Monday, October 31, 2011

Daintree Estates makes move to a chocolate-inspired future

It has taken a group of Mossman farmers 10 years to perfect Australia's first chocolate made from locally grown cocoa.

The group, Daintree Estates Cocoa, will unveil their chocolate at a lunch celebration at Port Douglas on Friday.

The chocolate will be the first Australian-made chocolate for commercial use from cocoa grown near Mossman.

The milk and dark chocolate varieties are made in Melbourne at present but there are plans to open a chocolate factory at Mossman to expand the business and as a tourist attraction.

"This is an exciting time for Mossman, Queensland, and the $1.4 billion Australian chocolate market that has never before had a locally grown commercial offering," Ray Durrant, executive chairman of Daintree Estates Cocoa, said.

"The cocoa we use has been nurtured from four estates in the Mossman area of the Daintree National Park. Each farmer has a special story to tell about their love affair with the land, region and cocoa and the opportunities this brings to the region."

Daintree Estates cocoa is the collective brainchild of former chocolate industry experts, government agricultural researchers and the staunch support of pioneering Far Northern farmers.

Most of cocoa growers are sugarcane farmers, many are from families with farming histories that date back generations in the Mossman area.

One of those farmers is Don Murday who is proud to be a chocolate producer.

"We`ve had no shortage of chocolate taste testers so if that's any indication then we are positive it will a real hit," Mr Murday said.

"We`ve had a lot of positive feedback, I think people are very surprised at how nice the chocolate is. It has a real fruity flavour."

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Source and Photo: Cairns.Com


Sunday, October 30, 2011

Recipe of the Week Halloween Special - Creepy Chocolate Cockroach Treats

Want something creative for Halloween? Check out this cool recipe from Fit Sugar.


INGREDIENTS

Parchment paper
30 pecans halves
4-5 squares of dark chocolate (I used Ghirardelli 72% Twilight Delight)
Chocolate Sprinkles
Round Halloween colored sprinkles (white, orange, purple)


METHOD

1. Pour about 1/2 cup or so of chocolate sprinkles and 1/4 cup of colored sprinkles into two separate, shallow bowls.

2. Chop dark chocolate into small, even pieces. Melt chocolate in the microwave or a double boiler until smooth.

3. Submerge pecan halves in melted chocolate and move around until the pecan is covered.

4. Remove the pecan from the chocolate allowing access chocolate to drip off. Dip each pecan, flat side down into the chocolate sprinkles to make little cockroach legs.

5. Place pecan on parchment paper sprinkle side down.

6. Continue the same technique for all the pecans, then drop two small round colored sprinkles to the smaller end of all the pecans to make eyes.

7. Let the pecans sit for a few hours so the chocolate can set, remove from parchment paper and store in an airtight container until ready to serve.


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Source: Sydney Morning Herald


Saturday, October 29, 2011

Chocolate bar leaves bad taste for Bondi Junction residents

AN application for a liquor licence at a site recently vacated by an Apple dealership has upset some Bondi Junction residents.

Theobroma Chocolate Lounge and Bar plans to open a new lounge at 20 Bronte Rd.

The plan for a three-storey chocolate lounge involves a liquor licence for two floors, according to Bondi Junction resident activist Danielle Ecuyer.

Ms Ecuyer said she had several issues with the application.

“This is the most densely concentrated area of licences and licensed premises in Bondi Junction and there is a real risk of negative cumulative impact if we add another large licensed premise,” she said.

“The second is a real moral and ethical problem with a licensed premises being linked to the supply of confectionary. It links alcohol to one of the most favourite foodstuffs of children. It is grooming them for the acceptance of liquor.”

But Theobroma spokesman Wayne Wright said that the business was not targeting children.

“There is no way we are targeting children, it’s an adult concept. We are selling food as well and the bar complements the cafe aspects,” Mr Wright said.

He also rejected suggestions it would become a late night drinking spot: “It gives people an option to drink in a cafe style environment, rather than a bar.”

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Source and Photo: Wentworth Courier


Friday, October 28, 2011

Nestle to launch personalized luxury chocolates

Nestle is launching a new brand of luxury chocolates selected to match individual preferences that consumers will order online.

"What we are offering is the perfect personalized chocolate," says Cedric Lacroix, director of Nestle's Chocolate Center of Excellence in Broc, Switzerland.

Nestle, the world's biggest food group and global leader in dark chocolate, opened the research center in Broc in 2009 and has said the economic woes of recent years have not hurt demand for premium chocolate much, calling it an "affordable treat" in difficult times.

The Swiss group presented its new chocolates at its 9-month press conference in Paris, asking journalists to taste different flavors and handing them little slips of paper to help them remember their chocolate identity.

Nestle said consumers will first order a box of five "tasting" chocolates with hints of milk, caramel, nut, fruit, flowers and vanilla to determine their preferences which they rate online following a set of instructions.

"Chocolate has certain attributes that people distinguish in different ways. It is like tasting wine," Lacroix said.

The Nestle Maison Cailler brand will then use the results to make a selection that suits an individual's taste from a set of 12 different chocolates that are sent directly to the consumer from the factory in Broc.

"We will be able to fine tune the Maison Cailler offering according to consumer feedback," Lacroix said.

The recipients can then share their favored "chocolate personality" with friends through their Facebook profile.

Maison Cailler, which will launch at the beginning of 2012 in Switzerland and Liechtenstein, also plans to set up "profiling stations" for its chocolates at a number of locations around the country, such as five star hotels.

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Source: Reuters


Thursday, October 27, 2011

I’m melting! Chocolate catwalk show comes a cropper after model’s dress falls off

Models often have enough trouble trying to stay on their sky-scraping heels on the catwalk without having to worry about suffering a wardrobe malfunction.

But French TV presenter Karine Ferri, revealed a little more than she intended to at the opening show of the Salon du Chocolat (Chocolate Fair) in Paris.

The 29-year-old, who started her career as a model before becoming a finalist in the French version of The Bachelor and turning to presenting, was ever the professional when her chocolate skirt started to shatter half way down the runway.

Ferri initially tried to stop her clothing from crumbling, but then just embraced her new mini skirt - which exposed the tops of her stockings.

She looked positively overdressed compared to her fellow walkers who made their way down the confectionery-scattered catwalk though.

