M. C. A. Hogarth ([info]haikujaguar) wrote,
@ 2008-03-13 14:04:00
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Current mood:tired but chocolanated
Entry tags:food, photos

Eating Elemental Chocolates
This one's for [info]janni. :)

99%


Let me say this first: I'm not a fan of Lindt. Someone is going to say, "I've tried 99% cacao Lindt chocolate and it was awful!" and I will say, "You're right. It is." I don't even like normal Lindt... I think the mouthfeel is awful and there's too much fat in it and the flavors are muddy and plastic. The 99% in particular is chalky, which is an instant game-over for no-sugar chocolate.

But, having said that: if you really want to know what the flavor of chocolate is, you have to try it without sugar. And unless you're in a truly high-end restaurant, your baking chocolate isn't going to cut it. You need 99% or 100% cacao eating chocolate, which is very hard to find.

The Michel Cluizel I've photographed (badly) above is pretty good. But my absolute favorite is the Domori Puro, at 100% cacao mass.

Domori Puro


If you can find this stuff or order it, then I recommend it as your best chance to have an excellent elemental chocolate experience.

A couple of things to keep in mind:

1. What you're about to eat is not dessert, but food. If you eat it thinking it's going to be a sweet treat, you will hate it. Instead, think of it as an ingredient or a food you'd eat on its own, or with a glass of wine and with cheese. Something savory, not sweet.

2. You cannot do this with old chocolate. Unlike with sweet chocolates, you can't shrug off an old or overheated or bloomed sugarless chocolate. The texture is too much part of the experience, and the subtlety is completely ruined by age or poor storage. It has to be fresh. A proper 99%-100% chocolate is smooth. Like satin in your mouth.

3. Be alert for the nuances. The Domori Puro tends to have a floral high-note; the Michel Cluizel above is more earthy, almost dusky. Others will have acid notes, coffee tones, or an almost incense-like aroma. These are the primary flavors and smells of chocolate... this is the thing you're aiming to experience.

4. Eat this stuff with a clear palette. Water first. Then hold it in your mouth and let it dissolve. Smell it while it's in your mouth.

With a fresh bar of high quality eating chocolate at 99-100% cacao mass, you get a really phenomenal experience. Not just the taste of real chocolate, but the sudden ephiphany of something you thought you knew already being something completely different than expected.

Personally, I love it. :)


Also, for those keeping track:

Celebration!


I did go get my celebratory chocolate drink. I'm well past the 25 books sold mark and head toward the 50! Thank you, everyone!


Stardancer Home.


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[info]tuftears
2008-03-13 06:44 pm UTC (link)
Mmm, I sampled a bit of this Domori Pure stuff when [info]dracosphynx shared some. I do agree that it's quite tasty! As for sweet, or food versus dessert, I can't say that I've particularly noted those issues, it's still a dessert item to me even if it's 100%.

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[info]captainq
2008-03-13 07:29 pm UTC (link)
You could compare this to drinking a fine tea.

I've found some Chinese rice and green teas are best without any sweeteners.

Thank you for sharing! I must try this someday.

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[info]dracosphynx
2008-03-13 11:17 pm UTC (link)
If you are ever in the Berkeley, CA area, I recommend going to Teance on 4th Street. The tastings may seem a bit expensive, but it can be worth it.

I was curious about their Phoenix Single Grove Phoenix (Almond Fragrance), but it was $28 for a 2oz bag. (Before people get sticker-shock, given that I could get two or three steepings from the leaves, and that 2oz makes a lot of cups, it's not all that much more than, say, some sodas.) So I had a tasting of that, and the barista (?) showed me the proper way to brew that one. (Instead of 'rinsing' the leaves before steeping, he poured the water out of the brewing cup and put the leaves in to 'waken' from the steam/humidity, using slightly more than the normal amount of tea, and steeped for 15 seconds.) When I sipped the tea and found it good, but said I mostly tasted it in the back of the throat, I was advised to slurp the tea. It made an amazing difference.

I since tried another high-grade oolong I had previously bought with those instructions, and it made a notable difference. Eventually, perhaps, my palate will reach the point where I am willing to try one of the yearly competition winning oolong teas as a tasting there.

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[info]captainq
2008-03-14 02:54 am UTC (link)
Ooooh. I never even thought of going to a tea house. Alas, I'm in Phoenix, so I'll have to see about finding one around here.

