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The Great Book of Chocolate Paperback – April 15, 2004
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In this compact volume, David Lebovitz gives a succinct cacao botany lesson, explains the process of chocolate making, runs through chocolate terminology and types, presents information on health benefits, offers an evaluating and buying primer, profiles the world's top chocolate makers and chocolatiers (with a whole chapter dedicated to Paris alone!), and shares dozens of little-known factoids in sidebars throughout the book.
The Great Book of Chocolate includes more than 50 location and food photographs, and features more than 30 of Lebovitz's favorite chocolate recipes‚ from Black-Bottom Cupcakes to Homemade Rocky Road Candy, Orange and Rum Chocolate Mousse Cake to Double Chocolate Chip Espresso Cookies. His extensive resource section (with websites for international ordering) can bring the world's best chocolate to every door. A self-avowed chocoholic, Lebovitz nibbles chocolate every day‚ and with The Great Book of Chocolate in hand, he figures the rest of us will too.
- Print length176 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTen Speed Press
- Publication dateApril 15, 2004
- Dimensions4.53 x 0.54 x 10.23 inches
- ISBN-109781580084956
- ISBN-13978-1580084956
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Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher
* Includes more than 50 location and food photographs.
* The New York Times on Lebovitzs first ook: "Instructions are clear and simple, and the recipes are so good that it becomes clear what a master baker he is."
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 1580084958
- Publisher : Ten Speed Press; First Edition (April 15, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 176 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781580084956
- ISBN-13 : 978-1580084956
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.53 x 0.54 x 10.23 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #974,785 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #229 in Chocolate Baking
- #315 in Confectionary Desserts
- #4,143 in Baking (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Author of The Perfect Scoop, the complete guide to making the best ice cream and frozen desserts at home, Ready for Dessert, a compilation of baking favorites, from an extra-moist Fresh Ginger Cake, to crunchy Double-Chocolate Biscotti, My Paris Kitchen, stories and recipes from the glorious foods markets and shops in Paris, and Drinking French, recipes and stories inspired by the iconic café drinks, apéritifs, and cocktails of France.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this chocolate cookbook comprehensive, containing lots of information about chocolate and covering the whole spectrum of goodies. The recipes are well-loved, with one customer noting it's the authority on baking with chocolate, and customers find it easy to read and follow. They enjoy the taste, with one review mentioning a deliciously moist chocolate cake, and find it fun to read.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers appreciate the book's extensive content about chocolate, including its history and manufacturing processes, with one customer highlighting its detailed coverage of cacao and chocolate botany.
"...Buying Chocolate gives a brief consumers guide to sources for good chocolate, including a detailed chronicle of seven days spend working at the shop..." Read more
"...- I have yet to try them but I am very impressed by the information presented on chocolate...." Read more
"...Very accurate and informative. Compact narrow book format is great for suitcases but a pain for comfortable armchair reading...." Read more
"...Half the book consists of well-written chapters on the history of chocolate, processing of the cacao bean, organic chocolate, the different kinds of..." Read more
Customers love the recipes in this cookbook, with one noting it's the authority on baking with chocolate.
"...Lebovitz says many of the recipes are original and, as he is a much, much better baker than I will ever be, even in my dreams, I will accept these..." Read more
"...The recipes look fantastic - I have yet to try them but I am very impressed by the information presented on chocolate...." Read more
"Handy international travel/shopping guide and well-focused recipe collection. Very accurate and informative...." Read more
"This is THE authority on baking with chocolate...." Read more
Customers enjoy reading this book, describing it as sweet and fun, with one customer noting it is well researched.
"...Not only that, it has lots of other good stuff, including some compounds which work as an antidepressant...." Read more
"Excellent book. One of the very few books on chocolate that I own that actually contains lots of info about chocolate...." Read more
"Wonderful! Informative! And FUN!..." Read more
"a good book for those who are passionate about chocolate and it's origin and specialities" Read more
Customers find the book fun to read, with one mentioning they enjoy consuming the results.
"Wonderful! Informative! And FUN!..." Read more
"...offers a big realm of topics about chocolate, and it is fun to have in my cookbook library." Read more
"...Don't resist this one, let yourself indulge, as reading it isn't fattening...and it's fun." Read more
"We both like this book. Natalie likes the recipes, and I enjoy consuming the results. Don't miss the discussion on different types of chocolate." Read more
Customers enjoy the taste of the book's recipes, with one mentioning a deliciously moist chocolate cake.