Former Miss France Cindy Fabre wore a gladiator-style bikini and singer and porn star Clara Morgane's bra was made out of a few well-placed cherries.

Men got in on the action too, in a slightly more covered up - but equally flamboyant - way.

French figure skater Philippe Candeloro dressed up as a giant chocolate ice cream, complete with a wafer-covered cone.

Newsreader Jean-Philippe Doux dressed as a circus ringleader in an over-sized bow-tie and tails all made of chocolate.

The fashion show marked the beginning of the 17th Salon du Chocolat at Porte de Versailles in Paris - a yearly trade fair for the international chocolate industry.

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Source and Photo: Daily Mail UK


Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Chocolatier unveils record-breaking chocolate bar to mark 100th birthday

After months of top-secret confectionery construction, Britain’s best loved chocolatier Thorntons, has unveiled the world’s largest chocolate bar to mark its 100th birthday. Tipping the scales at almost six tonnes (5,792.5kgs) the bar is made in Thorntons’ special recipe milk chocolate, and measures four metres wide by four metres long. In fact, the bar is equivalent to 75,000 Thorntons Chocolate Blocks!

The famous British confectioner has been surprising and delighting chocolate lovers across the country for a century, and attempted the Guinness World Records title to celebrate its 100th birthday with staff and customers. The previous record of 5,529.29kg was held by an American confectioner, who broke the record just last month. Not to be outdone by the Americans, Thorntons wanted to show that the Brits really do lead the way when it comes to chocolate!

The enormous bar was made in Thorntons’ Chocolate Block design and has been unveiled during the chocoholic’s favourite time of year – Chocolate Week (10th – 16th October) – and is making its way straight into the official record books. After its stint in the limelight, the bar will be broken down and will be available in Thorntons stores in the coming weeks.

Paul Bell from Thorntons led the world-record attempt: “All staff were asked to come up with ideas of how we should celebrate our 100th birthday and because Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was my favourite film as a child, I immediately thought of a scene from the film where a bar of chocolate was shrunk and I thought wouldn’t it be fantastic to do the reverse and make the world’s largest bar of chocolate.

“I’ve worked for Thorntons for nearly 20 years and the company is not only committed to innovation and making its customers smile, but it had a real desire to celebrate a fantastic 100 years and look forward to the next 100 years. It’s been so exciting seeing my idea become a reality and it is the most exciting thing I’ve ever worked on.”

Thorntons Master Chocolatier, Keith Hurdman, adds: “It’s been one of the biggest challenges we’ve ever had to face here at Thorntons, and has put all of our chocolate-making expertise to the test. I’m really proud of all of the team; it’s taken months of planning and over 50 people were involved in the making of it so the Guinness World Records title is a fantastic achievement and a great way to celebrate our 100th birthday.”

100 lucky winners of the Thorntons Golden Key competition will be visiting the chocolate factory to witness the spectacular unveiling and receive a behind-the-scenes factory tour and enjoy a piece of the action – and of the world’s largest chocolate bar if they’re lucky.

The world record attempt has also been supported by Cargill Cocoa and Chocolate, who supplied all of the chocolate that went into the bar, Dawson Group who supplied the air conditioned marquees the bar was made in, Shires Crane Hire who provided the cranes for weighing the bar, Speedy Hire who provided the generators and weighing attachments, PRS Refrigeration who provided the cooling fans and DS Smith Packaging Limited who made the giant Chocolate Block carton.

To celebrate their Centenary year, Britain’s best loved chocolatier has also launched a range of Centenary boxes, bars and bags, as well as touring its live mechanical chocolatier and magical Chocolate Kabin to raise money for the NSPCC and entertaining chocolate-lovers nationwide.


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Source: Talking Retail

Photo: BBC


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Chocolate Stampede As Tesco Pays For Error

Tesco stores came under siege from excited chocoholics on Tuesday after a glitch meant that Terry's Chocolate Oranges went on sale for just 29p each.

The famous chocolate treats, which usually cost £2.75 each, flew from the shelves as news of the offer went viral and shoppers dashed to stock up in time for the holidays.

The error came about after Tesco accidentally put two separate offers on the chocolates - a buy-one-get-one-free offer, and a three-for-£5 offer.

Combined, the offers meant that Tesco shoppers could purchase six chocolate oranges for just £1.75, or 29p each - a discount of nearly 90% off the official price of £16.50.

A Facebook group called "Terrys (sic) Chocolate Orange glitch, I was there" had hundreds of "likes" within just a few hours as triumphant shoppers posted images of their purchases, with some arranging the boxes of oranges to spell out the words "Yay" and "Tesco".

One shopper claimed on Facebook that she had managed to "raid" two stores to purchase an astonishing 246 oranges.

Usually that would have cost her £676.50, but on Tuesday it would have cost her a mere £71.34.

Laura Ryan said she had to make multiple trips to her car to load it up with her haul. She claimed she has already sold nearly half of the oranges, adding: "I do not like choc orange so I might as well sell them on plus I need a new wing mirror lol".

Other users claimed that oranges were being sold on eBay for up to £7 by people looking to profit by Tesco's mistake. Many were saving the chocolates for their families at Christmas, however.

Tesco supermarkets and Metro stores across the UK were affected by the error, with many shoppers complaining that they had learned off the offer too late and arrived at the stores to find only empty shelves.

In an echo of the famous slogan advertising the treats, the deal was not round for long, with Tesco claiming the glitch lasted only "a very short time" - much to many shoppers' dismay.

The chain would not reveal how many oranges were sold in the rush.

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Source and Photo: Sky News


Monday, October 24, 2011

Belgium to be the ISM 2012 partner country

Belgium will be the partner country of the 42nd International Sweets and Biscuits Fair (ISM), which will take place from 29th January to 1st February 2012 in Cologne.

ISM is the world’s leading trade fair for the trade in confectionery and snack items and presents a comprehensive product range of confectionery and snack items in the following product groups; chocolate, sugar confectionery, fine baked goods, snack products, ice cream and raw pastes. Only end products intended exclusively for retail sale are presented.

For years, exhibiting companies from Belgium have made up one of the biggest national contingents at the world’s most important trade fair for the international confectionery sector, and they regularly make an impressive showing, with the most refined art of chocolate-making, excellent baked products and numerous confectionery and snack items. As representatives of the ISM partner country, Belgian companies will once again demonstrate their top class expertise, outstanding skills and passion for tasty delights and variety.

Flanders Investment & Trade, Agence Wallonne à l’Exportation et aux Investissements Etrangers, and Brussels Invest & Export are the organisers of the program of activities that will put the spotlight on the partner country, Belgium, at ISM.

Belgium is rightly considered the home country of chocolate. After all, the high art of making chocolates and pralines isn’t only highly esteemed there, it also meets the highest culinary standards. And it isn’t only the big companies that are responsible for this reputation, many small, specialised producers and chocolatiers, in particular, maintain this tradition and are further developing it.

Chocolate is also an important business sector for Belgium’s economy. In 2010 alone, €1.7 billion worth of chocolate and pralines were exported (source: Flanders Investment & Trade, Brussels).

The spectrum of Belgian confectionery includes more than chocolate, however. It also features Belgian waffles, macaroons, couques - a traditional baked item for the Christmas season - spekulatius cookies, cakes and tartlets. In Belgium these specialities form part of the range of culinary offerings, and it is said that no one is the equal of Belgian companies when it comes to making bonbons, lollies and fruit gums.

ISM 2012 in Cologne will provide an overview of the variety and breadth of the Belgian confectionery industry. It is open exclusively to trade visitors from the wholesale and retail trades on all four days.

The fair will occupy 110,000 m² of gross exhibition space in Halls 2, 3, 4, 5, 10 and 11 at the Cologne exhibition centre. The organisers of ISM are Koelnmesse and the International Sweets and Biscuits Fair Working Group (AISM), which is the conceptual sponsor.

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Source and Photo: Food Processing News


Sunday, October 23, 2011

Recipe of the Week - Matt Preston's chocolate torte

We all love Masterchef so this recipe from Adelaide Now for Matt Preston's Chocolate Torte is something we just had to share with you.


INGREDIENTS

200g dark choc, 70 per cent
100g butter
4 eggs, separated
200g icing sugar
1 ( tbsp potato starch (or rice flour)
1/2 cuptoasted hazelnuts, skins removed

To Serve

Extra icing sugar
Fresh raspberries
Creme fraiche


METHOD

1. Preheat the oven to 150C. Melt chocolate and the butter together. Stir well to combine.

2. Grease a 25cm diameter ovenproof tart plate or metal flan tin. Line the bottom with baking paper.

3. Whisk yolks with the icing sugar and potato starch. It will quickly become a stiff batter but don't worry as the chocolate will loosen it up.

4. Now, whisk the egg whites until stiff. Stir together the chocolate and creamed egg yolks and sugar.

5. Then fold together the chocolate and the egg whites delicately, lifting from bottom to the top using a thin-bladed silicon or plastic spatula if you have one.

6. Pour the chocolate mixture into the metal flan tin.

7. Joggle it so the mix spreads evenly into the tin.

8. Sprinkle the hazelnuts evenly over the tart.

9. Bake for 20 minutes.

10. When cooked, remove and leave to cool in a safe place.

11. Now, get a sieve and sprinkle the finished tart with a fine dusting of icing sugar.

12. Slice and serve with fresh raspberries and creme fraiche on the side.


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Source and Photo: Adelaide Now


Saturday, October 22, 2011

Palestine activist distributes 'Mohammed Brenner chocolates'

Fay Waddington, a long-time activist in the Palestine solidarity movement in Brisbane, held a free give-away of “Mohammed Brenner chocolates” to passersby in Boundary Street, West End, on September 24.

Waddington and other supporters have held a regular weekly Palestine solidarity stall there every Saturday morning for several years, ever since the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 2006.

Waddington, a Socialist Alliance member, issued a statement to Green Left Weekly, describing the action as “a Chaser-inspired take on the Max Brenner brouhaha” in Australia over recent months.

She said: "The chocolate give-away, tongue-in-cheek called 'Mohammed Brenner,' is intended as a vehicle to engage with people" about the reality of the oppression of the Palestinians by Israel.

Waddington explained that "it was only after she became involved with refugee rights at the time of the Tampa incident in 2001, that she became aware that the Palestinians and their descendants are the largest single group of refugees in the world".

“A majority of Palestinians were forced to flee their homes in the 1947/48 Israel 'War of Independence,' known to the Palestinian people as Al Nakba, or The Catastrophe," she said.

"Over the years of the Palestine Solidarity Stall in West End, passersby are often surprised to learn that many of the displayed books are written by Jewish authors, including Israelis. Illan Pappe's The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, and Jeff Halper's, An Israeli in Palestine, are such examples.

"We have also shown DVDs, such as Anna Blatzter's Life in Occupied Palestine. Anna is an inspirational Jewish American woman, who is an ardent supporter of the controversial BDS (Boycott Divestment and Sanctions) campaign,” she said.

Waddington hopes “to make more people aware of the BDS campaign through the chocolate give-away, and encourages them to visit the Australians for Palestine website, www.australiansforpalestine.com, to find out how they can embrace the campaign".


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Source and Photo: Green Left


Friday, October 21, 2011

Show crowds enjoy 20 tonne chocolate hit

Almost half a million people hit up the Perth Royal Show this year with great weather, free entry for kids 12 and under and record breaking crowds on opening day boosting attendance.

Show punters worked their way through 20 tonnes of chocolate, 425kg of bananas and 200kg of sausages over the eight day event, taking full advantage of free samples in the food pavilions and award-winning produce on offer.

Visitors consumed 50 litres worth of flavoured milk, 36kg of cheese, 120 litres of lactose free milk and 42kg of yoghurt at the Harvey Fresh stand in the Dairy Pavilion.

Show competitions attracted people of all ages and walks of life, from leading rein riders as young as six to an 84-year-old woodchopper.

The most popular rides in Sideshow Alley were the new Thunderbolt ride and the Nitro.

About 2000 people each day enjoyed the Skyview Observation Wheel, the largest wheel in the southern hemisphere, in its first outing at the Perth Royal Show.

Award-winning chocolatiers Whistler's sold approximately 20 tonnes of chocolate and gave away 100kg worth of free samples. It made eight batches of honeycomb a day, or 960kg worth over the week.

