Make a Chocolate Portrait

This article was provided by wikiHow, a wiki building the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on how to make a chocolate portrait. Content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons License.

Published 2 years ago
Last edited 2 years ago

A love of art can be combined with a love of chocolate to create a striking, whimsical and delicious portrait. With just a photograph, a computer, and a few shades of chocolate, you can depict a person's face in one of the most delicious mediums in the world. Chocolate portraits make lovely gifts for friends, or, if you're feeling rather peckish, you can make one for yourself to nibble on for a few days.

Ingredients

An 8 1/2" x 11" piece of work needs about:

  • 200g White Chocolate
  • 150g Milk Chocolate
  • 200g Dark Chocolate

Step 1  

How To Make a Chocolate Portrait

Find or take a photograph of the face you wish to make a portrait of. Upload or scan it into a computer and use imaging software to change it from colour to black and white. (If you have Photoshop, convert to black and white then save as a 4 color gif, which will provide a "posterized" effect.) Adjust the brightness and contrast until you have three distinct tones. If the picture turns out too complex at this point, find or take a simpler one for your personal skill level.

 

Step 2  

Trace the image on grease proof paper (such as wax paper), outlining each of the three colours. After doing this, put a piece of strong cardboard of the same size behind the paper and tape the image onto it, so that the chocolate doesn't flop and slide everywhere later.

Step 3  

How To Make a Chocolate Portrait

Melt the white chocolate. The best way to do this is by using a double boiler. A small pan containing the chocolate is placed in a larger pan with boiling water, and the chocolate is stirred constantly until it melts. Putting it in the microwave doesn't give the chocolate the nice smooth texture that you'll need to make the portrait.
A double boiler with dark chocolate is shown for demonstration purposes.

 

Step 4  

How To Make a Chocolate Portrait

Pour the melted chocolate in a piping bag and start working on the lightest colour of the portrait, using the outlines you drew as a guide. Once the white chocolate has been painted, place the portrait in the fridge to cool and harden.

 

Step 5  

How To Make a Chocolate Portrait

Repeat the previous two steps with the milk and dark chocolate until you have filled in all of the page.

 

Step 6  

How To Make a Chocolate Portrait

Turn the picture upside down. To avoid touching, melting or breaking the chocolate, place a piece of cardboard on top of the portrait. (You should now have the portrait sandwiched between two pieces of cardboard.) Hold the cardboard together firmly at the edges and flip the portrait. Detach the cardboard from behind the portrait and peel off the greaseproof paper. Place the piece of cardboard back on, flip the whole thing right side up again, and there you have it, a custom chocolate portrait!

 

Tips

  • Don't hold or touch the portrait with your hands for any longer than you have to, or else the chocolate may start to melt.
  • Let the chocolate cool for a bit before you put it in the piping bag. You don’t want to burn your fingers!
  • Since pictures vary in size and complexity, you'll need to make more or less chocolate depending on your personal project.

Warnings

  • Chocolate can scald, so if young children are helping, be very careful.
  • Chocolate may be tasty, but don't eat your portrait. After all the work you've put into it, it would be better to just go and eat a chocolate bar if you really are craving chocolate.

Things You'll Need

  • A Computer
  • Greaseproof Paper
  • 2 sheets of cardboard, the same size as the paper
  • Chocolate
  • Card
  • Piping Bag (a circle nozzle)
  • Double boiler pots
  • Stove
  • A Picture

Share this article

Comments

Add your comment:
0 / 2000

Apocalyptic Cooking Shows: Furious Fishdicks & a Black Metal Vegan

Is Epic Meal Time a little too bro for you? If you're looking for something more extreme, with a hint of violence, headache-inducing screams, and ...

How to Clone a Banana with Jello

Mold making is pretty thrilling—the ability to replicate objects right down to every little crack and crevice seems like something only a machine ...

Möbius Pasta + Jell-O Jigglin' at 6200 FPS

Food is the meeting place of left and right brainers: Culinary arts call for creativity, but is also deeply rooted in the What, Why and How of ...

Watch this Baby (Cake) Get Mutilated

While some parents prefer to preserve an element of surprise upon delivery of their baby, most choose to learn the sex from their doctor as soon ...

Miraculous "No-Knead" Bread: Hack Yourself a Loaf in 10 Minutes

Making bread from scratch is extremely difficult. Painstakingly following instructions does not necessarily guarantee successful results. Baking ...

All Wonderment

Baking with Tamara World

Where gourmet meets the south.

Triple D Digs Food World

If you like food, you'll love DDD's

All about Yummy Food World

Because life is about enjoying food

All Featured Worlds

Byron Schmidt published a new tutorial: How To Consistently Locate Hidden Wall Studs in Your Home. This is Byron Schmidt's 5th article 37 minutes ago

Mary Seadub replied to Mika Nieminen's comment on How to Pickpocket-Proof Yourself from Thieving Hands 1 hour ago

Where I live in South America thieves won't hesitate to shoot or stab you if you resist. No possession is worth your life.

William Finucane replied to Muhammad Saleem's comment on Submit a Pic of Your Craziest DIY Project, Win My Lucid Dreaming Goggles Kit 1 hour ago

Awesome! Can we see some pictures?!

All Community Activity
loading...