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How to Make Native Chocolate "Tabliya"

Expert Author Marvin Vicedo

Tabliya came from the word "tablets" because the product shape resembles a medicine tablet. However, other product shapes exist. It is the old fashioned chocolate. Chocolate in its pure form without any added preservatives.

I am making a decent income from it even there are lots of modern chocolate competitors. Most of my customers are health conscious individuals. Read the following steps to make your own native chocolate.

1. Select good quality cacao beans. It should be dry and posses a sour smell. Sour smelling cacao beans are properly fermented. Fermentation adds flavors to your finish product.

2. In case you own a cacao plantation. Harvest matured cacao pods. Matured pods have a knocking sounds when shaken. Cut pods into halves. Place the seeds or beans in hard plastic bin and cover loosely. Let stand for seven days for fermentation to commence. Wash the seeds and let dry under the sun. Well dried cacao beans produce crispy sounds when stirred.

3. Roast beans in carajay under low flame. High flame will result in burnt beans. Continual stirring should be done to achieve even roast. Roast for one hour or until the rapid popping sound is heard. Transfer immediately into wooden trays. Cool immediately by stirring and placing in front of electric fan.

4. Loosen the plate of your grinder. It should be loose enough just to break cacao beans in large pieces. Our goal is to separate nibs from shell in next step. Nib is cacao bean without the shell or chaff. Now pass roasted cacao into grinder.

5. Winnow broken beans to remove the chaffs. Winnowing can easily be done by transferring beans from one container to another in front of electric fan. Air current will blow chaffs away leaving only the nibs. Repeat the process if necessary.

6. Grind the nibs in electric grinder. Grinding will produce heat and liquefy the nibs. Metal grinder plate will do but stone grinder will produce finer product. Roasted peanut is added in this stage if desired.

7. Let liquefied cacao cool until you can easily make a small ball by hand. Mold tabliya using polvoron molder or mold into balls by hand. Mix sugar for sweet tabliya.

Tabliya can replace modern chocolate in most recipes. Champorado and hot chocolate are my favorite recipes.

Marvin Vicedo is a licensed Agriculturist major in Food Processing and an experienced Researcher. He is the author of foodrecap.net.

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