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[info]naturespirit
2008-03-13 08:18 pm UTC (link)
Aw, man, I have got to get me some of that. I love really dark chocolates. I even like the Lindt 99%, I can just imagine how much better this stuff is.

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[info]typographer
2008-03-13 08:24 pm UTC (link)
I've tried two different 99% varieties (one a Belgian import that is only carried at one specialty store that I know of, the other a Japanese brand a co-worker had me try--I didn't even know Lindt had one, not sure I would have tried it) and didn't quite like either one as much as the 91% organic chocolate bar that is regularly carried at the foofy grocery store in our neighborhood. But I do really like the 91% one.

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[info]fatfred
2008-03-13 08:49 pm UTC (link)
As a diabetic, that has me intrigued.
May have to try it!

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[info]avenginglioness
2008-03-13 10:14 pm UTC (link)
I have a package for you. A small gift. As a thank you for the pewter humpback whale you sent me. It's ready to be mailed off. I just have to find money to actually mail it. :>

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[info]haikujaguar
2008-03-14 12:42 am UTC (link)
Eee! :D

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[info]shdragon
2008-03-13 11:37 pm UTC (link)
I still haven't bought mine. I'm a sucky patron. (Granted, I've been dealing with identity theft issues, and closing and reopening all my bank accounts kinda puts a damper on being able to purchase anything for a while..)

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[info]haikujaguar
2008-03-14 12:43 am UTC (link)
You are not a sucky patron!

I'd prefer the book had long steady sales than to have everyone buy it in the first week and then... nothing. -_-

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[info]mauser
2008-03-13 11:58 pm UTC (link)
My vote for worst chocolate ever: Anything by Cadbury.

I can't put my chocolate tastes up there with yours, but even in the drug store aisles, there are things to avoid. Only Cadbury could screw up something as benign as Milk chocolate.

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[info]haikujaguar
2008-03-16 12:20 am UTC (link)
I like Caramello bars!

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[info]mauser
2008-03-16 06:59 pm UTC (link)
Well, there the focus is on the Carmel...

I recently had a "Fruit and Nut" bar. And the chocolate frankly tasted more like Carob.

(My favorite quote about Carob: "Carob is a substance which, when mixed with the correct proportions of sugar and milk, yields a substance which has roughly the same color, texture, and general appearance as chocolate. Of course, the same claim can be made in favor of dirt.")

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[info]janni
2008-03-14 03:13 am UTC (link)
(makes notes) :-)

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[info]damewindhunde
2008-03-14 03:25 am UTC (link)
Oh, I really want to try that now! I wonder if it could be considered Umami?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umami

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[info]haikujaguar
2008-03-16 12:19 am UTC (link)
Hmmm. Not sure. I was under the impression that umami was almost impossible to pick out. More a feeling of heartiness than an actual flavor... I don't know much about it, though. :)

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[info]endlessland
2008-03-14 07:12 pm UTC (link)
Hmm, I wonder if the local Roger's Chocolates would have something like that. I don't think we have any shops that sell gourmet chocolate, even in the city, which is a 40 minute drive away. I shall look around regardless, for this sounds wonderful! I don't like having a lot of sugar and I've recently become addicted to dark, high percent chocolates.

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[info]haikujaguar
2008-03-16 12:19 am UTC (link)
The internet is your friend! You can order some, somewhere, I'm sure. :)

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[info]anisette_toast
2008-03-16 12:13 am UTC (link)
Not sure if they are sugar-free or not, but a unique chocolate experience is Vosges chocolates (www.vosgeschocolate.com).

They have a wide variety of unique chocolate flavors and definitely fit into the category of "experience" rather than just your regular wolfing down of a Hershey bar.

Probably a little more "dessert-like," but not all of them. And they are fantastic with wine tastings.

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[info]haikujaguar
2008-03-16 12:18 am UTC (link)
I've had five or six of their bars. They definitely do delicate and interesting flavor combinations. To me it's one of those novelty things, though. You eat it once and then you've eaten it, and you're done. Of the ones I've had the Creole bar is the most repeatable experience. The Bacon bar was... curious. The Black Pearl was really well done, though I wouldn't want to eat a lot of it (I tasted some of [info]hyanan's when she bought it) and the Macha bar is one of the only "tea and chocolate" bars I've had where you can actually tell that the extraneous flavor is tea. :)

I should probably try the Gianduja bar at some point, since I like hazelnuts.

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