Lydgate Farms Chocolate Tasting

Kaua’i is the oldest of the Hawaiian Islands with the most developed soils and fertile growing conditions. Known as the “Garden Island”, it’s purported to be the largest coffee grower of the US (although I have to admit I was not a big fan of the coffee I tried there). One of the island’s many farms is Lydgate Farms – a family-run 46-acre farm now managed by Will Hibbs Lydgate.

Situated in Wailua, above the town of Kapa’a (Kaua’i’s most populous town), Lydgate Farms grows a variety of tropical fruit – like rambutan, apple banana, lilikoi (passion fruit), longyan, and soursop – and produces honey, vanilla and bean-to-bar chocolate. The farm offers a unique and comprehensive 3-hour long tour of the property, complete with a full tasting of all these products.

The tour was fully booked during our visit, but we drove up to the farm anyway hoping to at least buy some small chocolates from the store. We were treated to something much more special: a free chocolate tasting with Will Lydgate himself!

After introducing himself and giving the back-story of the farm, Will brought us over to a near-by cacao tree and picked a ripe pod right off the branch. With a well-used knife, he cut into the husk to reveal the inner beans and surrounding white pulp. “Taste this,” he said, entreating us each with a bean covered in white flesh. It was so sweet! I was instantly reminded of lychee and longyan – a soft, juicy fruit surrounding a hard seed. Then, Will had us bite into the seed itself – the part that eventually produces the chocolate. It was so bitter! As he went on to explain, the bitterness comes from toxic compounds that detract animals from eating it. To make the chocolate that we know and love, the seed needs to be fermented, roasted, ground, tempered and molded. Anything besides 100% chocolate has added sugar to offset the bean’s natural bitterness.

Once we’d had a chance to taste the raw ingredient, Will gave a sample of Lydgate Farm’s three different chocolate bars: a 70% dark chocolate, a 70% chocolate with Hawaiian salt, and a 50% milk chocolate with coffee and cacao nibs. Each of the chocolates were solid: great texture with a smooth mouth-feel as it melted, and – similar to the Maui Ku’ia Estate Chocolate we tasted before – the Lydgate Farm’s chocolate had a slightly brighter note, hinting at the tropical terroir. But, I thought the taste was pretty monotone throughout. There wasn’t a blooming of different flavors as the chocolate melted and covered my tongue. Of the three chocolates, I was surprised (again) that my favorite was the 50% milk with coffee and cacao nibs. There must be something about this flavor combination – chocolate and coffee – that really excites my taste buds. (I really liked the Mokka Cappuccino chocolate from Maui Ku’ia Estate Chocolate too.) The inclusions also give it a fun texture. My tongue would roll around the nibs while the chocolate melted. Will said that the milk chocolate is a common favorite amongst all customers.

But the tasting didn’t stop with just the chocolate! Will then had us taste two versions of his farm’s chocolate-covered macadamia nuts, a common Hawaiian treat. However, his may be the only one to use only Hawaiian grown chocolate and macadamia nuts. He even candied the macadamia nuts in honey produced on the farm. A lot of work in this one bite! How should I approach eating something so special? Should I be give the chocolate my full attention and lick the coating off the nut, and then appreciate the candied macadamia nut separately? Or should I have them together and just chomp through the whole thing? Luckily, he gave us two each, so I tried both approaches. Turns out it’s better to just be a (chocolate) monster and chomp away.

And there was still more treats! While he didn’t have any farm-produced vanilla available for us to taste, we got to sample their honey, which was very rich. The absolute highlight of the entire tasting though was a cacao nectar popsicle – something completely unique to his farm. The cacao nectar is made from the sweet white flesh inside the pod. Will is convinced that cacao nectar is one of the least known but amazing products out there that only South Americans are commercializing right now. He thinks it will blow-up and become mainstream in several years’ time. I hope he’s not wrong because the popsicle was honestly so refreshing and delicious. I’d love to be able to have that on hot summer days, along with whatever cacao nectar products there might be.

