Session 10
Milk & white
Session 10 · Block C — Styles

Milk &
white

The categories people underrate. Done seriously, both are craft objects; done cheaply, they’re sugar delivery.

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
A craft milk bar (40%+ if possible)
Objective
Tell the four types apart and judge them fairly
Reading · 1 of 2

The four types

Click each to see what it is — and isn’t:

Reading · 2 of 2

How milk chocolate is built

Traditional milk

  • Low cacao (often ~30%), high sugar
  • Milk crumb or powder; cooked, caramel notes
  • Sweet, comforting, origin muted
  • The mass-market default

Craft "dark-milk"

  • Higher cacao (40–65%)
  • Real origin flavour under the dairy
  • Balances creaminess with cocoa complexity
  • The category’s renaissance
Judge them fairly

Don’t dismiss milk and white as beginner chocolate. A 55% dark-milk or a vanilla-forward craft white can out-nuance a mediocre dark. The question is always: is there real cocoa-butter quality and flavour here, or just sugar?

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. What is white chocolate made of?
  2. What does the craft-milk movement change?
  3. What is ruby chocolate?
  4. Where does origin show most, and why?
  5. How does milk differ from white in composition?
Session 11 · Block C — Styles

Inclusions &
confections

Everything beyond the plain bar — judged by one rule: does the addition complete the chocolate, or hide it?

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
A salted and a plain bar to compare
Objective
Apply the balance principle; name the confections
Reading · 1 of 2

Inclusions & the balance rule

The best inclusion bars still taste of chocolate first. Click each:

Reading · 2 of 2

A taster’s tour of confections

You don’t need to make these to appreciate them — but you should recognise them:

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. What single inclusion most reliably lifts a bar?
  2. State the balance principle in one sentence.
  3. What is gianduja?
  4. What is a ganache?
  5. Why is "praline" a confusing word?
Session 12 · Block C — Styles

Faults &
quality

Knowing what’s wrong is half of knowing what’s good. Learn the defects, then the framework that gates a score.

Duration
45 min
You’ll need
A bloomed bar, if you have one
Objective
Name faults; apply the quality framework
Reading · 1 of 2

The fault library

Two are texture faults (bloom); the rest are flavour defects, mostly from processing. Click each:

Reading · 2 of 2

The quality framework

Once a bar is clean, judge it on four axes — but cleanliness is the gate that comes first:

Storage — the fault you can prevent

Keep chocolate cool (16–18°C), dry, dark, and sealed, away from strong odours (it absorbs them). Never the fridge: condensation causes sugar bloom and the chocolate picks up food smells.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Distinguish fat bloom from sugar bloom.
  2. Name two flavour faults and their causes.
  3. Why is smoky-from-drying a fault but dark roast a style?
  4. What role does cleanliness play in scoring?
  5. How should chocolate be stored, and why not the fridge?