MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
 
      Title: Chocolate-Covered Strawberries
 Categories: Five, Fruits, Chocolate
      Yield: 9 servings
 
      1 lb Large strawberries
      7 oz (2 bars) dark bittersweet
           - chocolate; 60%-% cacao;
           - broken in small pieces
           +=OR=+
      7 oz (2 bars) high-quality white
           - chocolate; broken in small
           - pieces
      1 ts Olive oil (opt)
 
  Prepare the strawberries: Rinse and drain the berries
  well, then dry them off with paper towels. (If you have
  time, let them further air-dry in the refrigerator,
  about 1 hour.)
  
  Melt the chocolate: Fill a small pot with ½ inch of
  water, bring it to a simmer, then turn off the heat.
  Place a medium heatproof bowl over the pot. The bowl
  should not touch the water. Add two-thirds of the
  chocolate to the bowl and melt completely, stirring
  occasionally with a flexible spatula. Stir in the olive
  oil, if using, for a shinier end result. (This oil
  method is called faux tempering and is great insurance;
  just note that your final chocolate shell will be less
  snappy.)
  
  Cool the chocolate: Remove the bowl from the pot and add
  the remaining chocolate, stirring constantly until
  melted. Then, keep stirring until cool and starting to
  thicken (if too thick, return to the hot water to melt
  again). The mixture should feel slightly warmer than
  your bottom lip.
  
  Dip the strawberries: Holding each strawberry by its
  stem, dip it into the chocolate, twisting it to cover
  completely, then let any excess chocolate run off before
  placing on a parchment-lined sheet pan. Successfully
  tempered chocolate should set in 10 to 15 minutes at
  room temperature. If the chocolate doesn’t set at room
  temperature, refrigerate until it does. Stored and
  refrigerated in an airtight container lined with a paper
  towel, the chocolate-covered berries can keep for up to
  2 days.
  
  TIP: For this recipe, it’s important to use a chocolate
  bar from the candy section of the grocery store, not the
  baking section. Baking chocolate and chocolate chips
  have additives, such as stabilizers, that make them
  harder to temper. When picking white chocolate, go for
  high-quality bars, such as Lindt or Ghirardelli.
  
  By: Eric Kim
  
  Yield: 8 to 10 servings
  
  RECIPE FROM: 
https://cooking.nytimes.com
  
  Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives
 
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... "I had the right rib, but it musta been the wrong sauce" - Dr. John
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