"...(valuable insights into chocolate manufacture, tasting, etc)...." Read more
"...my surprised guests when they were informed that the deliciously moist chocolate cake they were devouring was a chocolate SAURKRAUT cake with..." Read more
"Excellent intro to top-quality, tasteful chocolate...." Read more
"Delicious..." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and follow.
"Love the recipes. Easy to read and follow. Love the scone recipe and have already made that twice and everyone love it." Read more
"David Lebovitz's book was easy to read, jam-packed with useful and unique information as well as great recipes and beautiful pictures...." Read more
"...These cupcakes are great. They are easy to make, not machine needed and ingredients easy to find...." Read more
Customers enjoy the stories in the book, with one mentioning the interesting anecdotes and another appreciating the lore.
"...It is a great resource, including recipes, lore, history, sources, anecdotes, manufacture, producers, and botany of cacao and chocolate...." Read more
"This is an interesting book. Not quite as many recipes in it as I thought it would have. perhaps that's a good thing - being a chocoholic...." Read more
"Loved the stories - loved the recipes. I particularly enjoyed his description of his week working in the chocolate shop." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2004`The Great Book of Chocolate', David Lebovitz' third book, is much, much more than a book of chocolate recipes. It is a great resource, including recipes, lore, history, sources, anecdotes, manufacture, producers, and botany of cacao and chocolate.
Even if you have any other book on chocolate, you will find things in this book which do not appear in any others, as it has information I have not seen in about a half dozen books on chocolate and about 20 hours of Food Network shows on chocolate done by everyone from Alton Brown to Tyler Florence to Gordon Elliot.
One of the most interesting new facts I found in this book is that like coffee, there are two different naturally occurring varieties of the cacao plant, plus a manmade hybrid. One of the varieties is much more delicate and much less common than the other, accounting for about 5% of the world's chocolate, but it is a much richer product. Very few chocolate processors deal with this criollo variety. Most use the much more common forestero variety or the hybrid trinitario.
Like tea and coffee and olive oil, cacao is a highly complex product, much of whose more desirable and subtle properties are destroyed by too much heat during processing. Heat is also the enemy of chocolate when melting and tempering chocolate to be used for cooking. This brings up one of my very few complaints about this book in that it explains a very primitive method for heating and tempering chocolate. I would have devoted at least one page to explaining how professional chocolate tempering pots work, and in what way one could be improvised. The author gives some very brief suggestions using a heating pad, but a paragraph plus an illustration would have been dandy. Other explanations in the book would have been well served by an illustration or a caption to a picture, but these are small matters in light of the overall quality of the book.
While Lebovitz was already a highly talented and accomplished pastry chef when he started writing this book, he has gone to the extra effort of investigating first hand the workings of premium chocolatiers in San Francisco, Paris and Brussels. He has also recently completed a course in chocolate at Callebaut College in Belgium.
The chapters in this book, after the introduction which covers Lebovitz personal involvement with chocolate includes:
Chocolate Explained gives the history, botany, and processing of the cacao plant, plus some stories of two important American chocolate producers, Hershey and Sharfen Berger.
Sustainability of Cacao discusses the fragile place of cacao in jungle ecosystems and the production of organic chocolate.
A Chocolate Primer discusses the forms of chocolate, from pure chocolate liqueur to cocoa power, plus an explanation of tempering. While he points out that there is no difference between `semisweet' and `bittersweet' chocolate, he does not discuss the availability of chocolates with sweetening graded by percent, as done by Vahlrona. It is also surprising that while so many other chocolate companies are mentioned in the book, this very important French company is not. It is not even listed in the very good list of resources in the back of the book.
Chocolate and Wellness reveals that carefully processed chocolate has a lot more antioxidants in it than even health food stars prunes, raisins, and blueberries. Not only that, it has lots of other good stuff, including some compounds which work as an antidepressant.
Buying Chocolate gives a brief consumers guide to sources for good chocolate, including a detailed chronicle of seven days spend working at the shop of the best chocolatier in Brussels.
Chocolate of Paris continues the buying guide with a focus on sources in Paris that rivals Brussels as one of the leading chocolatier centers in the world.
