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Shaved chocolate is useful for adding to cake toppings and cold desserts such as cheesecake and custard dishes. It can be made from semisweet or milk chocolate, or white chocolate for a dash of variety. There are different ways of making shaved chocolate––several methods are provided here, for you to choose from.
Things You Should Know
- For the best results, work with room temperature chocolate.
- Grate chocolate over parchment paper to catch shavings as they fall.
- For small shavings, press a vegetable peeler down the chocolate's long edge. For large shavings, scrape the peeler along the flat side of the chocolate.
- You can also use a grater or shredder. Large grater holes create large shavings and smaller holes produce fine or powdery shavings.
Steps
Method 1
Method 1 of 4:
Using a vegetable peeler
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1Choose a peeler. Note that different sizes of peelers will produce different sizes of shavings.
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2Choose chocolate at room temperature. Place a sheet of parchment or a plate underneath, to catch the shavings as they fall.Advertisement
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3Hold the chocolate bar firmly in one hand. Hold it with one long side facing upward for small curls, or hold it flat for larger curls.
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4Hold the peeler in your other hand.
- For smaller curls: Press it down firmly on the side of the chocolate bar and drag the peeler along the edge.
- For larger curls: Scrape along the broad area of the chocolate bar, on the flat surface side.
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5Add the shavings to your pastries, baked goods and cold puddings.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 4:
Using a glass dish
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1Prepare the chocolate first.
- Put 1 to 1/2 ounces of chocolate into a heavy-based saucepan. Add 1 teaspoon of coconut oil or similar shortening.
- Place the saucepan over a low heat. Warm gently, stirring often until the chocolate and shortening has melted.
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2Lay down a sheet of parchment paper under the glass dish. It should be longer at one end, to catch the curls once you push them off.
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3Remove the melted chocolate from the heat. Spread it over the base of a glass baking dish. Use a metal spatula or the edge of a butter knife to help spread it evenly. Allow to set.
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4Use a metal spatula to make the curls. Hold it at a 45-degree angle and push the spatula edge into the chocolate sheet to lift up sections into curls. Push the curls onto the parchment paper at one end.
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5Pick up the shavings with a toothpick or skewer. This will keep them from squashing or melting from your body heat.
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6Use as needed to decorate cakes, cupcakes, cheesecake, etc.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 4:
Using an oiled worktop
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1Melt chocolate in a bowl set over simmering water.
- The chocolate must be at room temperature before using it.
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2Remove the melted chocolate. Allow it to cool for one minute.
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3Spread oil lightly onto the work surface. Pour the melted chocolate onto this surface and spread out thinly with a metal spatula. Ensure that it is evenly spread across the whole surface.
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4Let the chocolate cool. When it is about to set, hold a long and sharp knife upright, holding it non-blade side, lower end, with your other hand.
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5Drag the knife in a sawing motion towards you.
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6Remove the shredded chocolate pieces onto baking paper and leave to fully harden.
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Method 4
Method 4 of 4:
Using a grater
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1Set up a sheet of parchment paper. Place the grater or shredder over the top.
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2Find a suitable large bar of chocolate.
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3Grate the chocolate against the grater's holes. Allow the chocolate pieces to gather on the parchment paper at the base.
- Large grater holes produce large shaved chocolate pieces.
- Smaller grater holes produce fine or powdery chocolate shavings.
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4Continue until you have as much as needed.
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5Transfer the grated or shredded chocolate to the food items as needed.
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Community Q&A
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QuestionCan I make shaved chocolate with a food processor?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerIf you have a grater disc for your food processor, it is possible to make shaved chocolate with it. Fit the grater disc. Add broken chunks of chocolate to the food processor through the feeder tube of the processor as you run it. One benefit of this is that the chocolate won't get as warm as when held in your hand against a grating tool. Remove the bowl from the processor and gently tap the shaved chocolate onto a plate for use. -
QuestionThe chocolate seems too soft to grate. What should I do?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff Answer -
QuestionHow do I grate chocolate?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerTo grate chocolate, you'll need a hand grater, a zester (special chocolate ones exist), or a box grater (use the smaller holes). Another alternative is a drum grater, which is a good choice when you want to prevent the chocolate melting, as it keeps the chocolate away from your warm hands. You can also freeze chocolate and/or the grater before grating, to prevent melting. Hold the chocolate bar in one hand, and the grater of choice in the other (or stand a box grated in place), then grate the chocolate downward over a plate. Keep your fingers away from the sharp grater edges. For a drum grater, follow the manufacturer's instructions.
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Warnings
- Hold the chocolate with care when using a peeler; a slip could cause the blade to cut your skin.⧼thumbs_response⧽
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Things You'll Need
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Using a vegetable peeler
- Vegetable peeler, preferably a straight one
- Parchment paper or plate
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Using a glass dish
- Heavy based saucepan
- Parchment paper
- Metal spatula
- Toothpick or skewer
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Using an oiled surface
- Bowl and saucepan or double boiler
- Clean surface, such as a marble board or cutting board
- Metal spatula
- Long, sharp kitchen knife
- Parchment paper
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Using a grater
- Grater or shredder
- Parchment paper
- Airtight container and greaseproof paper, if storing
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