We felt so lucky as we left Lydgate Farms that afternoon (with a bag full of chocolate). Will was so generous in letting us try so many things. I wasn’t expecting to eat a cacao bean that day, let alone have a cacao nectar popsicle! He also did a great job of explaining the different steps in the chocolate production process on his farm, happy to answer any questions. If the full farm tour is conducted in the same manner, it’s definitely worth it. Thanks so much to Will and Lydgate Farms for the treats we were able to bring back all the way from Hawaii and are now enjoying in NYC. We’ll be waiting for those cacao nectar popsicles too.

https://lydgatefarms.com/

Maui Ku’ia Estate Chocolate Tasting

During one of our free afternoons while vacationing in Maui, Peter and I decided visit Maui Ku’ia Estate Cacao’s (MKEC) in Lāhainā where they were offering chocolate tastings (9 tastings for only $10!). We picked a few from their menu and took the little squares to their open rooftop to enjoy.

The 9 chocolates we sampled.

To appreciate MKEC’s selection of chocolates, it’s worth understanding the company’s backstory. CEO Gunars E. Valkirs began developing the farm with Dan O’Doherty in 2013. They started by planting cacao trees on the west side of Maui with windbreak and shade trees to protect the first ten acres. It took three years to fully develop. The second ten acres followed in 2017 and 2018. Unfortunately, Hurricane Lane and a Lahaina firestorm in August 2018 defoliated the entire cacao farm. After extensive pruning, the farm managed to harvest in 2019. The resulting small batch of chocolate was delicious. While MKEC is still committed to producing Maui-grown cacao, the farm’s growing capacity is limited to small batches. As MKEC continues to develop and expand, the company is importing unique cacao beans from an award-winning single-family estate in Ecuador and from the wild Amazon of Brazil to supplement its chocolate production. This is why MKEC offers a selection of chocolates made with not only Maui-grown cacao but also has chocolates made with cacao from South America.

The 9 chocolates we picked can be broken down into three overarching groups:

  • Top row: Dark chocolates. The first made with cacao from Costa Esmeraldas, an award-winning single-family estate in Ecuador. The second made with cacao grown on MKEC’s farm. The last was made with cacao found in the Brazilian Amazon.
  • Second row: Dark milk & milk chocolate. Again, the first made with cacao from Costa Esmeraldas, with the second made using Maui-grown cacao. The last was the only milk chocolate we sampled, flavored with Maui Mokka Cappuccino.
  • Third row: Flavored dark chocolates. All of the flavored chocolates were made with cacao from Costa Esmeraldas. MKEC had a variety of flavors, but we decided to go with the most tropical ones (in our opinion). Calamansi is a citrus fruit also known as Philippine lime or Philippine lemon. It was a new fruit to us that we discovered shortly before while camping in the Ho’omaluhia Botanical Gardens on Oahu.
    • After tasting everything, we got a bonus tasting of their “POG” flavored chocolate. POG stands for passion, orange, guava and is a common mixed-juice flavor in Hawaii.

My favorite grouping was (not totally surprisingly) the dark chocolate. The first dark chocolate made with Costa Esmeraldas cacao had the most familiar flavor profile to me. The taste starts out slightly acidic and bitter, but as the chocolate melts, it gives way to mellower tones of caramel and toffee. Meanwhile, the Maui-grown dark chocolate had a much brighter flavor. It really seemed to channel the tropical flavors associated with Hawaii (bananas, pineapples, papaya, mangoes, etc.). Even though this wasn’t a flavored chocolate, I was getting hints of guava as it melted in my mouth. The last dark chocolate was not at all what I was expecting. I thought it’d be a return to the flavors of the first chocolate from Ecuador. It was so much fruitier and, in fact, tasted like blueberries! I was very much reminded of the chocolate covered blueberries and acai berries from Brookside. It was a very unique treat. Of the three, the one from Brazil was definitely the most interesting to me, whereas Maui-grown chocolate was a bit too tropical for my palate.

