How to Melt or Boil Chocolate the Right Way

Chocolate burns fast. This method gives you smooth, silky, perfectly melted chocolate without clumps or scorching.

Boil Chocolate

The Trick

Heat the chocolate gently. Bring the water to a boil once, then lower it to a simmer. Keep stirring the chocolate so it warms slowly without burning.

Why It Works

Chocolate melts best with steady, low heat. A rolling boil is too hot and can make chocolate grainy, thick, or bitter.

How to Do It (Step-by-Step)

If you’re using a double boiler (recommended):

  1. Set up your pot
    • Fill a small pot with 1–2 inches of water.
    • Put a heat-safe bowl on top, making sure it doesn’t touch the water.
  2. Heat the water
    • Turn the stove to high just long enough to bring the water to a boil.
  3. Reduce the heat
    • Once boiling, turn the heat down to a low simmer (tiny gentle bubbles).
  4. Add your chocolate to the bowl
    • Use chips, chunks, or chopped bars.
  5. Stir frequently
    • Stir slowly and constantly.
    • Lift the bowl off the pot for a few seconds if it seems too hot this lets you control the temperature.
  6. Stop when it’s silky
    • As soon as it’s smooth, turn off the heat.
    • Use immediately for dipping, drizzling, or mixing into dough.

If you’re using a microwave:

  1. Put chocolate in a microwave-safe bowl.
  2. Heat for 20–25 seconds at a time.
  3. Stir between each burst.
  4. Stop when mostly melted stir the rest until smooth.

(This follows the same “slow building heat” principle.)


Real-Life Uses

For drizzling:

Let the chocolate cool for 2–3 minutes so it thickens a bit, then drizzle using a spoon or piping bag.

For dipping:

Use while still warm and fluid. If it starts thickening, set it back over the simmering water for 10–20 seconds.

For mixing into dough:

Let the chocolate cool slightly before folding it in so it doesn’t melt your dough.