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New Zealand Chocolate Lovers


By Nicola Tewhare, 2010-09-06
I live in paradise and the name of it is New Zealand. Here we are serious about our chocolate as recently Cadbury's tried to change an ingredient in their dairy milk chocolate and being staunch Kiwis we all got up in arms about it untill this corporate relented. pleased to say it is back to normal. Our dairy products are of the highest standard here and this makes our chocolate particularly good.
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Greetings Chocolate Fiends !
I teach chocolate decorating classes for the home chef in the San Francisco Bay Area, sell instructional DVDs and offer lip-smacking chocolate home parties for every occasion.

I have several demos coming up including locations such as Bloomingdales in San Francisco and Dreager's in both San Mateo and Blackhawk and I'm available for hire for holiday chocolate decorating demos in the San Fran area ;)

Look for "Emergency Chocolate Decorating" holiday classes coming this Fall in the SF Bay Area !

Please visit my website for dates and info.

xoxo
~kat aka The Chocolate Addict








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Japan's Wild Kit Kats...


By Susie Norris2, 2010-08-19

...from Zester Daily

The electric green and pink box contained a candy bar like nothing I'd ever seen: a green tea and cherry blossom Kit Kat bar from Japan. This exotic gift came courtesy of my friend Susan Heeger, who had recently returned from a trip to the island nation. I marveled at the package and its contents: How could the Kit Kat inside the box, with its cherry blossom wrapper and its playful Hello Kitty sensibility, dare to differ so wildly from its American cousin? Why did it have its own box, pre-printed with a mailing label? Uniformity is prized in the mass-marketing of candy bars, so I wondered why Kit Kat, the crunchy, milk-chocolate drenched wafers sold in a wrapper as red as the stripes on the American flag, would contain green tea and cherry blossoms in Japan. And why was it adorned with a Nestle label when it's a Hershey's product in the States?
In America, the Kit Kat brand of candy bar is licensed by Hershey's, and flavors are only modest variations of the classic -- a little peanut butter here, a little dark chocolate there. Each "finger of the traditional four finger bar can be snapped off one at a time, thus inspiring its new tag-line: Break Time, Anytime. Yet this Japanese version seemed to be a wild mutation of the classic. Made of green-tinted white chocolate with a faint hint of green tea flavor, it offered a satisfying sweetness like the American version, but with the pronounced sugary notes of white chocolate and cherry fruit anchored by the undertones of bitter green tea

My friend Susan explained that Kit Kats are tokens of good luck there. They have become popular because of the similarity between the bar's name and the Japanese phrase kitto katsu, which roughly translates to "You will surely win!" This inspires parents to send school children a Kit Kat bar as a good luck charm on a school day. Or, kitto katto can be understood to bestow Kit Kat with the less positive significance of "you will surely miss the cut. Gifts of a single Kit Kat are a running joke for senior high school students taking university entrance examinations, according to Wikipedia.

Daring flavors of Kit Kat have been released for short periods of time in Japan: maple syrup, melon, vanilla bean, grape, apple, banana, caramel, kiwifruit, azuki, green tea, yuzu and cherry blossom have all appeared on shelves. Further building on the teen market, Nestle created a music label in 2005 and bundled Kit Kats with CDs, which has propelled the Kit Kat to become the No. 1 selling candy bar there.

In the States, the candy bar has a much more conservative stance as one of the great classics of American childhood. It has changed little since its early days. Kit Kats were first developed by Rowntree in England in 1935 as Rowntree's Chocolate Crisp. The formula of chocolate-coated wafers stacked an inch tall to form a "finger, combined in a hand of four, enrobed in milk chocolate and wrapped in a bright red wrapper changed little in the course of a century and was a bestseller. Nestle bought Rowntree in 1988 and licensed the brand to Hersheys for U.S. distribution. Aside from a few stylistic changes to the label and variations such as the "chunky textured option, it is still the same crispy, crunchy confection it has been for 80 years.

Want to get your hands on one of the Japanese varieties? Many of the adventuresome flavors of Kit Kat are available online through a quick Google search. Or try this recipe for white chocolate and green tea cherry truffles, inspired by my Japanese gift.