Given this, perhaps it’s not surprising that the flavored dark chocolates were my least favorite group. In general, I do not like adding fruit to chocolate much. (In the typical assortment boxes of chocolates, I always disliked the ones with raspberry filling.) The only fruit flavor I enjoy with chocolate is coconut, which usually comes in the form of a dry, textured mix-in rather than an essence that is just blended into the chocolate. All of the tropical fruit flavored chocolates from this tasting just distracted from the underlying cacao flavors. For me, I think I would prefer to eat the actual fruit – so fresh and juicy in Hawaii! – separate from the chocolate and fully appreciate the flavors of each on its own.

The dark milk and milk chocolates were quite good! Chocolate snobs typically turn away from anything besides the most unaltered dark chocolates. I guess I’m not a chocolate snob, because I’ve found that I actually enjoy the balance between the more complex flavors of a dark chocolate and the smooth texture that the bit of extra milk adds in dark milk chocolates. The Askinosie 62% Dark Milk Chocolate (made with goat’s milk) was the first labeled “dark milk” chocolate I’ve ever had, and it remains one of my favorite chocolates. Between the Ecuadorian and Maui dark milk chocolates, I still preferred the one from Ecuador. Again, it was closer to the more traditional chocolate flavor profile that I seem to prefer over the tropical taste in the Maui chocolate. I was most surprised by the milk chocolate in this group though. With the added Mokka cappuccino flavor, I really felt like I was eating a tiramisu in chocolate form. Unlike the tropical fruit flavored dark chocolates, this cappuccino addition melded very well with the underlying creamy milk chocolate. I could easily see this piece being a crowd pleaser. I know my sweet tooth was fully satisfied by this dessert chocolate.

Peter and I had a great experience with this chocolate tasting, and I would highly recommend it to anyone who ends up visiting Maui. I was really able to appreciate how the terroir can effect the flavors of cacao in chocolate – much like how it impacts the flavors of grapes turned into wine. While Maui-grown chocolate might not be my favorite, it was fun discover how different the tastes of cacao produced in separate parts of the world could be. I also fully respect everything that Gunars is doing at MKEC. While the farm has not yet turned a profit, he is committed to donating 100% of future net profits to non-profit initiatives. He is essentially investing a large amount of personal capital into a passion project that will ultimately will go towards funding philanthropic work. And he is doing it in a sustainable way that will benefit the land, the employees and the community. It is inspiring work to see. Check them out, support what they’re doing, and get some delicious chocolate! They also make for great holiday gifts.

https://mauichocolate.com/

Chocolate Review: Element Truffles’ Black Lava Salt with Turmeric Chocolate Bar

Bar: Black Lava Salt with Turmeric
Maker: Elements Truffles
Chocolate Percentage: 75%
Price: $7/50g Bar
Ingredients: Organic Raw Cacao Paste, Raw Honey, Organic Raw Cacao Butter, Organic Turmeric Root Powder, Black Lava Salt, Himalayan Pink Salt
Additional Notes: Chocolate Origin: Ecuador

Packaging: “Ayurveda Inspired Artisanal Chocolate” makes me think this is a chocolate meant for yogis. Ayurveda, as explained by the back of the package, derives from Ayur (life) and Veda (knowledge), and it is a “sister science” to Yoga that focuses on inner and outer wellbeing through balancing elements in the body. So perhaps this is best enjoyed to further sweeten your yoga session?

Appearance: The chocolate consists of a full, unsectioned bar with a lotus flower design to the side, adding to the whole spiritual and meditation theme of this product.
Aroma: The bar has a slight caramel like scent to it. Perhaps it comes from the combination of the dark chocolate with the honey. I don’t get any incense aromas. I guess it’s not that spiritual.
Melt & Snap: There snap is hard, but the chocolate melts nice and slowly. The texture is a little more gritty than the others. Maybe it has to do with the rawness of the chocolate? Or is it a consequence of the turmeric powder? I wasn’t sure. However, the grittiness was not at all unpleasant or distracting. The melt was quite satisfying.
Flavor: There honey flavor definitely comes through pretty strongly bringing a distinct sweetness to this chocolate. It really helps lighten the bitterness I would’ve expected from a 75% dark chocolate. I still think I would’ve preferred a regular sugar based sweetener though. I’m not sure that I got a distinct turmeric taste from the chocolate. I’m not sure what turmeric tastes like on its own to be honest. Overall, not a bad chocolate, but not my favorite either.