The 34 recipes certainly do not cover the whole world of chocolate baking and candy making, but they give you a pretty good sampling of both conventional products such as hot chocolate, truffles, fudge, and cakes; to the slightly unusual such as chocolate and cherry scones, mint and chocolate crème anglaise, and bourbon mud pie; to the really unusual such as chocolate sauerkraut cake and chocolate pizza dough.
Lebovitz says many of the recipes are original and, as he is a much, much better baker than I will ever be, even in my dreams, I will accept these recipes for being the crème of the crop. As I said above, this book will not replace your books by Flo Braker, Nick Malgieri, or Alice Medrich or even Lebovitz' earlier books on desserts. It is much more of a supplement to resources for making the best use in recipes by all bakers and chocolatiers.
As the book is much more valuable for its websites, addresses, and information than it is for its recipes, the awkward tall and skinny format does not annoy me as much as it may in other cookbooks. I just wish Ten Speed Press would come out with an explanation for why they are so in love with this tall, skinny format.
Highly recommended enhancement to your enjoying chocolate.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2007Excellent book. One of the very few books on chocolate that I own that actually contains lots of info about chocolate. Previously I've only collected recipe books but I have already read this book cover to cover and was delighted with all the information (valuable insights into chocolate manufacture, tasting, etc). The recipes look fantastic - I have yet to try them but I am very impressed by the information presented on chocolate. I wish I had purchased this book years ago before I started making chocolates and chocolate desserts it would have saved lots of time and mistakes.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2007Handy international travel/shopping guide and well-focused recipe collection. Very accurate and informative. Compact narrow book format is great for suitcases but a pain for comfortable armchair reading. Elegant, GORGEOUS photos are a big plus, but excessive wasteful "white space" and generous text-spacing (leading) should have been saved instead for a larger coffee-table book. Note that much of the shopping/address info in the 2004 edition reviewed here might need updating, so check if the publisher has done so.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2011This is THE authority on baking with chocolate. Half the book consists of well-written chapters on the history of chocolate, processing of the cacao bean, organic chocolate, the different kinds of chocolate, and where in the world to purchase the best chocolate. The recipes are simply fantastic. Imagine my surprised guests when they were informed that the deliciously moist chocolate cake they were devouring was a chocolate SAURKRAUT cake with chocolate glaze! Kudos to the ccoca-marzipan pound cake as well. This is one book every baker should have on the shelf.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2013This book is as much a text book as a cookbook!! It gives ALL the information anyone could possibly need to become a chocolate expert!! I haven't made any of the recipes yet, but most of them sound fairly simple, and they all sound out of this world!! Low-calorie it is not!! Rich luxurious treats is what this cookbook is all about!!
- Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2016Wonderful! Informative! And FUN!
You feel like David is standing with you in the market, the bakery, the chocolatiers', and in your own kitchen while you pull together one of his marvelous creations. :)
- Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2020Much too narrow to be useful.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2009David Lebovitz, how I love thee. Thank you for writing this book! If you want to know about chocolate, look no further. It gives the essentials of chocolate, from how it's grown to where to get it to cooking/baking, in his usual easy to read style. He also includes wonderful scrumptious recipes which pretty much cover the whole spectrum of chocolate goodies. Love, love, love.
Top reviews from other countries
- Suzanne BowenReviewed in Canada on July 31, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful collector foodie book
The loving thought gone into this little informative book is so refreshing😍
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DANIELAReviewed in Italy on January 16, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Très bien!
Bei disegni ed ottime ricette. Non esclusivamente per esperti, ma fattibili anche per principianti. Tutta l'esperienza di questo chef americano!
- MariaReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 16, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW
Great book, explaining all about chocolate making proccess, different kinds of chocolate, what to choose for different recipes, where to find it, amazing recipes and pairing/serving suggestions. And of course, David Lebovitz's style in writing makes it sooo enjoyable to read :))
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katka1221Reviewed in France on October 2, 2009
5.0 out of 5 stars Un livre pour chaque chocoholique
Il est génial, ce livre! En racontant les procédés de la fabrication du chocolat, de différents types de chocolat, et quelques histoires perso de David, avec des recettes délicieuses et faciles à faire (brownies, cookies, madeleines). Je recommande.
- RAMReviewed in Canada on May 16, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
lost in a house fire