Moules à chocolat

Le chocolat n'est pas seulement une friandise, c'est aussi une œuvre d'art. C'est une histoire racontée à travers l'élégance de chaque pièce. Mais qu'est-ce qui rend les chocolats vraiment délicieux ? Leur apparence, bien sûr !

Pour rehausser la richesse de la saveur grâce à des formes parfaites, PJ Bold propose une large gamme de moules à chocolat.

Conçus pour durer, nos moules à barres de chocolat sont conçus pour résister à l'épreuve du temps. De plus, nous utilisons un matériau de qualité alimentaire [approuvé par la FDA] afin qu'il ne fonde pas ou ne se mélange pas au chocolat moulé, garantissant ainsi une expérience pure.

Ne vous inquiétez pas des formes complexes ! Notre équipe de conception veille à ce que chaque conception d'un moule à chocolat soit non seulement un chef-d'œuvre, mais également facile à nettoyer et à entretenir.

Découvrez aussi nos moules pour chocolat, parfaits pour créer une variété de formes uniques et élégantes. Pour une expérience encore plus précise, explorez nos moules en silicone pour chocolat, idéaux pour obtenir des détails raffinés. Si vous aimez expérimenter, nos moules en silicone pour chocolats vous offrent une flexibilité supplémentaire pour donner vie à toutes vos créations.

Parcourir la collection de moules à chocolat PJ Bold

FDA-Approved
4.9 (843 Reviews)
Free Shipping over $35
Trier par:

Our Customers Speak: 1 Million Molds, Millions of Reasons to Choose Us

pjbold.com widget logo

What Makes Our Chocolate Molds Different?

Clean Detail on Every Piece

Fine embossed patterns, sharp edges, and smooth surfaces, our molds transfer every design detail from cavity to finished chocolate. Leaf vein lines, mushroom cap textures, or smooth geometric edges all come out crisp. No soft transitions or blurred design lines.

Silicone or Polycarbonate, You Pick

Silicone flexes for easy release and works for gummies and soft chocolates. Polycarbonate gives you a mirror-finish gloss that professional chocolatiers rely on for premium bonbons and filled pieces. Different recipes need different molds, you don't have to compromise.

Food-Safe Across the Collection

Every mold is FDA-compliant and BPA-free. The silicone molds meet FDA 21 CFR 177.2600, the federal rule for rubber in repeated food contact. The polycarbonate molds meet their own FDA food-contact regulation. Safe for chocolate, hot sugar, and filling ingredients.

Range of Cavity Sizes and Formats

Small truffle cavities for bite-sized chocolates, medium cavities for bonbons, large cavities for chocolate bars. The same collection covers every scale of chocolate work from single-serving truffles to gift-size bars. One catalog, every format.

How to Buy the Right Chocolate Mold

1

Pick Material Based on Finish

Silicone flexes, releases easily, and works best for soft chocolate or filled pieces where you need to bend the mold to unmold. Polycarbonate is rigid and gives you that glossy mirror finish on bonbons. For a deeper comparison, see our silicone vs polycarbonate molds guide.

Match the Shape to Your Audience

Classic bars work for everyday chocolate. Themed bars like the marijuana leaf chocolate bar or the Mushroom Thick Mold Candy Bar target specific audiences. For state-compliant infused bars, the CO, FL, OH THC Candy Bar Mold 74.45mL includes the regulatory symbol on each bar.

2
3

Consider Cavity Volume vs Bar Weight

Most standard chocolate bars weigh 40 to 100 grams. A 75mL to 80mL cavity gives you that range. For smaller gift or sample bars, the Leaf Thick Mold Candy Bar 80mL or a Square Thick Mold 5mL works for individual pieces. For truffle-sized bites, try the 10mL Heart Mold Polycarbonate.