Chocolate Review: Dick Taylor 73% Dark with Fleur de Sel | Northerner Blend

Bar: Dick Taylor 73% Dark with Fleur de Sel | Northerner Blend
Maker: Dick Taylor Craft Chocolate
Chocolate Percentage: 73%
Price: $9.50 per 57g / 2oz bar (online)
Ingredients: Cacao*, Cane Sugar*, Fleur de Sel (*Organic)
Additional Notes: Chocolate Origin: Northerner Blend – Brazil & Madagascar

Packaging: The main focus on the front of the packaging has a block print drawing of a sailboat with its crew on the flat deck navigating the vessel in the expansive ocean with some picturesque clouds. Dick Taylor’s company logo and the name of the bar take the blank space in the sky about the boat.

Compared to the other chocolate bars, the back of this packaging is relatively simple. Another mostly black and white etching shows two workers harvesting salt. There are a few more informational details, like the fact that the salt in the bar is hand-harvested Guatamala sea salt by Bitterman Salt Co., and that the chocolate was handcrafted using traditional European techniques in Humboldt County, California. There is even a batch no stamped on. However, you’d have to go to the website to learn that the chocolate is a blend of Brazilian and Madagascan cacao sweetened with Brazilian cane sugar. The website also gives additional details about “Northerner Blend”, which I guess is their name for this chocolate bar.

The chocolate is wrapped in a gold plastic with the signature Dick Taylor diamond and designs that are also etched into the surface of the chocolate itself. I’d say this inner packaging and the design of the bar itself are more exquisite than the two previous bars. The back of the chocolate bar is smooth and does not have the imprint design.

Appearance: The front of the bar had a nice dark brownish red color with some little splotches of brighter red tints. The back of the bar was a noticeably lighter shade of brown. It looked like it bloomed. You could also see the flecks of sea salt on the back of the chocolate bar.
Aroma: Nothing besides the chocolate and sea salt. It is a two ingredient bar after all.
Melt & Snap: The chocolate didn’t melt at all and had a hard snap. I even felt like I had to chew the chocolate to eat it.
Flavor: I was fairly disappointed by the lack of flavor in this chocolate, which was easily overpowered by the sea salt. Both the texture and the taste make leads me to believe that despite the Best Before date not passing yet, the chocolate had turned bad while in transport or something wasn’t processed correctly. Before writing off Dick Taylor chocolate, I would want to try a different bar.

Chocolate Review: Askinosie 62% Dark Milk Chocolate + Fleur De Sel

Bar: 62% Dark Milk Chocolate + Fleur De Sel Sea Salt Bar
Maker: Askinosie (Springfield, MO, USA)
Chocolate Percentage: 62% dark milk chocolate (54% cocoa liquor and 8% cocoa butter)
Price: $8.95 / 85g (3oz) from The Basket Store at Chelsea Market; $8.50 online
Ingredients: Davao, Philippines Cocoa Beans (Trinitario), Organic Cane Sugar, Cocoa Butter (made in factory with Davao beans), Goat’s Milk Powder, Sea Salt (from The Meadow)
Additional Notes:
Chocolate Origin: Davao, Philippines
Awards: 2017 – Bronze – Academy of Chocolate Awards; 2016 – Americas – Silver International Chocolate Award; 2014 – Good Food Award; 2013 – Good Food Award; 2011 – Gold – London Academy of Chocolate’s Best Bean to Bar Milk Chocolate; 2011 – Silver – London Academy of Chocolate’s Best Bean to Bar Milk Chocolate; 2011 – Gold – London Academy of Chocolate’s Best Packaging