White Chocolate and Green Tea Cherry Truffles
These truffles make a powdery first impression as you bite through sweetened green tea powder and crispy rice coating. Next, you'll discover the smooth sweetness of white chocolate and cream, interrupted only by the occasional morsel of dark cherry.
Makes about 30 truffles.
Ingredients
16 ounces premium white chocolate (such as Lindt or Valrhona), chopped (2 cups)
1 cups heavy cream
2 green tea bags
teaspoon salt
cup dried cherries, chopped
1 teaspoon vanilla
About cup matcha (Japanese green tea powder)
cup confectioner's sugar
cup Rice Krispies cereal, ground to a powder in a food processor

Directions
1.In a double boiler, slightly melt the white chocolate over simmering water. Place the cream, tea bags, salt, and cherries in a heat-proof measuring cup and heat for 1 minute. (Alternatively, heat these ingredients in a small saucepan just until they simmer. Allow to cool for 1 minute.) Remove the teabags. Add the cream mixture to the melted chocolate and stir. Add the vanilla. This will form a lumpy mixture at first; keep stirring and it will smooth out into a white chocolate ganache.

2.Place the bowl of ganache in the refrigerator and allow it to cool for at least 1 hour. If it becomes too hard to work with, just heat it up for 30 seconds or so in a microwave oven on low.

3.Use 2 spoons to scoop 1-inch balls onto a baking sheet or tray. Using the palms of your hands, roll the balls into smooth, uniform shapes.

4.Sift the matcha and confectioners sugar together in a small bowl. Mix in the powdered Rice Krispies cereal. Dip each white chocolate ganache ball into the matcha mixture, shake off the excess and set aside. Repeat until the desired number of truffles have been made.

5.Store at room temperature in an airtight box for the first day, then in the refrigerator after that to preserve the fresh cream.

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Chocolate on MAui


By Melanie Boudar, 2010-08-06
Our Sweet Paradise Chocolatier chocolate kitchen is relocating to Maui next month at the Lahaina Design Center.Buildout is underway! We will have a drip coffee bar, open kitchen concept and walk up counter for chocolate.
Come visit if you are in Maui.
75 Kupuohi St, Lahaina Industrial Plaza ...just a couple blocks off the main highway.
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Best cacao beans of Brazil


By Adeir Boida de Andrade, 2010-07-30
Cacao beans of our farm in Camamu/Bahia were chosen among the best of Brazil in Expo Brasil Chocolate from 22 to 25 of last July.The matter is in the link below (unhappily, only in Portuguese). Brazil is investing a lot in quality of the cocoa, and among dozens of farmers, we rest among the three better beans of Brazil in aroma flavor and quality! http://www.ceplac.gov.br/restrito/lerNoticia.asp?id=1633
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Hotel Chocolat.

The name conjures up romantic images of languorous days spent in tropical splendor. Which is precisely the point, according to Angus Thirlwell, co-founder of the UK-based company . The company has been around for nearly twenty years, originally as a catalog retailer, explains Thirwell, but about seven years ago we realized that our brand really didn't reflect our aspirations for the future so we decided to change our name.

'Chocolat' is more romantic than 'chocolate' and we wanted a name that would transport people, in their minds, to this magical, escapist, place that provides physical pleasure and nourishment of the soul. Once we came up with 'Hotel' we immediately knew it was right choice.

Sometime this Fall, Hotel Chocolat will be more than a collection of over 40 retail boutiques in the UK and the US (in Boston) it will also grow to include an actual luxury eco resort on the Caribbean island of St Lucia , closing the circle and bringing the metaphysical to the real world.


The main plantation house at Hotel Chocolat on Rabot Estate.



Rockers on the Plantation House veranda for guests to relax in.


Located on the Rabot Estate, a World Heritage Site , the Hotel Chocolat features a view down to the ocean soaring to views up to 1000 m (over 3000 feet) twin volcanoes. The hotel boasts eco-conscious barefoot luxury in an intimate boutique - only 14 rooms - setting. True to its cacao heritage, the hotel's 60-seat restaurant, Boucan, is built on the site of an old boucan (throughout the Caribbean today, a boucan is place where cacao is fermented, and boucan and buccaneer share the same linguistic roots, perhaps going all the way back to Arawak word for barbecue).


