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  • Some aspects of Chocolate and Confectionery Technology

    Jana opkov

    Erasmus, 11.3.2013

  • Content

    1) World production of cocoa beans, production and consumption of chocolate including cocoa powder 2) Technology of chocolate, cocoa powder and compounds - Flow chart a,b) 3) Sugar confectionery

    http://www.icco.org/ http://www.caobisco.com

  • Producer Total sale 2012 (USD mil)

    Mars Inc (USA) 16 800 Mondelz International Inc (USA) 15 480 Barcel SA, divison of Grupo Bimbo (Mexico) 14 095* Nestl SA (Switzerland) 12 808 Meji Co Ltd (Japan) 12 428* Hershey Foods Corp (USA) 6 480 Ferrero Group (Italy) 5 627 Chocolatefabriken Lindt&Sprngli AG (Switzerland) 2 791 August Storck KG (Germany) 2 272 Yildiz Holding (Turkey) 2 200

    The Worlds Great Chocolate and Confectionery Producers in 2012

    Candy Industry, leden 2013

  • Chocolate and chocolate confectionery

    Theobroma cacao, rain forest tree, 10 of north latitude and 10 of south latitude

    Production of coca beans

  • 02

    4

    6

    8

    10

    12

    Switz

    erlan

    d

    Norw

    ay

    Belgi

    um

    Germ

    anyIrla

    nd GB

    Austr

    ia

    Denm

    ark

    Finlan

    d

    EU 15

    coun

    tries US

    A

    Czec

    h Rep

    ublic

    Fran

    ce

    Austr

    alia

    The N

    etherl

    and

    Swee

    den

    Cana

    da Italy

    Gree

    ce

    Portu

    gal

    Japo

    nySp

    ainBr

    azil

    5,1

    2,0

    10,2

    Grinding of cocoa beans

    Consumption of chocolate a chocolate confectionery

  • Production and export of cocoa beans

  • Fermentation of cocoa beans

    1. Anaerobic processes - ethanolic fermentation

    2. Aerobic processes lactic fermentation

    acetic fermentation

    Colour and flavour of cocoa beans

    Drying of fermented cocoa beans colour, flavour

    Sunshine, dryers

  • Composition of chocolate, viscosity and yield

    Chocolate

    CA

    CAo

    Content (%)

    (Pas)

    (Pa)

    fat

    sucrose

    lactose

    moisture

    bitter

    max.

    3,0

    5,0

    35

    49

    -

    1,5

    min.

    31

    42

    -

    1,1 milk

    max.

    38

    55

    14

    2,4

    min.

    1,0

    1,0

    28

    36

    7

    0,7

  • Legislation of chocolate and applying of the cocoa butter equivalent

    EU Directive 2000/36/EC 23th June 2001 - The applying of non-cocoa vegetable fats was allowed, 5% of total content.

    EC Directive defining the composition of chocolate and chocolate products

  • Chocolate and Nutrition

    NH2

    O

    O N

    NH N

    N

    O

    O N

    N N

    N

    Theobromine Caffeine

    2 Fenylethylamine (max 0,6 mg/100 g)

    Anandamide (N-arachidonoylethanolamide)

    Magnesium, Mg (600 mg/100 g)

    Epicachetine Procyanidine B2

    Anthocyan

    Fat Sugars Proteins Energy value MethylxantinsFlavanols and procyanidins

    ORAC

    kJ/100 g *Chocolate 33 45 6 2454 500 170 13,1Red wine 220 22 0,7Coffee 1200Bread 1130

    * mmol Trolox equivalents/100 g

    g/100 g mg/100 g

  • Cocoa liquor

    Shell, sprouts)

