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Fructose free chocolate recipe

I first posted this recipe in April. This page contains the updated recipe based based on my further experimenting.  Changes/updates are highlighted in red. Enjoy :)


Fructose-free chocolate
80 grams cacao butter (aka cocoa butter), chopped finely (we sourced ours from the health food store
40 grams chopped/grated 100% cacao
3 Tablespoons dextrose syrup (see below
Small pinch of salt (note: original recipe had salt crystals but I found these did not break down and I got a whole crystal in a chocolate) 
1 tsp lecithin granules soaked in 1 Tbs boiling water (health food store had these but we also saw them at the supermarket health food section)- optional. Please see below for more about lecithin
Dextrose syrup:
Stir 100g boiling water and 230g dextrose in a saucepan on the stove until the dextrose is dissolved completely. It should go from being a white liquid to a crystal clear one (see pics). You could halve this recipe as you don’t need much (I used 3 tablespoons) but it seemed easier to do all the stirring in this quantity than a smaller one.
When dextrose is dissolved and syrup is clear, take off the heat and place to one side.



Note: Dextrose is glucose, but I have not been able to make this work using store-bought glucose syrup, which is very thick and just clumps at the bottom of the pan. Feel free to experiment with different sweeteners if you choose (e.g., rice malt syrup might work??) but I've only used the dextrose syrup above and it works great.
To make the chocolate:
Place at least 2cm of water in a pot and put a bowl on the top to make a bain-marie. Don’t let the bowl touch the water.  Heat the pot until the water boils, then remove from the heat.
Add cacao butter to the bowl.Stir until melted. It melts pretty quickly into a clear but yellowish oily liquid
I'm melting...
Add salt (optional)
Add 3 tablespoons of the dextrose syrup. You can add more if you wish- depends on how sweet you want it to be. (For those who've been off sugar for a while, even 3 tablespoons may make it too sweet. You can add less if you want to)
Add 2 teaspoons of the watery-lecithiny mixture (see pic of what our lecithin mixture looked like- ours was not fully dissolved in the hot water but the lecithin granules were soft and pretty quickly broke down further in the chocolate mixture). 

Lecithin is an emulsifier, and we wanted it to help the syrup and cacao butter to mix better- which on our observation it seemed to. The original recipe did not have this step at all, so you could leave it out if you prefer, but I’ve left it in because we think that it helped the texture of our chocs. Note: I've since made this chocolate without the lecithin and it still seems to work- perhaps because of the small amount of syrup which is added. In a few chocolates, the dextrose syrup seemed to 'bunch up' once the chocolate solidified, meaning that one part of the chocolate was sweeter than the rest- but this is not a big deal once you put the whole piece in your mouth... point is, if you don't have lecithin, or you can't use it (because of a soy allergy or intolerance) you can probably still try the recipe without this step.  
Add half of the 100% cacao, stir until it melts into the mixture, and then add the second half and do the same.
Ours had a bit of a foamy look on the surface as you can see. I think on reflection this was the lecithin and perhaps I should have left it to dissolve further. However, it didn’t affect the texture (which was entirely smooth) or taste of the final chocs.
The liquid at this point was very thin, much thinner than I was expecting to be honest.  
Pour into molds or ice trays.
Ours made 36 chocs- 16 in the heart mold and 16 in the ice cube  tray. 
Put in the freezer or fridge to set. Ours went in the fridge and by about ½ hour they were set enough to pop out of the mold and eat. Here they are again.
My babies. I'm so proud.


As it doesn't have any cream or milk, it obviously makes a pretty dark chocolate which we estimate tastes about the same as 80% dark chocolate. Mum pronounced it ‘as good as Lindt’. The texture is chocolate heaven- it melts so deliciously in the mouth. When I do it again, I’ll experiment with adding some chopped hazelnuts or similar to the chocolate in the last step. Yum!
I guess the only other thing worth posting is the cost. The cacao 100% bar was $20 and we used 40g so $4.44 worth. The cacao butter was $19 for 250g and we used 80g, so $6.08 worth.  So the main ingredients cost $10.52 for 36 chocs.  Up to you whether you think it is worth it- I loved doing it and will enjoy experimenting with different versions.
Note: I initially bought my 100% cacao from Jones the Grocer. However, you can order Willie's 100% cacao from this site individually, or as a gift pack of several blocks which is often cheaper. I just looked up the prices and I could order a pack of 6 of the 100% cacao blocks, and with shipping to Australia it would cost just over $80 AUD ($13.33 per block). A single block plus shipping would be about $16.70 which is cheaper than buying through Jones the Grocers ($20 per block). Hurray for the exchange rate, and thanks to Janet on the Sweet Poison forum for this tip.
If you give this recipe a go and have suggestions/additions/modifications or just comments, please add them below :)

18 comments:

  1. Lizzie gave this a go the other day. She just used (two tablespoons of) cocoa powder -instead of the block cocoa (from the health food store - but we suspect the supermarket stuff would work just as well) and it worked brilliantly. It made a delicious fine dark chocolate - the kids loved it (but they are sugar free - addicted kids might find it bitter).

