuff, not the baking stuff. Using my Thermapen, I stirred constantly (this helps the crystallization process) and checked until it reached 87 degrees, then dipped 47 short pretzel rods...all with a very smooth coating. I would do this again in a heartbeat, plus the chocolate tasted so much better. It does not have the sheen of pure tempered chocolate, but it's good enough for bulk neighborhood gifts.

Cheddar pie crust for an apple pie from The Book of Pie. Wow...this was...good. In fact, I would make it again just to cut out cookies/cracker out of it. I sprinkled raw sugar on top, so it ended up a savory/sweet thing...something I usually despise, but this may have converted me. The sugar darkened too much with an hour-long bake so would need to watch closer next time and cover if necessary.


Tried sous vide methodology to temper chocolate. Method worked beautifully, but my use of the tempered chocolate was a failure. I wante d to keep the tempered dark chocolate at 87 degrees, which meant keeping it in the sous vide water bath. But I was trying to dip long pretzel rods and the vacuum bag I had melted the chocolate in had to be kept clamped to the top of the container, out of the water. So some of the pretzel met 89 degree chocolate at the bottom of the bag...but had to pass through 84 degree chocolate at the top >> not a smooth coating. Still tasted good though.
Then I tried tempering by seeding the chocolate. That worked as well and I recoated the pretzel rods. I decided to see if seeding would make a difference with generic coating chocolate discs. I've had a lot of issues with that type of chocolate cooling down too quickly, so I took milk chocolate discs, melted them, then seeded with a chopped 4 oz bar of organic 100% unsweetened chocolate...the real stuff, not the baking stuff. Using my Thermapen, I stirred constantly (this helps the crystallization process) and checked until it reached 87 degrees, then dipped 47 short pretzel rods...all with a very smooth coating. I would do this again in a heartbeat, plus the chocolate tasted so much better. It does not have the sheen of pure tempered chocolate, but it's good enough for bulk neighborhood gifts.

Cheddar pie crust for an apple pie from The Book of Pie. Wow...this was...good. In fact, I would make it again just to cut out cookies/cracker out of it. I sprinkled raw sugar on top, so it ended up a savory/sweet thing...something I usually despise, but this may have converted me. The sugar darkened too much with an hour-long bake so would need to watch closer next time and cover if necessary.

Last edited:


