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Artisan Raw Chocolate Giveaway from Fine & Raw

February 13, 2015 by India Leigh

Artisan Raw Chocolate Giveaway from Fine & Raw

vday-love-chunky-set

Chocolate Giveaway

Fine & Raw Valentines Chocolate Giveaway 8 pc box set. I visited the Fine & Raw factory and retail space in Brooklyn. I have been evangelistic about their chocolate ever since. My most recent acquisition was a bar of their Scotch Chunky. Happy Face!

fine and raw chocolate

For our Valentines Giveaway we have box of the 8 pc classic to giveaway to one lucky chocolate lover.

truffles---mixed

 

‘FINE & RAW was started in a notorious Williamsburg, Brooklyn artist loft by Daniel Sklaar. A nonsensical obsession with chocolate inspired Daniel to begin making small chocolate batches. He shared them with friends then started delivering them on his bicycle to small local purveyors. The stock was good - the purveyors wanted more.’

What is raw chocolate? Unlike other chocolate it is not roasted and never reaches above 45 degrees. Some say that nutritionally, cacao is a superfood with more than 300 nutritients including antioxidants, flavonoids, fibre, iron, zinc, copper, calcium and magnesium. It also contains tryptophan which helps our bodies to manufacture serotonins (known as the happiness neurotransmitter). Also, the chemicals anandamine and phenylethylamine which simulate the feeling of falling in love. Aw.

And just look at this for a list of quality ingredients..

raw cacao, virgin coconut oil, blue agave, cacao butter, himalayan sea salt. This is chocolate it is easy to feel good about!

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Filed Under: Giveaways, Product Reviews Tagged With: artisan chocolate, Brooklyn, chunky, giveaway, NYC, RAW, scotch, valentines, vegan chocolate

TCHO and the chocolate factory

April 1, 2012 by India Leigh

TCHO and the chocolate factory

I recommend, when you visit any city, to get out and walk around, with no fixed goal. Or hire a bicycle, and go where the fancy takes you.  You will probably find most unexpected things of interest, great cafes, fascinating neighbourhoods with distinctive personality. You may get chatting to friendly strangers, who will point you in the direction of  a landmark or restaurant only the locals know about.  You may even cycle along the Embarcadero, whilst watching for the Golden Gate Bridge to step out from the fog in San Fransisco, and happen upon a whacking great chocolate factory.  Upon entering the factory store, you may have a chat  with a member of staff who informs you (whilst you are taking full advantage of the free samples) you can enjoy a free tour of the premises, if you feel so inclined.  But you can’t book it there.  Oh no, you have to go all the way back home and book it on the Internet. I’m not sure the idea of going on-line and booking one of the two, daily free tours would have got Mr Roald Dahl inspired. The notion is profoundly dull and uninspiring, in comparison to the fervent chocolate bar buying that Willy Wonka incited. But hey, let me tell you, I found it just as exciting AND stressful gaining access to the shrouded world of TCHO’s chocolate making machines.

Stressful because when I booked, the first time, and began my bike ride from the Mission District. Grabbed my bike from the basement to peddle like a tornado was nipping at my heals.  Down Valencia Street, took a right onto Market and down to the Embarcadero. Lands end.  My ETA was off by three minutes. THREE. ONLY 3 minutes, and my place was nabbed with breathtaking swiftness, by another ardent fan of the cacao.   I couldn’t believe it.  Just three minutes and I’m out.  I was deflated, dejected…and very sweaty. But my mind, Exocet on getting behind the big willowy curtains blocking my view from the chocolate making, I went home, got on the Internet and booked again. I returned a week later. Hardly learning from my mistake and arriving at four seconds past the tour start time. I ran in, again sweaty from cycling like the clappers down Market Street, and rugby tackled Iris, the tour guide, shouting my name to announce my arrival, as I flew through the air to grab at her heels. I was in!
TCHO (the phonetic spelling of the 1st syllable of chocolate) is, in their words, ‘New American Chocolate’.  They are a local chocolate factory, housed somewhere in between the Ferry Building and Fort Mason.They claim to go beyond fair trade when sourcing their beans and buy and collaborate direct with their growers.  They improve the growers production from planting to the racks the beans dry on.  An interesting fact I learned is that most growers from the cacao producing countries TCHO source from (Peru Ghana Ecuador Madagascar….ALL on my bucket list BTW) haven’t even tasted chocolate as we know it! They just grow the beans to feed the market.  Timothy Childs, ex NASA Space Shuttle contractor and co-founder of TCHO, built laboratories on sight so the growers get to taste the chocolate that their beans will produce and understand more of the process of fermenting, roasting, conching and tempering.  TCHO seem to be as obsessive about chocolate as I am about anything vegan. Karl Bittong, the other founder, has been so consumed by cacao that he moved to Ghana live next to a plantation.  Between them they’ve literally bodged together the laboratories and the San Franciscan factory with a hotch potch of retro machines and futuristic technology. 
 
A DVD injected a quick information download. Once that was done, finally, we were guided through the 40ft gossamer curtain to behold the world of the crazy chocolate makers. Strips of clear plastic separated the machines from the packing area where conveyor belts transported of cooling confection. I kept pushing one of the strips to let in the noise of the motors, so tickled I was by the effectiveness of their sound proofing qualities. Huge silver vats held tonnes of roasted cacao nibs. They were being ground to a liquid. Another belly of steel was tempering the chocolate. Heating it to encourage the molecules get in an orderly line, to help create the satisfying ‘snap’ you get when breaking a piece  from a bar. It’s then freed from the heating process, along tubes and down into the final moulds, in rods of warm, fluid chocolate. Crazy technology means Tim can crawl out of bed, grab his iPhone and adjust tempering times or roasting temperatures, without even changing out of his pyjamas, rubbing the sleep from his eyes and driving to the factory. The influence of the CEO and the President of TCHO, Louis Rossetto & Jane Metcalf who founded digital culture, Wired magazine?
Natty head-gear
brightly coloured cacao pods

the white gloop that covers the beans.  This is what ferments the bean.

roasted cacao beans
the happy growers

Aztecs believed that wisdom and power came from eating the fruit of the cocoa tree, and also that it had nourishing, fortifying, and even aphrodisiac qualities. The Aztec emperor, Montezuma, drank thick chocolate, unsweetened - sugar was not yet found, apparently he drunk a whopping 50 goblets every day! 

Standing there, albeit looking silly in a flimsy white paper hat.  The rich evocative smells dense in the air. I got it. Theand smooth? Pre-tour, one might think it a bit ‘poncy’ to imagine flavours and ‘top notes’. It’s chocolate, right? But the earth, the plants, the air, the roasting times, how the beans are dried…they all influence the flavour and impart the memory of where the bean originated. Honestly, I could taste citrus. I detected berries. I acquiesced, yes, indeed I could discern a suggestion of floral notes, when all the disc of chocolate contained was 80% cacao and a little sugar.
Just over an hour later I emerged back out from the hanger and into the strong sun.  I untwined the bike lock from the park up and went off on my merry way. Chocolate powered.  Shaking ever so slightly from too much sugar and theobromine. Next stop to hunt down a huge concrete organ built into a tiny promontory in the Marina, that shoots musical notes into the air at high tide, in the name of art.

Filed Under: North America, Product Reviews, San Francisco, Vegan Travel Tagged With: cooking courses, events, HOME, San Francisco, vegan chocolate

LONDON VEGAN FESTIVAL - 2011

August 22, 2011 by India Leigh

LONDON VEGAN FESTIVAL – 2011

Woo hoo!  It was the London Vegan Festival on Saturday.  An annual event held in an exhibition hall just off Kensington High Street.  I had been before, a few years back, but to be honest I’d not really enjoyed it.  This time was different though, I had people I wanted to meet and a few foods I had on my list to try.

The day had pasted up wall to wall sunshine so I decided to walk along the Thames before hopping on a tube to wilt in the high heat of a packed train.  The Circle line was closed so I had to walk from South Kensington, which could have been annoying but turned out rather well as a very manicured Italian Adonis agreed to accompany me the mile or so to the High Street, following my plea for him to relieve me from my state of lostness (is that a word?.. actually no, but I’m using it anyway).

