A center for every taste
Peppermint, strawberry yogurt or hazelnut cream: When it comes to Ritter Sport fillings, there is one to suit every taste. But how do the centers get inside the chocolate? To do this, the warm chocolate is piped onto the production belt, and machines pour the warm mass into a pre-heated, square-shaped mold, which is immediately flipped over so that part of the mass flows back out, leaving a thin layer of solidified chocolate on the walls of the mold - this is the chocolate shell. Marzipan or biscuit squares are then set into the shell, and liquid masses such as yogurt or
chocolate cream are injected through nozzles. The freshly-made chocolate is then refrigerated at 8°C to await further processing.
Ritter Sport makes 23 varieties of its 100g bar, six varieties of whole nut, and eight varieties of the 250g bar. Complementing these are three seasonal special editions – in spring, summer and winter – varieties sold for limited periods only. Ritter Sport staff are never short of ideas for flavors – be they delicate and fruity or tangy and strong – and they work on new varieties behind closed doors. The development kitchens see a lot of testing, experimenting and tasting. The trial chocolate is put into uncharacteristic white wrappers and sold to fans and bargain-hunters at the Ritter Sport factory shop in Waldenbuch. At the end of the day, it is the customer who decides whether a new creation is set to be a retail hit or a one-bar wonder.
15 minutes of fridge time
Once the filling has cooled and solidified, the employees pour on the underside of the bar. Energy generated by the CHP plant warms the edge of the chocolate mold so that the liquid chocolate coats the contents all round. The machine then removes the excess chocolate. The freshly cast chocolate bar is now almost finished – and is taken off to be cooled. Exhaust heat from the CHP plant is passed through an absorption cooler to produce refrigeration power, which is used to keep the product cool during production and storage. The chocolate stays in the refrigerator for 15 minutes at 8°C. The final stage in the production process is the twister, a machine, that turns the square chocolate bars over, allowing them to be removed from the mold safely and undamaged. A hammer then taps the bars out of the mold. To ensure the chocolate arrives in the supermarket in one piece, the conveyor belt whisks it to the packaging machine which puts it in air-tight wrappers and prints the relevant best-before date for the country of sale.