    alkalisation

    Cocoa powder

    Nibs of cotyledons

    Fermented cocoa beans

    Milling

    Nibs roasting

    Grinding

    Winnowing

    Flow sheet of cocoa liquor and cocoa powder

    Cocoa powder: 10-12 % cocoa butter, 20- 24 % cocoa butter

    Pretreatment Cocoa butter

    Stabilization

    Cooling

    Pressed cake

    Cocoa liquor

    Pulverizing

    Packaging

    Pressing

    Grinding

  • Flow sheet of bitter chocolate

    Chocolate

    Cocoa butter, CB equivalents

    Chocolate mass

    Cocoa liquor + Cocoa butter + Sucrose

    Forming, moulding

    Tempering

    Refining

    Conching

    Mixing

    Cooling

    Demoulding

    Package

  • http://www.gw-barth.de

    Pretreatment-Micronizing

    Infrared treatment plant IR 4000

    Heat transfer -radiation

  • Crushing of cocoa beans and separating of pulp, hulls and germs

    Grinding + winnowing

    Winnowing Plant 90 (Petzholdt Heidenauer) Winnower - Types: HEA 150 / HEA 200

  • 1, 2- imput of cocoa beans or cocoa nib, 3- preheating zone of cocoa beans or cocoa nib, 4- roasting zone of cocoa beans, 5- cooling zone of cocoa beans or cocoa nib, 6- output of cocoa product, 7- filter of air, 8- heat exchanger, 9 cyclon; temperature of product inside 105 C http://www.fblehmann.de/

    Roasting of nib and (cocoa beans)

    Heat transfer -convection -conduction

    Probat Neptun http://probatburns.com

  • Milling

    Stone mill (Fryma-Maschinen AG) www.fblehmann.de http://66.113.204.26/mining/ballmill.htm

    Mixing of chocolate mass

    Static mixer

    Ball mill

  • Refining

    Refining of mass and change from plastic to pulverous state,rolles are cooled at 30-45 C, speed is increasing up, result - 20 m particles

    Roll mills

    Chocolate Refiner-Buhler SFL 1300

    Carle-Montanari

  • Conche Carle-Montanari

    Milk chocolate: 24 h, 45-60 C

    Bitter chocolate: 48 h, 55-85 C

    Phases: dry conching (6-12 h)

    liquid conching (10 h) + CB or CBE

    homogenization + emulsiphier

    Results:

    Complete homogenization

    Reducing of viscosity

    Reducing of content of low volatile organic acids and water

    Creation of typical chocolate aroma

    Conching of chocolate

    http://www.carle-montanari.it/

    Clover 30-60

  • Temper machine Turbotemper TCB 1- zone of melting of coca butter crystals, 2 cooling zone, 3 crystallization of cocoa butter, 4 zone of temperature 31 C, melting of unstabile crystals of cocoa butter

    http://www.sollich.com/

    Tempering: Crystallization of cocoa butter (nucleation) in chocolate

    http://www.aasted.eu/

  • Sources of cocoa butter equivalents: shea, ilip, mango kernel, kokum gurmi

    http://www.cargillcocoachocolate.com/index.shtml

  • Crystal form Nomeclature (Loisel a kol.

    1998)

    Crystal form (Dimick 1991)

    Melting poit (C) (Kattenberg 2001)

    Latent enthalpy of heating(kJ/g)

    (Kattenberg 2001)

    I 3 (sub )() 13,1 II -2 hexagonal 17,7 86 III 2-2 ortorombic 22,4 113 IV 1-2 26,4 118 V 2-3 triklinic 30,7 137 VI 1-3 33,8 148

    Cocoa butter

  • Butyrospermum parkii Equatorial Africa, shea,

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butyrospermum_parkii

    Mali, Cameroon, Congo, Cte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Togo, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, Burkina Faso and Uganda.

  • Madhuca longifolia illip, India

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahua

    Indie : Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Kerala, Gujarat and Orissa

  • Moulding, forming, enrobing

    http://www.aasted.eu/

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRCrUg64BLI

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqGKp6C27Wc

  • Heat transfer via radiation, product leaves the cooling tunnel under the dew point.

    Cooling

    Remoulding and package

  • Cocoa liquor

    Pressing

    Grinding

    Pulverizing

    Pressed cake

    Cooling

    Stabilization

    Packaging

    Cocoa powder

    Cocoa powder flow sheet

  • Cocoa powder

  • Flow sheet of compounds Cocoa powder, Sucrose, Cocoa butter replacers or substitudes

    Forming, moulding

    Milling

    Mixing

    Cooling

    Demoulding

    Package

    Compound

  • http://www.loynds.com

    http://www.macintyre.co.uk

    Compounds - Milling

    Ball-mill

    Impact mill

  • Analysis of chocolate

    1. Rheology: Determination of viscosity and yield stress

    2. Determination of particles size

    3. Determination of fat

    4. Determination of carbohydrates

    5. Special analysis: metals, mycotoxins, pollutants

  • Cocoa butter equivalent - Non-cocoa vegetable fat, type equivalent, has the same composition like CB, non lauric. Equivalent CB (CBe) is produced only by process of rafinement and/or fractionation of raw material as illepe, shea, palm oil, sal, kokum gurki and mango kernels fat. CBe is fully miscible or nearly fully miscible with cocoa butter. Chocolate mass needs tempering. Cocoa butter replacer (CBr) or cocoa butter substitute CBs - The types of non-cocoa vegetable fats are miscible with cocoa butter with some limitation. They are produced from different type of raw materials (rape seed, soya, lauric fats). Chemical processing, hydrogenation and interesterification, is allowed. CBs contains lauric acid. Mass does not need tempering.