    Lizzie also tried switching milk powder for one of the cocoa powder spoonsful. The result was a nice milk chocolate (but a little grainy - so that might need some work).

    Great recipe Jemma!

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  2. Finally had a go at this recipe & have to tell you that we love it. Have tweaked it a little bit & substituted cocoa powder for the block cacao like Lizzie did & also added 1tablespoon milk powder. I actually blended mine with a Breville whizz stick to blend the lecithin totally. I have tried many different recipes for chocolate with varying degrees of success & this would have to have been the simplest & dare I say the best recipe I have come across. Thanks Jemma this will be a favourite in our household for an occasional treat.
    I am also putting the rest of my dextrose syrup in an airtight container in the fridge in case I can use the rest in another batch - not sure if it will keep but will soon find out.

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  3. I'm so glad to hear the cocoa powder works as well as the (much more expensive!) solid cacao.

    Thanks for mentioning about refrigerating the detrose syrup, Ann- it will return to a solid form (like a stuck-together powder) in the fridge- but when heated turns back to the liquid and can be re-used. This means making a second batch is even simpler. I have no idea how long it would keep for if you were not planning to re-use straight away. I think I would keep for a week max (in an airtight container in the fridge) to be on the safe side. Hope it turned out well for you the second time!

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  4. On the journey to being fructose free and chocolate like many people would be the most terrifying to get rid of. Will try this! thanks for the recipe :)

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  5. So glad to have found this! Will give it a go when I get ingredients.

    Any luck now with making a slightly milkier chocolate? I love dark chocolate, but 80% cocoa is usually a little too dark for my tastes.

    I might try using this chocolate recipe to make truffles by melting it into heated cream, setting it in the fridge, scooping into balls and then coating it in more melted chocolate from this recipe. I wonder if adding a tablespoon or two of liqueur to the truffle mixture would be way to much fructose to justify?!

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  6. I just finished making these with my daughter for Easter, so far they've turned out really well, thanks so much for the recipe. I tried making some with Stevia last night (instead of the dextrose syrup) and they tasted quite bad, had to throw the whole batch. I wish I'd tried these first.

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  7. Thank you for the recipe! It's delicious (though, as you say, a bit sweet for non-sugar eater). Really appreciate you sharing it :)

    - Bron

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  8. I have made this recipe a number of times now. I don't bother with the lecithin, and I have used cream in it to make it milkier. All done by guesswork, and it's rather nice. Good to use if making dessert recipes that call for chocolate in them. And keeps for ages in the fridge.

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  9. hi Jemma, i have tried this twice now and my chocs will not set they have a mousse like texture even after being in the freezer overnight. what am i doing wrong?
    thanks,
    Nikki

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  10. How frustrating, Nikki. I'm not sure what's going wrong if you are following the recipe above- are you also adding anything e.g milk powder? That might change the texture and as David found it makes it grainier so perhaps this is the problem.

    It is the cocoa butter that makes them set hard. This is solid at room temperature- so they should definitely set if you are using this in the ratios above. The other thing could be if you are adding more of the dextrose syrup than above, perhaps again changing the texture?

    Otherwise all I can suggest is that you have a bad batch of cocoa butter or something. Sorry I can't be of more help! Let us know if you figure it out....

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  11. I truly like to reading your post. Thank you so much for taking the time to share such a nice information.
    amberlyn chocolate store

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  12. Hi Jemma, I must have done something wrong as the dextrose syrup seperated in the bottom of the moulds and was left behind when I turned the chocolates out. Any suggestions where I went wrong?
    Melissa

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  13. Yes, I have the same problem. It doesn't set.Porblem is the water,
    Just add the dextrose powder and coco powder and milk powder all together.
    THEN add to the already melted coco butter. Then it works fine. Lecethin aswell to help emulsify.

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  14. Yum ... can't wait to try! ... still in withdrawal, so I'll have to wait a bit longer :)

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  15. When do you know when the withdrawl bit has finished? I want to try this. also anyone know where to get the solid Cocoa in uk?

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  16. Hi Jemma - did you have any luck making a milkier version of this recipe? My first batch was great (although the glucose syrup caused some inconsistency, as you alluded to), but my second batch was a monstrosity as I tried to throw milk into the mix!!

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  17. Hi! I'm a US'er. Can you translate what 40 grams and 80 grams is in cups, please? I'm anxious to try this

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    1. I guessed 2 tablespoons each of cocoa butter and 100% cocoa (I used ground cacao nibs though I could use powder), and then for the 3 tablespoons dextrose syrup I used brown rice syrup. The flavor was ok but the frozen "ice cubes" were gooey. Are these about the correct proportions? I have no idea what grams are for cooking.

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