Novelty showbags were again popular, with AC/DC, Crusty Demons, Dora The Explorer, Harry Potter, the Glow Bag and Bertie Beetle the biggest selling items.

Royal Agricultural Society of WA president Hugh Harding said this year's show had been an outstanding success and it remained a relevant and popular event after 180 years because it was a celebration shared with family and friends.

"Everyone knows someone who enters or judges a competition, volunteers their time or mans an exhibit. Many people have been involved in the Show for decades and their children and grandchildren follow suit," he said.

"It is really important that children understand where their food comes from, that they appreciate the work of farmers in this State and they realise that everybody benefits from our agricultural industries," he said.
Mr Harding said that he was proud of the event's showcase of competitions, 10,000 animals; one-off exhibits such as the Amazing Albany Experience and Guest Nation Malaysia to firm favourites such as cow milking and the IGA Follow the Yellow Brick Road trail through the agricultural pavilions.

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Source and Photo: The West


Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Why chocolate is healthy for women

Chocolate-loving ladies, you are in luck. New research suggests that eating about two chocolate bars a week could help reduce your risk of stroke. Announced on October 10, the new Swedish study supports previous research in men and women. “The protection started at more than 45 grams [about 1.5 ounces] a week,” said researcher Susanna C Larsson, PhD, of the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, in a statement.

ChocolateIn the study, the group eating the most chocolate (about 2.3 ounces a week) got the most benefit, reducing stroke risks by 20 percent, stated the researchers.

The research is published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. While prior research has discovered a link between eating chocolate and reduced stroke risk, the study discovered that those subjects who ate the most chocolate were protected a bit more from strokes caused by haemorrhage than strokes caused by obstruction such as blood clots, although the researchers aren’t exactly sure why.

Earlier research has established a link between cocoa-based confections and lowered blood pressure or improvement in blood flow, often attributed to antioxidants. One study announced this summer found that in 1,00,000 patients, with and without heart disease, those who ate the most chocolate had a 37 percent reduction in cardiovascular disease.

But don’t get too excited. The findings come with an important caveat: the healthful molecules are found in the bitter cacao, not in the sugar and fat with which they are routinely combined. So, to gain healthy benefits from chocolate, opt for a good quality dark chocolate that is at least 70 percent cocoa, Larsson noted.

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Source and Photo: Hindustan Times


Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Leave room for dessert - at $35,000

The world's most expensive dessert has been cooked up with an eye-watering price tag of STG22,000 ($A35,000).

Styled like a Faberge Easter egg, the extravagant chocolate pudding is believed to have broken all previous records thanks to its pricey list of ingredients, which includes gold, champagne caviar and a two-carat diamond.

Layered with champagne jelly and a light biscuit joconde, the creation is finished with bitter dark chocolate and glazed with edible gold leaf.

It has been created by Marc Guibert, head chef at Lindeth Howe Country House Hotel in Windermere, Cumbria.

The dessert, which is being launched for National Chocolate Week, starting on Monday, is made with four different types of the finest Belgian chocolate flavoured with a combination of peach, orange and whiskey.

Stephen Broughton, managing director of Lindeth Howe, said: "Marc has used all of his culinary talents to whip up a truly incredible concoction of chocolate, champagne and gold leaf, all topped off with a diamond. It looks spectacular, tastes incredible and has a price tag to match!"

At STG22,000, the dessert easily breaks the world record currently held by New York's Serendipity 3 Restaurant, which has a pudding priced at STG12,000.

But the British pudding will not take its place in the Guinness Book of World Records until a customer has deep enough pockets to order one - which must be done three weeks in advance.


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Source: Sydney Morning Herald

Photo: Daily Mail


Monday, October 17, 2011

Melting those chocolate myths

It's Chocolate Week 2011 in the UK so senior dietitian, Tracy Parker, unravels some health myths around this popular sweet treat.

In one of Roald Dahl’s famous novels, Mr Willy Wonka throws open the doors to his factory to sweet-toothed youngsters with a taste for chocolate. It’s a tale of greed and temptation but also a celebration of Wonka’s passion for the sweet stuff. And chocolate lovers have cause for celebration this week too; it’s Chocolate Week 2011.

As a dietitian, chocolate crops up in my job quite a bit because there are plenty of truths and myths flying around about just how heart healthy it is. Let’s unravel three of them.


1. Chocolate can keep heart disease at bay


Chocolate cakeThis is a myth. Eating chocolate will not stop you having a heart attack. Various pieces of research over the years, often reported in the media, have suggested chocolate, eaten in small quantities, might have some health benefits. But there are still lots of unanswered questions about chocolate. In the absence of conclusive evidence, I’d never advise anybody to eat chocolate to help prevent heart disease. Fruit and veg as part of a balanced diet, physical activity and giving up smoking are the things that really make a difference.


2. Dark chocolate is more heart healthy than milk chocolate

Cake slices with chocolate icingThere may be some truth to this one, but we’re still not clear as to what it is in dark chocolate that might be beneficial. Dark chocolate does contains more cocoa and therefore antioxidants than milk chocolate, which may contribute to good health. You see antioxidents help to mop up harmful free radicals - unstable chemicals that can damage other cells. Scientists think some of these nasty free radicals may also speed up the furring of our arteries. But we can get the beneficial effects of antioxidants by eating plenty of fruit and veg.

It’s also worth remembering that dark chocolate has the same amount of saturated fat as milk chocolate; too much saturated fat can mean higher cholesterol which, in turn, raises your risk of heart disease. So you should still keep dark chocolate as an occasional treat in a healthy balanced diet.


3. Chocolate should be avoided altogether

Chocolate muffinsAnother myth. There’s no harm in allowing yourself a treat like chocolate now and again. Completely stopping yourself from eating all the foods you really enjoy isn’t a great idea and won’t help in the long run if you’re trying to eat a healthy, balanced diet. You’ll probably eventually give into temptation and then feel like you’ve failed and abandon your healthy eating efforts.

So let’s not use this year’s Chocolate Week as a golden ticket to cocoa excess, but there’s no reason why we shouldn’t enjoy chocolate as an occasional treat. I know I probably will!

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Source and Photo: Health Canal


Sunday, October 16, 2011

Recipe of the Week - Chocolate marsala cake with caffe latte sauce

Another gem from Taste. This rich and luscious chocolate cake filled with Marsala soaked raisins might just be the next best thing to being in Italy!