When I entered the festival I was plunged into a world of brown.  I then recalled why I didn’t  much enjoy the festival the first time I’d gone.  Kudos to London holding a vegan festival but to be honest in my opinion, the building is depressing and dingy and doesn’t really do much to advertise bright and happy vegan living. 

Anyhow, I had a job to do so I wandered around the stalls.  Encouragingly the place was packed and patience was called upon to reach the front of the rows of people and get to sample tiny squares of things on cocktail sticks.  Much of the stalls were animal rights based and, being food obsessed,  I would have loved to have seen a bigger food contingency too.

I picked up a few cards and flyer’s from the stalls that impressed me;

 Raw Delights had some really good granola and savoury crackers
www.moofreechocolates.com were there with their vegan chocs and hamster (??) mascot

www.redwoodfoods.co.uk had some samples of their ‘meats’ (too closely resembling the real thing for my liking but would be a good choice perhaps for those transitioning. Their BLUE CHEESE was delicious. 

I FINALLY got to meet www.mscupcake.com - what a sweetie - agreeing to pose for this picture.  She’d already nearly sold out of her creations by 1pm

www.plamil.com had a stall packed with all their flavoured chocolates and vegan mayonnaise

Bright West Indian flavour from the Green garden cafe
this rather nice chap from Redwoods had some tasty soya free, yogurt made from pea protein and fruit sweetened.  Do you think he had honed his pot holding skills before the festival?

The gluten free cheesy slice and colourful fresh salads from www.fairfoods.org were enticing and I was curious to try so this was my lunch option (surprising how I had room after a round of sampling and a cake pod and cupcake!).  I didn’t take a pic (this is courtesy of their website - you can also get the recipe here).  I can report it was rustic, delicious and I cleaned my plate.

A full list of programme promoters, vendors and sponsors can be seen here.  Other noteworthy vendors;
www.mccakes.co.uk - wonderful artistic custom made cakes
www.bboheme.com - Bourgeois Boheme had a line up of some very stylish and covetable boots and shoes
www.establishlife.org - sweet couple just on the cusp of launching their new online  wholefoods store and lifestyle management consultancy - cooking courses etc.
Sorry the stall was too crowded and my pics all had an orgy of arms in front of the produce but www.vegusto.co.uk makers of organic vegan, soya free, nut based cheese had some very tasty hard cheeses.
http://www.beanieshealthfoods.co.uk/ had a hearty line up of their fake meats and sausages to sample from their Frys Foods range.
www.veganrunners.org.uk  had left their trainers (sneakers) at home for today and were signing up new members.
www.animalcharitiesfair.org.uk were promoting their fair to be held at THE CAMDEN CENTRE on Sunday 6th November
www.animalaid.org.uk were one of the festival sponsors
My favourite gluten free, sugar free, bonnie wee lass www.hannahbananabakery.co.uk  whose raspberry chocolate cupcake pods had me all giddy with delight when I reviewed them last week - read (drool) here was there in a volunteering capacity for her favourite animal rights organisation so only had a small but happy-making selection of her cake pods.  Yum in abundance!

Talks and workshops on raw food, Animal Liberation, massage, gardening and even vegan bodybuilding went on throughout the day. 
I think the UK has someway to go to match the vegan food festivals of LA and San Francisco.  Very salubrious affairs, held in HUGE beautiful, light exhibition centres, they are full of fun and seem to attract a large following of veg curious too.  To be honest I didn’t feel like this event had moved on much….one day.  Though, counting the number of footfalls crossing the threshold and gathering in the sunshine outside makes me hopeful for the future.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: events, HOME, horton street, london animal charities, london vegan festival, raw cupcakes, raw food, Uncategorized, vegan cheese, vegan chocolate, vegan shoes, vegusto

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Hi, my name is India. Welcome to A Vegan Obsession. This site is for you to enjoy the delicious discoveries of a gluten free, vegan traveller and cook. Read More…

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