Hi, I'm Rachel.

A few years ago I could barely boil water.

True story.

Determined to be a kick ass wife, I developed a love for football and learned to cook in my tiny Jersey City kitchen. I spend my days working in Manhattan, my nights and weekends chasing after a rambunctious toddler, and the hours in between cooking with my husband and feeding my TV habit...oh, and I blog about it all! 

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Friday
Mar252011

350 Truffles: How we did it

This project started with 3 things.

Perserverance. Comfortable shoes. Clothes we didn’t mind dirtying. And iron stomachs.

Ok so 4 things. All equally as important though.


To make 350+ truffles for my best friend Lindsey’s engagement party a few weeks ago, we truly got our DIY on. Lindsey wanted to have little favor boxes filled with truffles as the party favor.

After a trip to Michael's for all of our supplies, we spent most of a Saturday melting chocolate, mixing filling, and, of course, sampling the goods. It was a fairly simple, yet time-consuming project. So if you too want to make truffles, here's a few things you'll need:

1. The double boiler. I highly recommend this tool. You can absolutely use the glass bowl over the saucepan trick, but since we were melting chocolate for about, oh 8 hours, the double boiler really came in handy. Thanks to bridesmaid Jenny for supplying this wonderful tool (that I'm admittedly a little obsessed with now).

2. Good chocolate. Not to go all Ina on you with the pretentious ‘good’ ingredients (I still love ya girl!), but since you are eating this chocolate straight, please, for the love of your sister (or brother. or parents), use good chocolate that you would happily consume raw. Because you will. Ya dig?

3. Mini mini baking cups. We got them at Michael's. Separating each cup from the stack was a feat in itself, but well worth it because they were so darn cute.

4. Giant trays. You'll want to load up your mini cups on to some giant baking trays (so they can each rest comfortably, no smooshing together please) for filling.

5. Packaging. We used favor boxes. Decide what you want to use these for and go from there. If you are bringing some to a party, perhaps set them up on a pretty platter with little flags denoting the flavors. Cheeseboard style...

6. Good company.

7. Some treats for the chefs.

bonus for stemless glassware since the last thing you want are broken wine glasses around your chocolate making.

How we did it

1. Lay out the baking cups and melt the chocolate. Spoon just enough melted chocolate into each cup to cover just the bottom. Set them aside to harden. We did not need to refrigerate or freeze them. A solid 20 minutes of sitting out on the counter top should do it.

2. Once hardened, get a tag team going on filling them. Use any filling ya like! We used pb+j, graham crackers + fluff, and Oreos to make 4 different flavors. Be creative!

3. Once your cups are filled (we tackled one variety at a time), it's back to the stove for more melted chocolate. With a spoon, cover the truffle filling with melted chocolate. Now is also the time to put someone on topping duty. If you want to add sprinkles or any kind of garnish (like crushed up graham crackers), then go ahead and add them now before the chocolate hardens.

Some more tips:

Decide on how many you are going to make, and then make at least 10 more of each variety. There will undoubtedly be some rejects in the pile. Trust me on that one. Plus, you need some samples for taste testing.

This project was made easier by all the help that was had. We had a team of 5 people working on various baking projects for the party, with Lin and I primarily on truffle duty. Lots of company and iTunes made this project fun.

Have fun! You are making chocolate after all.

So what do you think? Have you ever tried candy-making? How about cooking or baking on a large scale?

psst...The Book Club page is up and running! Head over to check it out, along with my first write up of Lisa See's Shanghai Girls.

Reader Comments (12)

I am so tempted to do this! I volunteered to make some desserts for my future sister-in-law's bridal shower and I feel like the truffles look really special!

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterLauren at Keep It Sweet

I was wondering how you accomplished such a feat! And it's no easy one at that!! Did you allocate some truffles for eating? :) Esp with the wine! :)

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterSusan(Oliepants)

amazing!!! i want one of those pb&j ones!!

This still blows my mind that you did all that! Good job girls!! I haven't made candy on a large scale but I did make Almond Roca for Christmas gifts! Delicious!!

Oh my goodness, you are so ambitious! These look absolutely divine. :)

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMadison M

I am SO totally impressed by you! This is a totally amazing and rockin' feat!

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterLauraJayne

I absolutely love Fluff,i was so stoked to find the strawberry flavour over here in Tx Maxx,im pretty sure spooning it out and nearly finishing a whole jar is not healthy!

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKel

OMG what a huge project! I love all of the different flavors you made, it looks like a lot of fun.

I've been making a couple of batches of candy for the holidays for the past few years, usually caramels, toffee, or nut brittles. I used to work in a lab, so I love the precise measuring and temperature tracking.

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterRachel (Olalliberry)

I LOVE making truffles, and this looks so fun.

...because there's WINE involved... duh.

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAlyssa @ Life of bLyss

Thanks everyone!

Kel, I did not know they made strawberry Fluff? I need to get on that asap!

Rachel, your candies sound fantastic!

March 25, 2011 | Registered CommenterRachel

Holy Truffles!!! Wow, I bet the bride was beyond happy!

Great post! i would definitely need some of that "treat" if I were a chef on that job :)

I've never done a big project in the kitchen like that. It's awesome...I just don't know if I have the patiences!

March 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterLisa

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