Chocolate(s) of the Day
Les gourmandises des Francais S.A.S.
Noir et sel de Camargue
(Extra dark chocolate and Camargue salt (bar))
Good ++
Weight: 1.41 oz. (40 g.) / 2.82 oz. (80 g.) in total bar
Calories: 225.6 calories in 1/2 bar
Cost: $9.50 for 1 bar
Purchased from: Il Parco, Presidio, San Francisco, CA
Les gourmandises des Francais S.A.S.
Noir, eclats de feves de cacao
(Extra dark chocolate with cocoa nibs (bar))
Good ++ - Good +++
Weight: .53 oz. (15 g.) / 1.06 oz. (30 g.) in total bar
Calories: 85.35 calories in 1/2 bar
Cost: $4.50 for 1 bar
Purchased from: Il Parco, Presidio, San Francisco, CA
Bonjour, and welcome to Day #12 of Chocolate and The Sea Theme Week--that featured a variety of chocolates with marine-related flavor additions and themes. The first of the two bars featured today contained sea salt and was adorned with a colorful, tattooed sailor.
This is also Day #2 of Chocolate and Seeds Week with chocolates that contain seeds (including seeds that are misnamed beans).** The second bar featured today has bits of cacao seeds (aka nibs).
Extra dark chocolate and Camargue salt (bar)
Aroma notes for this 71% French dark chocolate with salt bar included: deep, dark chocolate (West African, Forastero/Amelonado varieties of cacao); dark, fudge-y, with a touch of earth and very faint tree bark/peat; and barely detectable cookie.
Texture: fudge-y, luxe texture and melt interspersed with crystalline sparkles of salt.
Flavor notes included: Rich, deep dark chocolate (that tasted slightly darker than 71% cacao); faint and balanced loamy earth and peaty-bark; satisfying upticks of salt; and very faint tropical fruit and nut. The unrefined cane sugar contributed a subtle, natural, fruity sweetness.
I liked this flavorful, dark and not too sweet dark chocolate, with a thick, luxurious melt and texture. I enjoyed the small crystals of Camargue* salt (and the salt origin story); the colorful illustration of a sailor with the tall ship (and bird) tattoos, on the package; and the use of organic ingredients.
Ingredients: Cocoa mass* (Tanzania, Dominican Republic, Peru), unrefined cane sugar*, cocoa butter*, Camargue salt flower 0.3% (* = Ingredients from organic farming, certified by FR-BIO-O1)
Allergen-related information: "May contain traces of milk, gluten, eggs, soy, peanuts and nuts."
Extra dark chocolate with cocoa nibs (bar)
Aroma notes for this second 71% French dark chocolate bar--with cocoa nibs--included: deep, dark chocolate and faint fruit (melon, fig) and very faint chocolate cookie.
Texture: fudge-y, luxurious texture and melt in the base 71% dark chocolate; accented with crunchy bits of cocoa nibs.
Nit-picking time....Cacao beans or cocoa beans are actually seeds; and the terms cacao (or cocoa) nibs used to describe bits of beans, are (you guessed it) bits of seeds. It seems unlikely we'll correct these terms after using them for many decades now. But, a seed-themed week seemed like the best time to make this point.**
Flavor notes included: Rich, deep dark chocolate; subtle fig cookie and very faint diffuse tropical fruit (ripe pineapple, mango, sweet green banana, red apple); faint, balanced slightly acidic, woody (peaty) earth, and nut cookie.
I liked the depth and subtle complexity of the rich, cocoa flavor in this small dark chocolate bar; and that it wasn't too sweet (thank you!). The sugar did not mask some of the more nuanced cacao and chocolate flavors. I also liked the use of organic ingredients and the lack of emulsifiers and other additives.
Ingredients: Cocoa mass* (Tanzania, Dominican Republic, Peru), unrefined cane sugar*, cocoa butter*, cocoa nibs* (* = Ingredients from organic farmers)
Allergen-related information: "May contain traces of milk, gluten, eggs, soy, peanuts and nuts."
*Salts in chocolates come with their own sea-related origin stories. Camargue salt comes from salt marshes in the Camargue region of southern France. This Mediterranean fleur de sel is used extensively in cooking in Southern France. The harvested salt is pushed up into large piles near pink salt evaporation ponds. Flamingos in the region also enjoy feeding in this landscape with large, shallow expanses of sea water and salt ponds.
I could relate to this origin story. I live near the southern end of the San Francisco Bay (with salt marshes and a history of salt-making). We even have one, lone (live) flamingo that has been sighted feeding in some of the old salt ponds.
**We may end up updating/clarifying definitions for seeds and beans in the future; but the following is what I was taught decades ago: A seed comes from a mature flowering plant/tree. A "bean" is a type of seed that comes from legumes; e.g. plants in the pea family (peas, lentils, beans). Cacao, coffee and vanilla are not part of the legume family; but their seeds are, nonetheless, called beans.
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