INGREDIENTS

150g raisins
1/3 cup (80ml) dry Marsala
350g dark chocolate
250g unsalted butter, softened
250g caster sugar
2/3 cup (100g) plain flour, sifted
6 eggs, separated
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/4 cups (155g) almond meal
3 tbs golden syrup
Caffe latte sauce (makes 3 cups)
1 cup (250ml) milk
1 cup (250ml) pure (thin) cream
1/4 cup (55g) caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
4 egg yolks, lightly beaten
200ml thickened cream
2 tbs icing sugar, sifted
100ml espresso, cooled


METHOD

1. Preheat oven to 180°C. Grease and line a 22cm round cake pan. Bring raisins and Marsala to a simmer in a small pan over medium heat. Cool. Melt 200g chocolate in a bowl over a pan of simmering water (don't let bowl touch the water). Cool.

2. Beat 225g butter and 200g sugar until thick and pale. Stir in flour, yolks, vanilla, meal, 2 tbs golden syrup and chocolate. Fold in raisins and soaking liquid.

3. Whisk eggwhites to soft peaks. Whisk in remaining 50g sugar until stiff and glossy. Fold into cake mixture, then pour into pan. Bake for 1 hour until cake begins to crack and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Cool completely in pan.

4. For sauce, bring milk, pure cream, caster sugar and vanilla to just below boiling point in a pan over medium heat. Whisk in yolks, then cook, stirring, for 5-6 minutes over low heat until thick. Strain, then cover with plastic wrap. Cool. Whip thickened cream to soft peaks, then fold into cooled cream mixture with icing sugar and coffee. Chill. Melt remaining 150g chocolate and 25g butter in a pan over low heat with remaining 1 tbs syrup. Pour over cake and serve with sauce.



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Source and Photo: Taste


Saturday, October 15, 2011

Chocolate Dirt: Is It Art or Is It Dinner?

A few years back, an unknown chef, at restaurant Noma in Copenhagen, created a strange series of tableaux on his dining room tables, using tree bark, pine needles, lichens and other things normally grazed by reindeer. And so it was that in 2010 the Nordic forager René Redzepi (sounding much like an acid rock band) displaced the Spanish chemistry wizard Ferran Adria (for whom he once worked) as the world's numero uno chef.

Since last year, molecular gastronomy hasn't exactly evaporated, but now you might get trampled by dozens of upscale chefs who are rushing to harvest dinner from the underbrush and under rocks - or assembling dishes that looked like they might be untamed gardens. Although many chefs preceded Redzepi, dozens of acolytes are now making pilgrimages to Copenhagen for a chance to stage at his stoves.

In the US, "wildcrafting" is largely, but not entirely, a West Coast trend. Forerunner to Redzepi, Jeremy Fox created a global stir with beautifully composed plates at Ubuntu, in Napa, years ago, and Daniel Patterson at Coi in Los Angeles and David Kinch at Manresa in Los Gatos are masters of the style. You'll find similar efforts at the restaurant McCrady's in Charleston where chef Sean Brock lists farmers and foragers on his menu; at Toqué in Montreal, where chef Normand Laprise's website lists his kitchen staff as "artists" and its suppliers as "artisans"; and at Castagna in Portland, Ore., where chef Matt Lightner, who's been rooting around woodlands for years, produces still-lifes-with-leaves and calls them dinner.

2011-10-07-image006.jpg
Perhaps the most "florid" exemplar is Dominique Crenn at Atelier Crenn in San Francisco (her restaurant is subtitled "Poetic Culinaria"), whose vegetable presentations look like bonsai gardens and who claims she is reliving her childhood food memories and fantasies.

These chefs' horticultural foodscapes appear to have been assembled with tweezers and dental instruments. Their foraged dishes might contain upwards of 20 plants and herbs, and they're sent to your table on slabs of slate, miniature rock slides, primordial wood shapes and thrown glass instead of plates. They come with lyrical names such as Ocean Creatures and Weeds, A Walk in the Garden, Into the Vegetable Garden, Summer Bids Adieu, or Le Jardin d'Hiver.

In truth, if you substituted gems for the food, these presentations would look perfectly at home Tiffany's display windows. Caravaggio might have painted them.

You'll be eating roots, stems and petals of plants that used to be discarded or that you might step over on the sidewalk. One chef famously quipped, "Not the sidewalk. We'd never use stuff from there!" Which makes one wonder whether this chef has any idea what bears do in the woods.

As this trend of "food as naturalistic art" takes hold in upscale restaurants around the country, you'll find lots of new ingredients slipping onto upscale menus: White acorns; tips of fir needles; "dirt" made of dried and crumbled mushrooms, pumpernickel breadcrumbs, black olives, bulgur wheat, or sprouting grains; aloe vera, eucalyptus leaves, chickweed, wild ginger, wood sorrel, yarrow, pineapple weed, and sumac. Dirt is so hot that Crenn cooks her potatoes in the stuff before washing them clean. You'll find a similar plating style at just-opened modernist Korean eatery Jung Sik Dang in New York, where you'll need to bring lots of money. Next up: Dessert assemblages growing out of chocolate "humus" (as in dirt, not as in chick peas).

All of this comes at a price, of course, which is why you'll only find these goings-on at fancy restaurants. Some restaurants actually have foragers on their payrolls, and others need to hire artistically talented cooks to plate dishes so that each leaf, each carrot stalk, each nasturtium flower, each pod of immature sweet peas, is placed just so - a serious challenge when tonight's wild harvest contains a surprise crop of newcomers. You won't be stumbling across such food at your local Olive Garden.

But is it food? Is it art? Or is it merely extravagantly imitative horticulture? Some critics have complained that taste is taking a back seat to artifice, but they said the same thing about earlier shenanigans of molecular gastronomy without recognizing how new laboratory trickery might be transformative in the kitchen.

In this case, I think we're witnessing a reaction to cooking-with-chemistry with a romantic return to naturalism, or, to coin a word, "gastro-naturism." It is a way for high-flying chefs to differentiate themselves from the rest of the herd and it is guaranteed to get a thousand bloggers and their cameras into these restaurants.