Plan Your Batch Workflow

Home batches need small molds with 4 to 6 cavities. Small commercial kitchens need half-sheet or bar-format molds that fit standard baking trays. Large-scale candy production needs depositor-compatible half-sheets. Match mold format to your workflow so pouring, setting, and cleanup all happen on the same scale.

4

Tips for Making Chocolates

  • 1

    Temper the Chocolate

    Tempering is the difference between chocolate that shines and chocolate that blooms (gets white streaks). Heat dark chocolate to 115°F, cool to 82°F, then reheat gently to 88°F working temperature. Milk and white chocolate need slightly lower working temps. Proper tempering gives you glossy finish and a clean snap.

  • 2

    Polish the Cavities First

    Wipe each cavity with a lint-free cloth before pouring. This matters most for polycarbonate molds, moisture or dust in the cavity shows up as dull spots on finished chocolate. For silicone, a clean-and-dry check is enough. Either way, every pour should start with a clean cavity.

  • 3

    Tap Firmly to Remove Air Bubbles

    Air bubbles trapped in the design leave pits in the finished chocolate. Give the tray two or three firm taps on the counter right after pouring. The bubbles rise and break at the surface. This is especially important for detailed designs like embossed leaves or mushrooms.

  • 4

    Build Filled Bars in Layers

    For filled bars, pour a thin base layer first and let it set 5 to 10 minutes. Add your filling, caramel, ganache, nuts, or fruit. Top with another layer of chocolate and smooth. This gives you a proper chocolate shell with a center inside, just like premium confections.

  • 5

    Chill to Release Cleanly

    Chocolate contracts slightly as it cools, which helps it release from the cavity. Chill the filled mold in the fridge for 15 to 20 minutes. For polycarbonate, flip and tap. For silicone, flex the edges and push from the back. For more details on each method, see our guide on how to make chocolate molds, or learn about the best chocolate bar molds for homemade treats.

How to Care for Your Chocolate Molds

  • Silicone molds: wash with warm soapy water or put on the top rack of the dishwasher
  • Polycarbonate molds: hand-wash only with mild soap and a soft cloth, dishwashers dull the gloss finish
  • Dry all molds fully with a soft cloth or air-dry to prevent water spots on the next batch
  • Skip abrasive scrubbers and metal tools since they scratch both materials and reduce release quality
  • Store flat in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight
  • Check molds monthly for scratches, thin spots, or damage, and replace when the finish quality drops

FAQs

Silicone is flexible, releases easily, and works great for soft chocolates, gummies, and filled pieces. Polycarbonate is rigid and gives you a mirror-finish gloss ideal for premium bonbons. For the full breakdown, our silicone vs polycarbonate molds guide covers when to pick which one.

Yes. Silicone molds are made from platinum-cured, FDA-compliant, BPA-free silicone. Polycarbonate molds are made from FDA-approved food-grade polycarbonate. Both meet FDA 21 CFR Part 177, the federal regulations covering food-contact polymers.

Yes, silicone molds handle both. Chocolate sets faster than gummies, but the mold doesn't care what you pour. Wash between batches so flavors don't transfer. Polycarbonate molds work best with chocolate specifically, they won't damage gummies, but you'll get better results using silicone for gummy work.

Two things. First, temper chocolate properly, that's the single biggest factor for gloss. Second, polish polycarbonate molds with a lint-free cloth before pouring, and make sure silicone molds are clean and completely dry. Proper tempering plus a clean cavity gives you that premium mirror finish.

Yes. Our bar-format molds hold full-size chocolate bars of 38mL to 80mL per cavity. For a full step-by-step recipe and technique, see our guide on how to make chocolate molds. For picking the right mold, read our guide on best chocolate bar molds for perfect homemade treats.

Yes, both silicone and polycarbonate handle freezer temperatures without cracking. Chilling speeds up chocolate release, especially for polycarbonate molds where the chocolate contracts as it cools and pulls away from the cavity walls. Freezer-safe molds cut your setup time noticeably.