Friday, July 24, 2020

Slitti Cacao Pregiati - LatteNero 70% (bar) - July 24, 2020

Chocolate of the Day:

Slitti Cacao Pregiati
LatteNero 70% (bar)
Good ++
Weight: 1.76 oz. (50 g.) / 3.5 oz. (100 g.) in total bar
Calories: 299 calories in 1/2 bar
Cost: $8.95 for 1 bar
Purchased from: Chocosphere.com, online order

Welcome to Day #7 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

This bar had a bold dark chocolate aroma with earthy, fermented fruit notes, and a relatively smooth melt and texture. The flavor was similar to the aroma; however it was mellowed (and arguably improved) by the addition of milk. 

This was an ultra-dark 70% milk chocolate bar that worked. Seventy percent of this bar was cacao/cocoa. Normally that would mean that the remaining 30 percent would be sugar. However, with a dark milk chocolate like this, some of that 30 percent is whole milk powder, and the percent of sugar may then be lower--closer to what you might find in an 80 percent cacao bar, pushing it into a more profound flavor feast. Less sugar means greater access to the authentic or original cacao flavor. 

The same ultra-dark milk chocolate flavor extended into a lingering finish.

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Guido Gobino - Latte 35% Sao Tome e Principe - July 23, 2020

Chocolate of the Day: 

Guido Gobino 
Latte 35% Sao Tome e Principe
Good 
Weight: .194 oz. (.5 g.) in 1 piece
Calories: 29 calories (estimate) in 1 piece
Cost: $ missing information ($0.89 estimate for 1 piece)
Purchased from: Chocosphere.com, part of a larger online order

Welcome to Day #6 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

Today's Latte 35% Sao Tome e Principe chocolate was from Guido Gobino (Torino (Turin), Italy).

Swathed in gold foil, this individually-wrapped, disc-shaped piece was sweet, creamy, relatively flavorful milk chocolate, made using cacao from Sao Tome e Principe off the west coast of Africa.

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Luigi Zaini S.p.A. - Cioccolato Fondente (Dark Chocolate bar) - July 22, 2020

Chocolate of the Day: 

Luigi Zaini S.p.A.
Cioccolato Fondente Extra (Dark Chocolate (bar)
Good + - Good ++
Weight: 1.325 oz. (37.5 g.) / 2.65 oz. (75 g.) in total bar
Calories: 195 calories in 1/2 bar
Cost: $1.99 for 1 bar
Purchased from: Grocery Outlet Bargain Market, Palo Alto, CA

Welcome to Day #5 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

Today's Cioccolato Fondente Extra (Dark Chocolate bar) was from Luigi Zaini S.p.A. (Milano (Milan), Italy)--a company founded over a century ago (1913).

This dark chocolate (no cocoa % listed on package) had a sweet chocolate, faint coconut, green and very slight waxy aroma notes. The chocolate was uniform in texture and flavor and had a pleasant dark chocolate taste.

Ingredients: Sugar, chocolate liquor, cocoa butter, soy lecithin (emulsifier), natural flavor. 

*Made in Italy and imported into the U.S. by Lettieri and Co., Brisbane, CA

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Venchi - Cuor Di Cacao 85% (bar) - July 21, 2020

Chocolate of the Day: 

Venchi
Cuor Di Cacao 85% (bar)
Good ++
Weight: 1.76 oz. (50 g.) / 3.52 oz. (100 g.) in 1 bar
Calories: 300 calories in 1/2 bar
Cost: $7.75 for 1 bar
Purchased from: Chocosphere.com, online order

Welcome to Day #4 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

This thick, faceted ultra-dark had fermented fruit, earth, green jungle, mild sour/bitter aroma and faint vanilla tobacco aroma and flavor notes. The taste also had a light marshmallow floral note. The texture was relatively smooth and creamy.

The chocolate possessed a variety of deep and serious notes, all balanced and with soft edges. 

It lacked brightness and light -- no ripe citrus or summer peach and strawberry Criollo cacao notes here. But, then again, one may not associate these traits with 85% chocolate. 

Ingredients: Chocolate liquor (chocolate liquor from Ecuador 26.5%, sugar, cocoa butter, emulsifier: soy lecithin, natural vanilla flavor.

Venchi - Nougatine Bonbons - July 20, 2020

Chocolate of the Day:

Venchi
Nougatine Bonbons 
Good ++ - Good +++
Weight: .388 oz. (11 g.) for 2 pieces (1.94 oz. (5.5 g. each))
Calories: 58 calories (estimate) in 2 pieces -- 539 cals. in 100 g.
Cost: $1.90 for 2 pieces
Purchased from: Chocosphere.com, part of online order

Welcome to Day #3 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

Today's Nougatine Bonbons were from Venchi (Torino (Turin), Italy).

Nougatine is an historic specialty for Venchi. The recipe for today's confection is said to date back to 1878. First, sugar is caramelized in a copper cooking pot and then bits of special, local (IGP) hazelnuts are incorporated. Then the nougat center is covered with chocolate.

The 56% dark chocolate coating around these capsule-shaped bonbons covered a hard, crunchy center of toffee-like caramelized bits of Italian IGP hazelnuts. These special hazelnuts from the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy had a special sweet, creamy roasted nutty flavor that lingered into the finish. 

Because of the capsule shape of these shiny, individually-wrapped chocolates, I was tempted to write a prescription to myself: take two of these each morning; to be taken daily, for the rest of 2020.