A view down to the water from Rabot Estate.



The Pitons from Rabot Estate.


But this is only one part of the Hotel Chocolat story. St Lucia has a long history of cocoa production but there has been little or no export from the country in a long time. Rabot Estate is not only the site of a hotel, it is the center of the company's efforts to reinvigorate the local cacao industry which has fallen on hard times; many established cacao farms were turned over to faster-growing bananas. With support from the Board of Directors and the Government of St Lucia, Hotel Chocolat representatives met with independent growers all over the island to see what they could do to help.

From the beginning, we knew we needed and wanted independent cocoa growers in St Lucia to work with us, says Thirwell. We met with them and asked them to join our team. We guaranteed to purchase 100% of the crop and we pay a premium that is as much as 30% over the international commodity price. We also provide technical assistance. There are no middlemen, so all the benefit goes to the farmer.

When we started out a couple of years ago we worked with two farmers. Today we're working with more than 80 independent growers that supplement what we grow on Rabot Estate. We've established a central collection facility where we oversee all the fermentation and drying to control quality, and we've established a number of nurseries on the Estate to provide farmers with subsidized seedlings. It's still a little too early to precisely quantify all the benefits to farmers and the local economy of what we're doing, but growing from two to eighty farmers in two years is an indication that we must be doing something right.


Drying racks on Rabot Estate.


The company intends to begin making chocolate in small batches from defined areas of Rabot Estate and from different areas of the island. The goal is to locate areas that exhibit interesting terroir characteristics and then to commercialize them. The hotel is set to open this coming November (2010) and there is a site for the chocolate factory nearby. This close proximity will enable Hotel Chocolat to experiment freely on a small scale with a focus on small batch and vintaged production. Other beans grown on the island will be sent to a cocoa processor who, working in close collaboration, will create chocolate on a larger scale for use in other products.

One aspect of opening the hotel is especially interesting to me: agro-tourism offers a means of independent verification of the claims made for an operation by people who are visiting. Hotel Chocolat is committed to a total open access policy where anyone staying at the hotel can ask any of the farmers any questions they want about the operation of the business. Visitors can see for themselves the fermentation and drying and walk through the farms to inspect them. This is a very low cost alternative to expensive certification programs and it's straightforward and transparent - anyone with an interest in finding out what is really going can take personal responsibility for doing so.

The company has been approached by groups interested in its approach, called Engaged Ethics, and there is a move underway to transplant the approach they are pioneering on St Lucia to several other Caribbean islands, including Jamaica and St Vincent.

Not content to innovate on the plantation, Hotel Chocolat announced recently that it was raising money through a private bond issue offered to the approximately 100,000 members of its Tasting Club. The dividends for investment are truly sweet investors receive their dividends in chocolate. (Just as I was getting ready to post this article, I received an e-mail with an update on the progress of the bond issue. Those details (a smashing success so far) can be read here .)
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If you register on LivingECO.com before August 10, 2010, you can enter to win vegan organic chocolate truffles in a paper box infused with wildflower seeds (and some other nice eco-friendly gifts). After you finishing eating the chocolate, you can plant the box, and wildflowers will grow. http://www.livingecho.com/contest/
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the chocolate song ...


By deedee devi, 2010-07-08
my friend just posted this: Some Chocolate song funny song indeed!
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I arrived home from a road trip in the wee hours on the 4th of July and was too tired to unload the car. In addition to all the equipment for my new chocolate factory I'll be opening in the fall, I had 400 lbs of cocoa butter and over 150 lbs of beans in the back of the car. I was convinced that I had the best smelling car (especially at the end of a two week road trip).

The next morning I had confirmation of just how good it smelled. When going to open the back of the car, I noticed the windshield wiper was broken. Then I noticed the paw print smudged in the two week build up of grime on the back of the car. It took me a few more minutes before I noticed the puncture marks all along the back bumper.

Yes, even bears appreciate good chocolate.

Fortunately for me, the bear was unsuccessful in reaching the chocolate. The car is a different story.

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