Chocolate of The Day
Wild West Chocolate
Bear Claws - Huckleberry & Cashew 50% Oatmilk Chocolate Nut Clusters
Weight: 2 oz. (56 g.) / 2.96 oz. (84 g.) in total bar
Calories: 320 calories in 4 pieces
Cost: $8.99 for 1 package of 6 pieces
Purchased from: Wild West Chocolate, online order
Welcome to Day #5 of Chocolate & Bears Week.
Today's Bear Claws - Huckleberry & Cashew Organic Oatmilk Chocolate Nut Clusters were from Wild West Chocolate, LLC (Missoula, MT)--and featured an image of an impressive brown bear standing in tall grass with snow-capped mountains in the background.*
Aroma and flavor notes for these individually-wrapped bear claws included: chocolate; dark sweet berries; faint vanilla; and very faint nut and oat.
Texture: The base chocolate was relatively smooth, with a slight oatmilk-y texture. The cashew chunks added an attractive, soft crunch.
I liked the huckleberry (and blueberry) flavor additions (extracts); the very subtle and authentic fruit blend (date, mulberry, peach and mango powders)--used to sweeten this chocolate instead of sugar; and the small, rich, roasted cashew pieces. The individually-wrapped "claws" made them practical for sharing with others.
One last big plus with all the chocolates from Wild West Chocolate: they're made with Organic and Regenerative Organic Certified ingredients.
Ingredients: Organic Oatmilk Chocolate (Organic Fruit Blend [Powdered Date++, Powdered Mulberry+, Powdered Peach+, Powdered Mango+], Organic Cocoa Liquor++, Organic Cocoa Butter++, Oatmilk+, Vanilla Extract+), Roasted Cashews+ (Cashews, Salt), Huckleberry Extract+, Blueberry Extract+. (+ = Organic; ++ = Regenerative Organic Certified; Cocoa Liquor and Cocoa Butter: Fair Trade Certified 39% of Product.)
Allergen-related information: Contains Cashews. "Manufactured on equipment that processes tree nuts, peanuts, milk, wheat and soy."
*The photo of this powerful-looking bear made me think: this is not the bear I'd want to meet while hiking or camping in the wilderness; but it sure looks great in nature. One early morning, years ago, a Black Bear (near Yosemite National Park in California) walked into my tent when I was still in my sleeping bag. This nose-to-nose encounter was enough for me. (You know you're too close to a bear when you can smell what it just ate for breakfast.)