Packaging: And I thought the inside packaging of the Raaka chocolate bar was detailed. Askinosie takes it to another level in terms of transparency. The focus on the front of the packaging is on the source of the chocolate with “Davao Philippines” printed boldly at the top with a picture of the cocoa bean farmer below. The specific chocolate bar type and Askinosie brand logo are left to the lower third of the front label. The back of the packaging touts a “Real People. Real Places” trademark and explains that the farmer on the front of the package is Peter Cruz, whom Shawn Askinosie, Founder & CEO personally met on his first journey to the Philippines. Askinosie also promises a “Taste Good Does Good” approach to their chocolate by guaranteeing higher than Fair Trade prices to the farmers, open books, and a share of the company’s profits. However, an equitable supply chain does not seem to be the only company focus. The paper packaging even details that the tie keeping it closed came from a biodegradable bag of beans that were shipped to the factory. Further, the inner wrapper of the chocolate is also home compostable from and made from a sustainable source. Askinosie also values environmental sustainability in its production process. The last detail on the packaging is a rubber stamped number, which I would guess equates to some kind of batch number. However, a lot more detail about Davo, Philippines and Peter Cruz can be found on the company’s website. The details here include that the cocoa bean consists of a Trinitario variety, which are harvested in October-November, fermented in wooden boxes, sun dried on a patio under rain cover. The chocolate comprises of 54% cocoa liquor and 9% cocoa butter, has a medium roast, medium conch and is tempered at 43C, 31.6C. Again, the level of transparency is shocking.

Appearance: The chocolate bar is divided into a 6×3 rectangle grid, with a letter centered on each square to spell out “Askinosie Chcocolate”. Not the prettiest bar in my opinion, but it does get a proud message across. Being a dark milk chocolate, the color is lighter than your typical dark chocolate bar. The chocolate has a nice little shine to its surface.
Aroma: Creamy vanilla and caramel smells
Melt & Snap: Crisp snap. Ultra smooth, creamy, slow melt. No hint of grittiness in the chocolate (like Raaka).
Flavor: A sweeter dark chocolate, with vanilla and milky caramel tones. Definitely get the luxuriousness from the goat’s milk. I did not taste much of the sea salt, but got a hint of toasted nuts instead. This is a far cry from Hershey’s.

Chocolate Review: Raaka Bourbon Cask Aged Chocolate

Bar: Bourbon Cask Aged Unroasted Dark Chocolate
Maker: Raaka Chocolate (Brookyln, NY, USA)
Chocolate Percentage: 82%
Price: $5 / 1.8oz Bar (sale at Whole Foods)
Ingredients: Organic cacao beans, organic cane sugar, organic maple sugar, organic cacao butter
Additional Notes: Chocolate Origin: Kokoa Kamili, Tanzania Awards: 2013 Good Food Award Winner

Packaging: Textured paper with an abstract print of pink, brown, red and cherry on the outside. My wrapper noted this bar was part of Batch 220. On the inside of the packaging, Raaka outlines what they mean by “Transparent Trade“, which includes details on the region/country of the cacao used to produce this chocolate (Kokoa Kamili, Tanzania) , the type of sourcing (grower-centered fermentary & exporter in this instance), and prices paid. It is the most detail I have seen thus far on the wrapping of a chocolate bar. The bar itself is wrapped within another piece of paper, with one-sided silver foiling.

Appearance: Solid rectangular bar with layers of horizontal ridge lines on the front and an imprinted logo in the upper-center of the bar. The lines evoke the sense of overlapping mountain ranges or waves.
Aroma: Sharp, bright, cherry notes but with earthy undertones
Melt & Snap: gentle snap, smooth and slow melt
Flavor: Admittedly, this bar was the first in my foray of trying artisan craft, bean-to-bar chocolate, and I probably started with a fairly complex one given the advertised flavor profile. The chocolate is bitter at 82% but still packs a surprisingly bright taste that reminded me of cherries and goji berries. Given the slow, smooth melt, undertones of the oak also shine their way through. The chocolate even has a very slight gritty, velvety texture to it, which seems to play to the “tuxedoed sophisticate” superlative Raaka has given this chocolate of theirs. I wonder if the mouth feel has to do with the fact that these beans were “unroasted”, which is Raaka’s unique processing method. The complexity of this chocolate has made me feel compelled to have two tastings on each occasion of enjoyment.