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Source and Photo: Huffington Post


Friday, October 14, 2011

Chocolate Week is Back

Like chocolate? You’ll love Chocolate Week. It’s a week long celebration of fine chocolate commencing Monday the 10th and hosted at a variety of venues across London and around the UK with things winding down on Saturday the 15th and Sunday the 16th at Vinopolis with Chocolate Unwrapped, a choco-licious showcase featuring more than 40 exhibitors from Britain and around the world.

Some of the London highlights on offer during the week include:

The opening of Richmond-based chocolatier William Curley’s residency in the Front Room at St Martins Lane hotel offering a range of his award winning creations at a “Chocolate Box” pop up until the end of the year;

A five course chocolate menu available until 15 October at Canary Wharf’s scenic Plateau featuring courses such as include foie gras served hot with a cocoa nib tuille, braised endive and planed 70% Cru Virunga original beans chocolate;

A six course chocolate menu at “London’s most romantic restaurant” Clos Maggiore, priced at £59 per head or £98 with matching wines, and available through the 16th, with dishes such as seared wild scallops with fennel, orange and cocoa nibs vinaigrette;

A six course chocolate dinner collaboration between chocolatier Paul A Young and fusion chef Peter Gordon at Providores on Friday the 14th priced at £105 and including six courses, matching wines and a cocktail.

That’s just a bit of the best. And rest assured there are plenty more events several of which are free or geared toward the budget conscious. Booking for many of the tastings and restaurant specials is definitely recommended as is getting your tickets in advance for Chocolate Unwrapped. For more details about Chocolate Week, a full list of participants and a calendar of events visit www.chocolateweek.co.uk and www.chocolateunwrapped.co.uk.


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Source and Photo: Londonist


Thursday, October 13, 2011

World’s Largest Chocolate Bar on Tour with Healthy Lifestyle Message

A gigantic chocolate bar is bringing an even bigger idea to children and their families across the nation.

Weighing 12,190 pounds, the bar was produced by World’s Finest® Chocolate. Guinness World Records recently certified the bar as the World’s Largest Chocolate. The bar is a replica of the World’s Finest “dollar bar” and is 4 feet wide, 3 feet high and 21 feet long.

World’s Finest Chocolate, the leading provider of chocolate fundraising products, is featuring the bar in a tour called “Think Big. Eat Smart!” The tour is using an upbeat multimedia display to take the message of “eating right and staying fit” to students during presentations at schools.

The first phase of the tour included stops in Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin and Illinois. The next stop is New York City where the bar will make an appearance October 10 on the new ABC daytime food and lifestyle show, The Chew.

The remainder of the October schedule will take the bar to Pennsylvania, North Carolina, South Carolina and Ohio. The tour will conclude next May at the Sweets and Snacks Expo in Chicago.

The bar has 209,000 servings – enough for every fan in Yankee Stadium, Citi Field, MetLife Stadium and Madison Square Garden, with about 6,500 leftovers.

“We purposely made this bar to be an example of ‘portion distortion’. The bar is huge, but the big idea is eating right and staying fit,” said Eddie Opler, chief executive officer of World’s Finest Chocolate.”

Nelda Mercer, a registered dietitian and former spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association, said using the larger-than-life chocolate bar to discuss portion control is a great way to capture the kids’ attention. “When you’re trying to teach children about things like moderation and how to have a healthy relationship with food, having something that really makes them sit up and take notice helps make the message memorable.”

The tour includes an educational video, original music and a specially choreographed exercise dance to communicate the importance of active lifestyles and healthy eating. The messages make exercise and portion control synonymous with “the good life” and stress that chocolate and other treats should be eaten only in moderation.

About the World’s Largest Chocolate Bar

To make the world’s largest chocolate bar, World’s Finest Chocolate used:

1,200 pounds of almonds
5,500 pounds of sugar
2,000 pounds of milk powder
1,700 pounds of cocoa butter
1,400 pounds of chocolate liquor

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Source and Photo: PR Web


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Chocolate Chinaman 'not racist': poll

Some 97 percent of Swedes did not find the picture on chocolate giant Fazer's “Kinapuffar” product offensive despite claims of racism, according to a recent survey carried out by market research company Sifo.

Last week confectionery giant Fazer announced that the product was to be re-designed after complaints that the current packaging featured a "racist" image.

"Kinapuffar" (literally: Chinese pops) is a chocolate-covered sweet with packaging that features a caricature of a bright yellow Chinese face with a red pointed rice hat.

Fazer's move to change the packaging came in response to the debate following the publishing of a column in Swedish newspaper Helsingborgs Dagblad (HD) which questioned the stereotypcal picture used to market the sweet.

In his column, HD journalist Patrik Lundberg wrote that "to joke and laugh at Asians seems to be the only racism which can pass by unremarked".

"All it takes is stretching your eyes with your fingers or saying L instead of R, then the audience explodes with laughter," Lundberg wrote.

After Fazer's decision to revamp the packaging, Swedish artist Lars Vilks wrote an opinion piece on a Sveriges Television (SVT) website where he said that Lundberg was fighting a losing battle if he hoped to eradicate national stereotypes.

“It is probably impossible to get rid of prejudicial opinions on ethnic and national differences. You can tire yourself out by straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel,” Vilks wrote.

Lundberg, however, was quick to respond.

“Vilks is urging people to just ignore these things. I suggest we all ignore Lars Vilks' opinion on the matter and instead do our best to treat our fellow human beings the way we want to be treated ourselves,” Lundberg wrote.

Although Fazer's sweet might be a small matter in the larger scale of things, wrote Lundberg, “it doesn't mean that it is OK to go up to me and stretch one's eyes , or shouting 'Chinese-bastard' to me in a bar. It doesn't mean that someone gets to call my Asian girl-friends Thai whores”.

However, when SVT asked a thousand Swedes whether they thought the picture was offensive, only 3 percent said that they did.

Although there was little difference between men and women's answers, in the age group 15-29, eight out of a hundred said they found the picture in bad taste, which was slightly higher than the average.

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Source and Photo: The Locale


Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Chocolate bars get security tags

Newest research shows that recession hit consumers have taken to stealing chocolate bars along with other products. In order to prevent this from happening, supermarkets have started to fit security tags to the bars.

Tesco Express, in Polegate, East Sussex, has attached metal strips to 250g bars, worth £1.97, which will set off alarms at the exits if they are stolen.

