Ganache Ratio Calculator – Perfect Chocolate to Cream Ratio

🍫 Ganache Ratio Calculator

Calculate exact chocolate & cream amounts for any ganache type or batch size

Quick Presets
📏 Unit System
🧪 Calculator Inputs
💡 Tip: The chocolate-to-cream ratio is the key to ganache consistency. Higher chocolate = firmer. Higher cream = softer and more pourable. White and milk chocolate contain more fat & sugar, so they need less cream to set properly.
✨ Your Ganache Formula
Chocolate
grams
Heavy Cream
grams / ml
Ratio (Choc:Cream)
by weight
Approx. Truffles
at 12g each
Ganache Type
Chocolate
Heavy Cream
Unsalted Butter
Corn Syrup / Glucose
Total Batch Weight
Consistency
📊 Ganache Ratio Reference Chart
Ganache Use Choc : Cream Consistency Best For
Truffle Centers (Dark)2 : 1Very firmHand-rolled truffles
Truffle Centers (Milk)2.5 : 1Very firmMilk choc truffles
Truffle Centers (White)3 : 1Very firmWhite choc truffles
Tart / Pie Filling1.5 : 1FirmChocolate tarts
Cake Frosting1 : 1MediumCakes, cupcakes
Drip Glaze1 : 1MediumDrip cakes (warm)
Whipped Ganache1 : 1.5Light & airyPiped frosting
Chocolate Fondue1 : 2PourableDipping fruit
Pourable Sauce1 : 3Very fluidIce cream topping
🍫 Chocolate Type Adjustments
Chocolate Type Cocoa % Ratio Adjustment Note
Extra Dark / Bittersweet70–85%Standard (2:1)High cocoa butter sets firm
Dark / Semi-Sweet55–70%Standard (2:1)Most versatile
Semi-Sweet45–55%Add 10% less creamSlightly sweeter
Milk Chocolate30–45%Use 2.5:1 ratioExtra fat from milk solids
White Chocolate0% cocoaUse 3:1 ratioVery high fat content
Ruby Chocolate~47%Use 2.5:1 ratioSimilar to milk chocolate
Batch Size Quick Reference
Batch Size Chocolate (2:1) Cream (2:1) Approx. Truffles
Small (150g total)100g50ml≈ 12
Medium (300g total)200g100ml≈ 25
Large (600g total)400g200ml≈ 50
Party (900g total)600g300ml≈ 75
Small (6 oz total)4 oz2 fl oz≈ 12
Medium (12 oz total)8 oz4 fl oz≈ 25
📌 Butter & Glucose Notes: Adding 10–15% unsalted butter (by chocolate weight) creates a shinier, silkier ganache. Corn syrup or glucose (5–10% of cream weight) prevents crystallization and extends shelf life, especially useful for truffles meant to sit for several days.

Chocolate ganache is made of chocolate and warm cream. Mixed until smooth and shiny, it is a basic part in the kitchen of every baker. Not only is it simple and quick to make but it is very versatile.

You can use it for many sweets: as filling, glaze, spread, frosting, cover or layer in cake

How to Make and Use Chocolate Ganache

Ganache, in broad meaning, is a mix between melted solid chocolate and water-based ingredient as cream, milk or fruit pulp. It has a smooth, shiny look. Traditional chocolate ganache is a mix of a high fat part with less fat.

Here the chocolate has more fat than the heavy cream.

The preparation is very easy. Heat the cream until it almost boils, pour it on chopped bits of chocolate, and after it melts mix until smooth. The whole procees lasts only some minutes with little effort.

Only two ingredients are enough.

You can make ganache thick for truffle filling or liquid for glaze. Liquid ganache melts for cover or whips for cake filling. Whipped ganache becomes light and gives a creamy, fancy frosting, ideal for cake filling or piping on cupcakes.

The proportions matter a lot. A 1:1 ratio of chocolate to cream by weight works for pouring when warm or filling when cold. A 2:1 ratio of chocolate to cream serves for truffles, where ganache must stay solid at room temperature.

For milk chocolate ganache a 2:1 ratio works well too.

Ganache works also for cover of cakes, cookies and cake pops. It is a perfect two-ingredient sauce for drizzling over sweets, fill macarons or piping between layers of sponge cake. It even covers cheesecake well.

Adding it to s’mores from an air fryer is another fun idea.

If ganache is too liquid, heat it and add grated chocolate to help. Let it melt and mix well. But too much chocolate makes it too fat, it can break and become grainy and crumbly.

Ganache firms up at room temperature or cold, but it is more like the texture of chocolate truffle than hard.

When you cover a cake, leaving butter out is a good idea, especially in warm weather, because there is more risk of splitting during work. Ganache freezes well also. It can stay at roomtemperature for 48 hours, in refrigerator one week or freeze for six months.

Ganache Ratio Calculator – Perfect Chocolate to Cream Ratio

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