A Study in Chocolate

If you know me at all, you know that I have a pretty bad sweet tooth (that has even given rise to my fair share of cavities). It shouldn’t be a surprise then, that chocolate is one of my favorite treats. Growing up, I ate all kinds of Hershey’s, Dove and Nestle branded chocolate, accompanied by the occasional Lindt truffle, Ferrero Roche, Almond Roca, or, even more rarely, the Belgian chocolate sea shells from Guylian (those were the most decadent, and my most favorite).

In the past couple of years, I’ve grown into the habit of having a piece of (dark) chocolate as an afternoon pick-me-up. At first, it would just be a couple squares of some basic Lindt chocolate bar, but now, I’ve been exploring more “craft” or “specialty” bars. Comparing the different offerings from the grocery story has been a fun little experiment. But after a while, I grew curious as to what makes some chocolate better than others. And so began my little dive into “bean-to-bar”, craft chocolate making.

To learn more, I visited a couple of top Google search result sites and was surprised to see that there are annual international chocolate awards and even chocolate tasting certifications (although it seems a lot less strenuous than becoming a master sommelier). I even borrowed a couple of books from the (amazing) NYPL, including:

  • Bean-to-bar Chocolate: America’s Craft Chocolate Revolution: The Origins, the Markers, the Mind-Blowing Flavors by Megan Giller
  • Making Chocolate: From Bean to Bar to S’More by Todd Masonis, Greg D’Alesandre, Lisa Vega & Molly Gore (this was not only a highly detailed, informative book, but also visually very beautiful)

Here are the biggest things I learned from my little exploration:

  • Much like how the variety and terroir of grapes impacts the taste of a wine, the specific type of cocoa bean and where it is grown dictates how the end chocolate tastes, which can be quite diverse. For example, Madagascar is fruity, Philippines is earthy, Ecuador is floral and Nicaragua is nutty.
  • The same beans from the same farm can taste very different depending on how long it is fermented and roasted. Chocolate makers have to experiment numerous times before settling on a “recipe” for a single type of chocolate. It takes a lot of patience because a day or two during the fermentation period and a minute here or there during roasting can really have a big impact. Having control over the fermentation period is another reason why some bean-to-bar chocolate makers work directly with farms.
  • Other steps in the chocolate making process (after fermenting, roasting and grinding) includes conching and tempering to further release some of the inherent bitterness of the chocolate and to make a more “shelf-stable” chocolate.
  • Fair trade is great, but direct trade is even better when it comes to rewarding the chocolate farmers. In fair trade, the farm is paying an annual fee to a central governing body to get a Fair Trade certification and to obtain a higher price for their crops. However, some small farms cannot afford to pay the annual fee, and some farms that do get the certification have questionable labor practices. Direct trade, on the other hand, isn’t a certification. It’s a description of the relationship between the buyer and the farmer. By trading directly, and cutting out the middleman and brokers, farmers are able to reap a higher reward. The direct relationship also allows the farmer and chocolate maker to collaborate more closely to produce a better product and ensure that the growing practices are aligned with broader environmental and/or labor goals.
  • Bean-to-bar chocolates highlight the original chocolate flavors by using less cocoa butter and vanilla. This is why there are so many different tastes in these more “craft” chocolates compared to the mass-produced international brand chocolates. Some chocolate makers (Raaka for example) also forgo roasting all together to produce a more “raw” chocolate product. Creative mix-ins are another common element of craft chocolate making, but some producers (like Dandelion) also like to stick to two-ingredient (cacao and sugar) chocolate bars.

With this new appreciation for the whole chocolate production process – the global growing regions (even including Taiwan!), the supply chain, and the different ways new smaller bean-to-bar craft chocolate makers are approaching their craft – I have a new framework to “evaluate” the unique, small-batch chocolate bars I’ve been buying. And, just for fun, I will start tracking my personal reviews here!