Sarah Crodey, from the British Retail Consortium, said shoppers will start to see more tags attached to the cheaper popular branded items as the economic downturn drives more people to steal groceries and luxuries.

She said: ‘Changes in technology mean security tags are more affordable and we must remember that theft from a retailer is not a victimless crimes. It pushes up prices across the board for honest customers paying for their shopping. Shoplifting is a serious crime.’

A spokesman for Cadbury’s commented: “Dairy Milk is one of the more affordable brands so it’s surprising our bars need a tag on them.”

In 2008, a Sainsbury’s in Eastbourne started tagging budget chickens and in 2009, some UK Tesco stores put the metal strips on Cathedral City cheese.

As the recession started in 2009, major stores reported shoplifting up by a third. Items worth £400,000 are stolen from shops every day.

A spokesman for the Polegate store said: “At least one bar is stolen an hour. The tags are stickers. They are not very noticeable.”

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Source and Photo: International Supermarket News


Monday, October 10, 2011

Police on chocolate thief trail

Police are hunting conmen who stole £9,500 worth of chocolate bars.

A man duped a driver into taking his delivery of Milka and Toblerone bars to a different location after he arrived at the Paycocke Road industrial estate in Basildon, Essex.

When he arrived at the new location, two other suspects were waiting and unloaded the goods on to another lorry.

Inspector Simon Gray, of Essex Police, said: "The suspects will obviously try to sell on their haul, so if you notice a large amount of Milka or Toblerone chocolates being sold anywhere untoward, contact police immediately.

"It is also quite possible that they will offer the chocolate to businesses at discount prices."

The crime happened at about 10am on Monday.

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Source and Photo: Press Association


Sunday, October 9, 2011

Recipe of the Week - Dark-Chocolate Beetroot Cupcakes

Courtesy of the Irish Independent this recipe looks simply awesome. Apparently it makes between 9-12 cupcakes.

INGREDIENTS

100g dark chocolate
200g cooked beetroot, puréed with a blender
1110g caster sugar
110g soft butter, softened and cut into small pieces
2 large eggs
75g self-raising flour
1 tsp baking powder
50ml milk

Chocolate frosting 110g butter, at room temperature

1 tsp vanilla extract
325g icing sugar
4 tbsps cocoa powder
75ml double cream


METHOD

1. Pre-heat the oven to 180°C/350°F/Gas Mark 4 and line the bun tray with paper cases.

2. Melt the chocolate in a bowl over a pan of gently simmering water and then stir in the puréed beetroot.

3. In a large bowl, using a hand mixer, beat the sugar and butter until light and fluffy. Whisk in the eggs, one at a time, until incorporated. Mix in the flour, baking powder, milk and the chocolate and beetroot mix.

4. Divide the batter evenly among the paper cases and bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes, or until firm. Allow the cupcakes to stand for a minute before transferring to a wire rack to cool.

5. To make the chocolate frosting, beat the butter and vanilla extract together in a bowl until light and fluffy. Then, add the icing sugar and cocoa powder, a little at a time, to the double cream until it is all incorporated and the mixture is smooth.

6. Using a palate knife, frost the cupcakes when they are completely cool.


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Source and Photo: Irish Independent


Saturday, October 8, 2011

The chocolate capital of the world is all set to indulge in a sinful weekend

The chocolate lovers can now rejoice! No more waiting for a reason to indulge and savour the sinful chocolate treat. At the Bruge’s annual Choco-Laté festival held in the Belfort bell tower, visitors can savour and experience their favourite dessert in all possible shapes & forms!

Choco-Laté is the festival of sweet sins. The sensations that chocolate makers offer at dozens of stands seduce the patrons and submerge them in an atmosphere of indulgence and pure enjoyment.

The festival is set to host a gamut of activities, making mouths water and waistlines expand with a list of innovative, fun filled programs from body painting, demonstrations in chocolate recipes, creations by chocolate artists, Chocolate sculptures, a chocolate village for kids, a “chocolate walk” through the town of Bruges and many more interesting and innovative activities.

During live demonstrations, top chefs, bakers and chocolate makers let visitors discover chocolate creations and recipes that they can try out themselves. Attention is paid to the wide variety of ‘creative applications’ with chocolate. Sculptors, painters, and body painters will create works of art using chocolate.

Besides pleasing the taste buds, chocolate has also been used increasingly in beauty products and for a healthy lifestyle. Chocolate massages, chocolate packs or cocoa therapies are just a few of the treatments that could be presented to the visitors. Chocolate's role in a healthy and balanced diet is also given an important place at the fair.

Though chocolate in all forms is appetising, the classy combination of chocolate with a nice glass of wine, a big chocolate fondue with fruit etc. can open imagined experiences of this dessert! Choco-Laté will demonstrate the art of deliciously combining chocolate with other delicacies.

And lastly, for the most loyal patrons of the cocoa – the festival offers a Choco-Laté junior – a creative corner for children where they can explore their creativity in chocolate through fun body painting, sculpting and decorating etc.


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Source and Photo: Business Standard


Friday, October 7, 2011

UK Maltesers go Fairtrade

Maltesers, the third biggest chocolate brand in Britain, is to become Fairtrade, in a move which will boost sales of the ethical brand by 10%.

This is the first time that Mars, the Maltesers manufacturer, has shifted production of one of its products to Fairtrade. If follows similar moves by rivals, including Nestle, whose KitKat is now Fairtrade and Kraft, which shifted some of its Cadbury Dairy Milk products into Fairtrade. Starbucks and McDonald's have also stocked an increasing number ethically-sourced products in their outlets, a trend which has not always been cheered by cynical consumers.

Fiona Dawson, the managing director of Mars Chocolate in the UK, insisted the company wasn't "greenwashing". She said: "Consumers have been saying for many years that they want and expect big brands to do the right thing. They care deeply about where their food comes from."

Mars has already declared that it intends to buy 100pc of its cocoa from sustainable sources by 2020. As of 2009, certified cocoa – such as Rainforest Alliance, organic or Fairtrade – represented just over 1pc of total purchases.

Maltesers is the third biggest chocolate brand in Britain, behind Cadbury Dairy Milk and Galaxy. It had sales of £140m in the last 12 months.