    H 2 C

    H C

    S or P

    O or L

    H 2 C S or P

    http://www.aak.com/?aak=home

    http://www.springerlink.com/content/34550k31r5356712/fulltext.pdf, Eur Food Res Technol (2006) 222: 385391, Aleksandra Torbica Olga Jovanovic Biljana Pajin

  • Pseudo-phase diagrams of mixture of two substances: Cocoa butter and Equivalent Cocoa butter and Replacer

    con

    tent

    of c

    ryst

    als

    (%)

    cont

    ent o

    f cry

    stal

    s (%

    ) EquivalentCocoa butter

    ReplacerCocoa butter

  • 1. Rheology: Determination of viscosity CA and yield stress 0CA

    Casson viscosity CA shear stress mass flows contiously Casson yield stress 0CA shear stress mass starts to flow

    Newton liquids linear relationship between shear stress and viscosity:

    Nenewton liquids linear relationship according to Casson equation :

    0CA = 10 - 200 Pa CA = 1 - 20 Pas http://www.malvern.com

    Chocolate Rotational Rheometer

    Shear stress

    dydv =

    dydv.0 =

  • 2. Determination of particle size/ Stanoven velikosti stic

    Particle size in chocolate 20-25 m

    a) Micrometer

    b) Laser Diffraction Particle Size : The technique of laser diffraction -particles passing through a laser beam will scatter light at an angle that is related to their size

    http://www.malvern.com

  • 3. Determination of total fat content in chocolate and other cocoa derivatives

    a) Soxhlet extraction organic solvents, time consuming

    b) Low resolution Nuclear magnetic Resonance (NMR), measurements

    of protons in liquid phase, 50 C

    http://www.oxford-instruments.com

    MQC

    http://www.cyberlipid.org/extract/extr0010.htm

  • 4. Determination of carbohydrates by HPLC

    http://www.home.agilent.com/

  • 2500 2000 1500 1000 500

    0,0

    0,2

    0,4

    0,6

    0,8

    1,0

    1,2

    Abso

    rban

    ce

    Wave number (cm-1)

    Determination of all components

    Near infrared spectroscopy calibration models

    Near infrared spectra of cocoa powder

  • Sugar confectionery

    11.3.2013

    Amorphous sugars hard candies, jellies, caramels (toffee) Crystallised sugars - fondant, lozenges, nougat, marzipan, caramels (fudge)

  • Flow chart of hard candies technology sucrose + water

    dissolving

    glucose syrup

    acids, colours, flavour

    wrapping

    mixing

    evaporation

    cooling

    dyeing and flavours

    forming

    sucrose, water, glucose syrup

    mixing

    evaporation

    cooling

    wrapping

    dissolving

    moulding

    demoulding

    dyeing and flavours

  • Flow chart of fondant technology sucrose, water, glucose syrup

    mixing

    evaporation

    crystalization of sucrose

    wrapping

    dissolving

    moulding into starch

    demoulding

    whipping

  • The role of gucose syrup in hard candies -Increasing the viscosity -Inhibition of sucrose crystalization hard candies are in the glassy state -Bulking agent -Releasing the flavour

    The role of gucose syrup in fondant - Bulking agent

  • Hard candies and fondant

    Hard candies Mass ratio of glucose syrup and sucrose 50-60 kg : 100 kg Water activity 0.3, i.e. hard cadies are hygroscopic The content of dry matter 98 %

    Fondant Mass ratio of glucose syrup and sucrose 15-25 kg : 100 kg Water activity 0.7-0.75, i.e. fondant has tendency to be dried The content of dry matter 80 %

    Glucose syrup has dry matter 80 %

  • Hard candies Glassy state amorphous sugars

    Crystals in amorphous mass

  • Components in formulation of hard candies

    Sucrose, glucose or maltose syrups Isomalt Isomalt a maltitol syrup Glucitol Glucitol a maltitol syrup Maltitol Maltitol and maltitol syrup Lactitol Lactitol a maltitol syrup Content of sugars in formulation

  • Dissolution of components and evaporation

    Heat transfer - convection (jet cooker), - conduction (tube heat-exchanger and batch

    cooker), - radiation.

