Homemade Chocolate Chips
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Every package of chocolate chips I’ve seen has highly processed sugar as one of its ingredients, so I like to make homemade chocolate chips once in a while. This recipe requires just 2 ingredients, and you can adjust the sweetness to suit your taste.
We’re very fond of chocolate in my house, so I love having these on hand to add to a healthy batch of muffins or cookies. If you don’t have a frosting tool to shape them, you can just melt the ingredients, let them cool a bit, and then shape the chips by hand. Alternately, you can pour the whole batch of melted chocolate into a loaf pan, refrigerate for an hour, and then break it into chocolate chunks. Children love to participate in this process because we’re basically making the simplest candy here.
Ingredients
- 5 ounces single-ingredient chocolate (I use Baker's Unsweetened Chocolate)
- 1/2 to 3/4 cup maple syrup
Instructions
- In a double boiler, melt the chocolate over medium-low heat. Turn off the burner and stir in the maple syrup. If you want to add mint extract or vanilla extract to give the chips a different flavor, add it here. Taste the chocolate and add a little more maple syrup if desired.
- Working quickly, transfer the mixture to a frosting tool with a wide tip. I use this fun cupcake decorating tool.
- Press out little chocolate chip sized portions onto wax paper. I use my fingers to shape each chip into a triangle.
- Refrigerate the chocolate chips for at least 30 minutes so they solidify. I store them in the refrigerator until I’m ready to bake with them.
Nutrition
Homemade Chocolate Chips Price Breakdown
This batch yields 9 ounces of chocolate chips and the total cost is $2.71. There’s no packaged brand of chocolate chips with clean ingredients that I can compare these to, but a 10-ounce bag of Enjoy Life Chocolate Chips retails for over $4.00. Enjoy Life is considered one of the cleanest store-bought versions of chocolate chips. You won’t believe how easy it is to make these homemade chocolate chips, and your family will love them.
Hi Annemarie… my post is almost a year after your last post on this topic but I just had to write to tell you that I just made some chocolate chips with the help of your recipe!! I love to bake, but I think I love to eat chocolate more, and I was out of chocolate chips. I have to admit my guilty indulgence after dinner is just a few chocolate chips with a tablespoon of natural peanut butter. I’ve been out of semi-sweet chocolate chips for a while now and tonight the craving was just too strong but I didn’t want to drive to the store. So, I went online for the answer. I had some Bakers unsweetened choc squares, maple syrup and vanilla and went to work! After melting the chocolate and adding the syrup and vanilla I had to let it cool a bit in order to put into my piping bag. Once I did though I proceeded to pipe perfectly shaped chocolate chips and put them into the fridge to harden. I then scooped them off the wax paper and put them into a container for better keeping. I “stole” a couple from the tray and put some natural peanut butter on them and wow! My chocolate craving was taken care of! I can’t believe I haven’t been doing this since I learned how to bake when I was young! Thank you for bringing it back to the basics and for your ideas.
Thanks so much for the comment, Julie! I’m glad it worked for you. I think a snack of chocolate chips and peanut butter after dinner is the perfect guilty indulgence. 🙂
Awesome, but I am going to do a short cut by simply piping a plain old “tube” down the full length of the bar pan and then repeat with as many “stripes” as the pan can hold, then chill them, then either pop them up and group them and cut into chunks, or just cut them while still on the pan into chunks!!!
Great idea, Jaslyn! Chocolate chunks would be even faster to make.
Oh thank you, thank you! My little girl is allergic to cane sugar and I can’t find any store bought chocolate chips without it. 🙂
Thanks, Rachelle! These should work well for you. That’s a tough allergy, but we’re all better off without cane sugar in the long run.