Many ethical lines of food and drink have suffered in the recession, with organic sales going into reverse. However, sales of Fairtrade products increased by 40pc in 2010 to an estimated retail value of £1.17bn compared with £836m in 2009, suggesting British consumers have embraced the the label, which promises to pay farmers a premium on top of the market rate for their prouducts.

The premium that Mars will pay farmers, on top of the price they currently pay, will be about £900,000 a year. Most of them are based in the Ivory Coast. The sugar used in the sweets will also be Fairtrade. The first packs of Fairtrade Maltesers will hit shop shelves in spring, next year.

Michael Nkonu, director of Fairtrade Africa, which represents farmers and producers across Africa, said: “We’ve been working hard to support and strengthen our networks of Fairtrade certified cocoa farmers in West Africa. Many farmers in the Ivory Coast region are still struggling to re-establish their lives and build up their farms following the recent troubles. This agreement couldn’t be more timely, and will help enable a better future for farmers.”


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Source and Photo: Telegraph UK


Thursday, October 6, 2011

Barry Callebaut Completes Sale Of Stollwerck To Belgian Baronie Group

Barry Callebaut AG, the Zurich-based chocolate maker, Friday said it completed the previously announced sale of its European consumer business Stollwerck to the Belgian Baronie Group.

The sale included all of the business and all assets of Stollwerck and its affiliates, including five factories in Germany, Belgium and Switzerland.

Both the companies did not disclose any financial details of the transaction.

Stollwerck, based in Germany, generates revenues of nearly 500 million euros and volumes sold are more than 100 thousand tons.

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Source and Photo: RTT News


Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Will chocolate become a costly luxury?

Is the world's cocoa supply in danger? That's what a new study from the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) suggests, singling out a familiar culprit: Global warming. The findings reveal that annual temperature increases will hamper the crop-production efforts in West Africa, which currently supplies half of the world's chocolate — at least if preventive measures aren't taken. Here's what you should know:


How hot are we talking?

The study, which consulted 19 climate-change models, indicates that a mere two degrees Celcius increase by 2050 will render areas like Ghana and the Ivory Coast too hot to grow cocoa, says The Washington Post. As cocoa trees struggle to obtain enough water, the developmental stages of cocoa pods that house "the prized cocoa bean" — source of the chocolate we know and love — would be disturbed. The effects of a shortage — including a leap in the price of chocolate — could be felt as soon as 2030.


Well, why not just move the cocoa trees elsewhere?

Rachel Cernansky of TreeHugger points out that "the ideal conditions for cocoa-growing will shift to higher altitudes — but most of West Africa is relatively flat, so there is not a lot of land at higher elevation to move to." Plus, clearing forests to pave way for farmland may actually end up "exacerbating climate change even further."


How would a shortage affect the region?

The cocoa trees play an "absolutely critical role" in the region's rural life, says CIAT's Dr. Peter Läderach, who authored the study. Hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers use "their cocoa trees like ATM machines," he says. "They pick some pods and sell them to quickly raise cash for school fees or medical expenses."


What kind of preventive measures can be taken?

Farmers could diversify their crops to "spread the risk" and avoid being overly dependent on cocoa, notes TreeHugger's Cernansky. Other solutions include using shady trees to cool growing areas and developing irrigation systems that aren't exclusively weather-dependent.


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Source and Photo: The Week


Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Australian chocolate industry praised for commitment to accredited cocoa

The Australian chocolate industry has taken huge steps towards using accredited cocoa products, new research shows.

Tim Piper, Victorian Director and Principal Advocate, Ai Group Confectionary Sector says the industry is making positive change towards only using accredited cocoa, but more can be done to ensure no inhumane treatment of workers.

“The major chocolate companies have all taken steps to encourage use of accredited cocoa, from using only accredited cocoa in their most popular brands, to using accredited cocoa across their entire product range,” he says.

“Despite the improvements over the last decade, change will only occur by working in conjunction with local communities to encourage appropriate steps.

“The industry totally disapproves of the worst forms of child labour and will continue to help African communities recognise the benefits of changing their practices.

“Improved agricultural production techniques are vital to assist long term improvements which will create the right environment to ensure child labour is greatly reduced and even eradicated.

But Piper does not believe new regulations imposed on the industry will not produce an improved supply chain and suggested chocolate companies need to commit to further investment to reduce child labour and create better and more efficient agricultural production techniques.


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Source and Photo: Food Mag


Sunday, October 2, 2011

Recipe of the Week - Sour Cream Chocolate Cake

According to Dan Lepard it is really not so hard to ensure your cake has a moist, delicate crumb – you just have to know a few ground rules.

The cake chapter in his new book goes into some detail about getting the crumb moist and delicate: don't overbake it, add a little syrup while it's warm, keep it covered once cool and, if you want it extra soft, add two teaspoons of vegetable glycerine for every 200g flour. Or just eat it fresh. Here's his recipe below.


INGREDIENTS


75g dark chocolate
75ml sunflower oil
75g sour cream
125g caster sugar
75g runny honey
2 tsp vanilla extract
3 medium eggs
25g cocoa powder
175g plain flour
2 tsp baking powder


For the quick cake syrup:

25g icing sugar
2 tsp vanilla extract


For the sour cream frosting:

300g dark chocolate
50g unsalted butter
50g runny honey
25ml bourbon or brandy
100g icing sugar
125g sour cream


METHOD

1. Line the base of two round 18cm sponge cake tins with a disc of nonstick paper and heat the oven to 180C (160C fan-assisted)/350F/gas mark 4.

2. Get on with the cake mix – melt the chocolate, then beat in the oil, cream, sugar, honey and vanilla. Beat in the eggs one at a time, then stir together the cocoa, flour and baking powder, and sift in. Divide the mixture between the tins and bake for around 25 minutes, until a skewer pulls out with just a few crumbs sticking to it.

3. While the cakes are warm, make the syrup by stirring the icing sugar and vanilla with 25ml boiling water.

4. Prick the cake tops, spoon over the syrup and leave to cool in the tin, covered with paper or clingfilm.

5. For the frosting, melt the chocolate and butter, stir in the honey, bourbon and sifted icing sugar, leave until cool, then beat in the sour cream.

6. When the mixture firms slightly, beat again, sandwich the cakes together with it and spread the rest over the top and sides.


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Source and Photo: The Guardian