Ingredients: Hazelnut Piedmont i.G.P. caramelized (sugar, Piedmont hazelnut 48%) 66.2% cocoa mass, sugar, cocoa powder, cocoa butter, coating agent: gum Arabic, emulsifier: soy lecithin, natural vanilla flavor. (Venchi chocolates are "naturally gluten free;" however, (this nougatine) may contain traces of other nuts, milk, fruits.)

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Guido Gobino - 80% Chontalpa dark chocolate - July 19, 2020

Chocolate of the Day: 

Guido Gobino
80% Extra Bitter Chontalpa dark chocolate
Good ++ - Good +++
Weight: .58 oz. (16.5 g.) in 3 pieces
Calories: 87 calories (estimate) in 3 pieces
Cost: $0.89 x 3 = $2.67 for 3 small pieces
Purchased from: Chocosphere.com, online order

Welcome to Day #2 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

Today's 80% Extra Bitter Chontalpa* dark chocolate from Guido Gobino (Turin (Torino), Italy) had a relatively complex chocolate aroma and flavor with balanced, molasses spice, very faint green, lightly tart-sweet, concentrated fruit notes. 

The fruit notes--ripe, dried blackberry, goji berry, dried mulberry and golden raisin--came from the cacao type and terroir/origin environment, fermentation and subsequent processing steps; and the fruit gave this ultra-dark 80% chocolate a relatively sweet flavor--an appealing characteristic for those who like a bright fruit-sweet taste without the additional sugar.

Despite the "Extra Bitter" in the product name, this was a balanced, flavorful chocolate with relatively low bitterness.

*Note: These small disc-shaped chocolates (produced from single origin cacao in Chontalpa, Tabasco, Mexico) were made for an event (Presidio Slow Food in this case); and this size may not always be directly available to consumers.


Venchi - Granblend "Montezuma" Fruttato 65% squares - July 18, 2020

Chocolate of the Day: 

Venchi
Granblend "Montezuma" Fruttato 65% squares
Good 
Weight: .53 oz. (15 g.) in 2 squares (7.5 grams each)
Calories: 86 calories in 2 squares
Cost: $2.40 for 2 squares ($1.20 x 2) + shipping
Purchased from: Chocosphere.com, online order

Ciao and welcome to Day #1 of Italian Chocolate Theme Week.

Today's Granblend "Montezuma" Fruttato 65% squares were from Venchi, made using cacao from four plantations (primarily Madagascar and perhaps other sources). Venchi is a large, privately held chocolate manufacturer based in Castelleto Stura, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy). 

Italian Chocolate Overview
The first chocolate makers in Italy date back to the late 1700s. Italy is also home to some of the longest running chocolate businesses in the world. There are still several family and privately held chocolate companies in existence after more than a century.* 

In the 1800s, companies like Caffarel, Pernigotti, Streglio, Peyrano and Venchi got their start. Venchi was founded in 1878 in Torino (Turin), Italy, by chocolatier Silviano Venchi, and became well-known for their chocolate and hazelnut nougatine candies.

Fruttato Squares
Today's Venchi dark chocolate 65% cocoa squares had an attractive circle of pink (flavored white chocolate?) on each square. The individually-wrapped squares had a subtle chocolate and fruit (strawberry - strawberry rose-vanilla aroma) and flavor.

The inclusion of whole milk powder yielded a smooth, creamy melt and mouthfeel. The milk may also have muted the sweetness a bit (OK by me) and mellowed flavors (maybe not so good, depending on the flavors that were muted). 

Madagascar cacao is often associated with red berry and citrus notes. A touch of "vanilla in ground berries"** and an acidifier (citric acid)** were added to this chocolate--perhaps to enhance the berry and citrus notes. (A salute to Madagascar terroir perhaps?)

In any case, the subtle flavors were nicely balanced, and we're asked to accept the trade-off of adding milk to dark chocolate, i.e. you get creamier texture but tamer flavors. This could well have been a good choice; but we'll never know. 

Venchi tasting notes: "Grand blend Montezuma*** with four plantations that combine to give off unique sensations of exotic fruit, bananas and vanilla, a prized plantation from Madagascar with aromas of ripe fruit and plane tree centrally embeds a citrus-fermented rosacea chocolate to preserve its characteristics."

*In the U.S., U.K. and other countries large, historic chocolate makers' operations are now primarily owned by, or are managed as, large, publicly-traded corporations with brand portfolios. Cailler, one of the oldest chocolate companies, founded in 1819, in Switzerland, now is part of Nestle. One notable local exception where I live in Northern California is: Guittard Chocolate, founded in the 1800s south of San Francisco and the company is still going strong in 2020 with descendants from the original founder.

**Ingredients: "Madagascar cocoa mass 44.2%, sugar, cocoa butter, whole milk powder, cocoa mass, emulsifier: soy lecithin, acidifier: citric acid, vanilla in ground berries, natural vanilla flavor." 

***Montezuma
The "Montezuma" name on the label was a bit of a puzzle. Montezuma was the name of a hero-god in Indian (extending up into SW U.S.) mythology; and he was the Aztec chief  that ruled over a mighty empire in what is now Mexico in the 1500s). Montezuma is said to have consumed a large amount of cacao. This leader eventually met his downfall when forces led by Spanish conquistador, Hernan Cortes (Cortez) arrived looking for wealth and gold. And, Cortez brought some of the first cacao back to Spain with him. Cacao would eventually made its way to Italy and the rest of Europe as well. And, given the wonders of today's complex food supply chains, today's chocolate ended up in Northern California, closer to the original source of cacao (Central and South America).




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