  • Solubility and boiling point of sucrose solutions

    1 solubility of sucrose, 2 boiling point of sucrose solutions

  • Trends of the boiling point as the mass fraction of components

    100110120130140150160170180190200210220

    60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105

    hmotnostn zlomek x (%)

    b.v.

    (C

    ) 36 D.E.64 D.E.43 D.E.SacharosaS

    Mass fraction x (%)

    Sucrose

    Vacuum

  • http://www.bepexhosokawa.com/02confectionery/profile/profile.htm

    Batch evaporator

    Heat transfer -conduction

  • Moulding of confectionery mass

  • Forming of hard candies

  • Crystallization of fondant

    http://nca.files.cmsplus.com/ResidentCourse/Week2/ResCourseWk2CH3AFondant&Cream.pdf

  • Moulding in starch

    http://nid.com.au

  • Arabic gum Starch Gelatine Agar Pectin

    Content (%) 35-45 9-12 5-12,5 1-1,5 1-1,5

    Temperature1 (oC)

    25 71-82 60-65 87-95 93-100

    Temperature 2 (oC)

    82 93 71-82 76 93

    Temperature 3 (oC)

    71-82 82-93 71-72 65-76 82-93

    Temperature4 (oC)

    20-37 20-37 20-37 35-37 71-82

    Time4 (h) 24 12 4 3 1

    Moisture of starch (%)

    5 - 8 5 - 8 5 - 8 5 - 8 5 - 10

    Notes: 1 Temperature of dissolving, 2 Temperature of acid, 3 Temperature of moulding, 4 Temperature and time of setting

    Confectionery jelly

  • Questions?

    Some aspects of Chocolate and Confectionery TechnologyContentSnmek slo 3Chocolate and chocolate confectionerySnmek slo 5Snmek slo 6Snmek slo 7Composition of chocolate, viscosity and yieldLegislation of chocolate and applying of the cocoa butter equivalentSnmek slo 10Snmek slo 11Snmek slo 12Snmek slo 13Snmek slo 141, 2- imput of cocoa beans or cocoa nib, 3- preheating zone of cocoa beans or cocoa nib, 4- roasting zone of cocoa beans, 5- cooling zone of cocoa beans or cocoa nib, 6- output of cocoa product, 7- filter of air, 8- heat exchanger, 9 cyclon; temperature of product inside 105 C http://www.fblehmann.de/ MillingRefiningConche Carle-MontanariTemper machine Turbotemper TCB 1- zone of melting of coca butter crystals, 2 cooling zone, 3 crystallization of cocoa butter, 4 zone of temperature 31 C, melting of unstabile crystals of cocoa butterSnmek slo 20Snmek slo 21Snmek slo 22Snmek slo 23Snmek slo 24Snmek slo 25Snmek slo 26Snmek slo 27Snmek slo 28Snmek slo 29Snmek slo 30Cocoa butter equivalent- Non-cocoa vegetable fat, type equivalent, has the same composition like CB, non lauric. Equivalent CB (CBe) is produced only by process of rafinement and/or fractionation of raw material as illepe, shea, palm oil, sal, kokum gurki and mango kernels fat. CBe is fully miscible or nearly fully miscible with cocoa butter. Chocolate mass needs tempering. Cocoa butter replacer (CBr) or cocoa butter substitute CBs- The types of non-cocoa vegetable fats are miscible with cocoa butter with some limitation. They are produced from different type of raw materials (rape seed, soya, lauric fats). Chemical processing, hydrogenation and interesterification, is allowed. CBs contains lauric acid. Mass does not need tempering.Snmek slo 32Snmek slo 33Snmek slo 34Snmek slo 35Snmek slo 36Snmek slo 37Sugar confectioneryFlow chart of hard candies technologyFlow chart of fondant technologySnmek slo 41Hard candies and fondantSnmek slo 43Components in formulation of hard candiesDissolution of components and evaporationSolubility and boiling point of sucrose solutionsTrends of the boiling point as the mass fraction of componentsSnmek slo 48Moulding of confectionery massSnmek slo 50Snmek slo 51Moulding in starchSnmek slo 53Snmek slo 54