Shopping for BBQ Gear? Start Here!

2,000+ Free Pages

2,000+ Free Pages

YOU ARE HERE >> AmazingRibs » Desserts » Homemade Chocolate Truffles, As Easy To Make As They Are To Fall In Love With

Homemade Chocolate Truffles, As Easy To Make As They Are To Fall In Love With

Chocolate truffles in a box

Impress your loved ones with these melt-in-your-mouth chocolate truffles.

The fastest way to a woman’s heart is with chocolate. Actually, it works on me, too. And even though working with chocolate is tricky, nothing could be simpler to make than chocolate truffles. Just like the ones they serve at the fancy restaurants. Sooooo simple to make with this how to recipe and sooooo seductive.

They’re called truffles because they look somewhat like the rare and expensive fungus of the same name found in Italy and France. Rolling them in cocoa powder is supposed to resemble the dirt on the mushroom when it is dug up. Bit of a stretch if you ask me. But they are fairly easy to make so I don’t care what they call them.

The first step in this easy recipe is to read The Science of Chocolate which explains how to handle chocolate. The basic recipe starts with making a chocolate ganache, which sounds intimidating, but it is simply chocolate and cream. You can also use ganache as a cake icing, just use equal amounts of cream and chocolate and add about 10% unsalted butter. When it is warm pour it over the cake and let it run down the sides.

Of course you could just skip the whole thing and order some fabulous Valentine’s Day truffles from my favorite chocolatier, Jacques Torres at Jacques Torres Chocolat in New York City.

flames line2
chocolate truffles.

Easy Homemade Chocolate Truffles Recipe

3.06 from 35 votes
Rate this Recipe
Show your loved ones how much you truly care by skipping the store bought chocolates and opt instead for these delicious homemade truffles.
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Chill 3 hours
Servings: 24 truffles
Course: Dessert, Snack
Cuisine: American, French
Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients
 
 

  • 8 ounces high quality bittersweet or semisweet chocolate
  • 4 ounces heavy cream or whipping cream (1/2 cup)
  • 1 tablespoon seedless black raspberry jam
  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder

Method
 

  1. Prep. Chop or shave the chocolate into bits smaller than a pea. Place the chocolate in a microwave safe bowl at least 2 cup (473.2 ml) capacity.
  2. Cook. Heat the cream in a saucepan over a medium heat until it starts to make small bubbles in the center, but do not boil.
  3. Add the hot cream to the chocolate and stir steadily with a fork or whisk until the chocolate has melted completely and there are no streaks. Just after adding the cream, add the raspberry jam. If it doesn’t smooth out, microwave the mix on medium for about 20 seconds, then stir until smooth. If needed nuke it again. If you don’t have a microwave, you can set the mixing bowl in a pan of hot tap water but do not boil the water. Or you could sit the bowl on top of a small saucepan with about an inch of water at a very low simmer. Be very careful to not get any water in the chocolate. That can lead to disaster. Stir steadily. That’s your ganache. If you are adding mix-ins, add them after the hot cream. Or divide the ganache into several bowls and flavor each differently.
  4. Cool. Refrigerate until firm throughout, at least 3 hours.
  5. Prep again. Scoop out about a teaspoon and roll in your very clean dry hands until it is roundish and bite size, about the size of a maraschino cherry. The chocolate will melt quickly, so have your lover lick your hands when you are done. Make all the balls before you start coating them and place them on a tray so they are not touching.
    Chocolate coated hands
  6. Put the cocoa in a shallow bowl. Roll each ball in the coating. Tap off excess so it doesn’t get all over your shirt when you eat it. They will keep well in the fridge if covered but this probably won’t be necessary.
  7. Serve. When ready to serve, grab one while you can as they will go fast.

Notes

About the chocolate. Before you begin you should learn a bit more about chocolate, how it is made, how it is labeled, and how to handle it, you should read my article on The Science of Chocolate.
About the jam. I use Dickinson’s Seedless Black Raspberry Preserves. Rich and concentrated, it adds tremendous depth and complexity. Whatever you use, make sure it is seedless!
Other mix-ins. Make this recipe first. Once you have the hang of it you can play. I’ve never tried any of the following mix-ins, so you’re on your own if you want to experiment, but I’ve seen recipes with orange marmalade, orange juice concentrate, orange zest, lemon zest, candied ginger, peanut butter, nutella, honey, reduced balsamic vinegar, cinnamon powder, cardamom powder, chipotle powder, vanilla extract, orange extract, peppermint oil, raspberry liqueur, grand marnier, coffee liqueur, hazelnut liqueur, amaretto liqueur, Bourbon, dark rum, brandy, condensed milk instead of cream, cream cheese, and even fresh goat cheese. If you must experiment, work in small batches. Failures can be expensive.
About the coating. Instead of the straight cocoa powder, I like to make a blend of cocoa powder and finely ground coffee beans. You can use just plain coffee, or substitute confectioners sugar, regular sugar, coconut shavings, finely ground coffee beans, colored sprinkles, colored sugar, crushed graham crackers, chopped hazelnuts, almonds, pecans, or peanuts. Or mix the cocoa with cinnamon powder, fennel powder, a pinch of salt, or even a touch of ancho or chipotle powder.

Tried this recipe?

Let us know how it was!

Related Articles & Posts

This item is for members only
This item is for members only
This item is for members only

Why We Require You To Sign In Before You Can Post Commentsgrouchy?

Before you can post a comment or question you must sign into our commenting partner, Disqus. This is helps make sure everyone hanging around the grill is civil. We do not tolerate nastiness, racism, porn, inappropriate language, or attacks on others. All comments are the property of AmazingRibs.com and we reserve the right to quote them, edit them, delete them, and block people from making future comments.

Please leave comments and questions on the page devoted to the same subject so others can see them and our answers when they are reading about that subject. You must enable JavaScript to use the comments section, and you must accept cookies to post comments. Note that the software that runs Disqus is different from the Pitmaster Club so members need to sign into that separately.

Click to comment or ask a question...
Published On: March 4, 2016
Last Modified On: April 2, 2026

New Recipes, Reviews, and Science Sent To Your Inbox!

Subscribe to receive our FREE weekly newsletter, Smoke Signals, and never miss a new recipe!

New Recipes

Jump To Top

Meet The AmazingRibs.com Team

BBQ Hall of Famer Meathead founded AmazingRibs.com in 2005 to help people master barbecue and grilling. Today he and his team of culinary experts have created a site with more than 2,000 pages of myth-busting, science, recipes, methods, product reviews, and the Pitmaster Club—the world’s largest BBQ association—dedicated to making you a legend.