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Archive | event

Craft Chocolate:
Slow Food That’s Worth the Wait

February 18, 2020 by Emily Mantooth

Emily Mantooth is co-founding the Craft Chocolate Experience with us March 6-8, 2020. Her years of experience with the Dallas Chocolate Festival made her the perfect partner with whom to embark on this adventure. She has been the engine pushing the festival forward and so we thought you’d enjoy hearing about it from her perspective. We look forward to seeing you in March!

Selling small-batch chocolate

 

Making chocolate is a lesson in patience. To start, it takes a cacao tree about five years to grow enough to bear fruit.  And even then it can take another four to five months (or longer) for the tree to actually produce that fruit in the form of cacao pods.

cacao pods on the tree

From there, beans are harvested, fermented, bagged, and shipped all around the world. This can also take months. For the craft chocolate maker, only the finest beans will find the way to the factory, assuring that the chocolate that is produced can highlight the nuances of these magical beans. And while the farmer may be looking to the next harvest, the maker’s work is just beginning: sorting, roasting, winnowing, grinding, conching, tempering….so many calibrated steps that all have to go perfectly to produce a high-quality bar.

cocoa beans

And that’s just to make the chocolate. For confectioners, they take it a step further to create truffles, bonbons, and pastries that both taste delicious and look amazing.  

So much work has gone into getting the chocolate made, but even that is not the end of the process. Once craft chocolate makers and chocolatiers perfect their recipes, they must add to that production the challenge of selling what they make. Decisions about product and shape, packaging, marketing, pricing, and shipping. Do we open a shop or just sell through others? Do we update our labels this year? How much should I produce of each product? How many beans should I buy? The rabbit holes are many and deep. So, while addressing the business decisions is a key part of actually making chocolate as a business, it is rare that a chocolate maker got into the business because of this step. And yet, day after day, amazing artisans grapple with these choices to keep their passion going.

making chocolate in a melanger

As we put the finishing touches on Craft Chocolate Experience: San Francisco, I think about all those things daily. From the farmers to the folks wrapping bars that have come off the production line, everyone has a part to play in getting a delicious and beautiful piece of chocolate into the hands of someone who can enjoy its flavor while also appreciating all the time and energy and perseverance that it took to get it there.  

We are thrilled that we have over 90 exhibitors coming to the beautiful Palace of Fine Arts from March 6-8 to tell their unique stories and share their amazing work. This truly is a chance like no other to learn and taste and experience the literal fruits of these labors. For our guests, this means tasting bars and confections from around the world, learning from industry experts on a range of in-depth topics, and also having some fun while gaining a deeper appreciation of what it takes to bring craft chocolate to market. These makers and their commitment to excellence, to doing things the right way, and to caring about the impact that their businesses can have on the communities they touch continue to inspire our whole Craft Chocolate Experience team.

A group of chocolate makers holding chocolate bars

So, while we excitedly count down the days until we see old friends and try new treats, our hope is that everyone who attends Craft Chocolate Experience this March shares our enthusiasm. We are mindful of the dedication, creativity, and tireless effort it takes to make each bar of chocolate…and we cannot wait to see these talented makers share that with every guest who comes into the Palace of Fine Arts.  

Just as each chocolate bar begins with a cacao tree planted years before, we, too hope that Craft Chocolate Experience is just the beginning of a chocolate journey. That the things that guests taste and learn are the beginning of their own chocolate adventure….and we can’t hardly wait!

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12 Nights of Chocolate 2019: Dec 4 – 15

November 8, 2019 by Jennifer Roy

This year marks our seventh hosting the 12 Nights of Chocolate, bringing together chefs from the Bay Area and beyond to take over the chocolate factory with a dinner series for charity. We lay down one rule: use our chocolate in any application on the plate. That’s it! After months of planning, texting, cajoling, we’re excited to announce the line-up for this year with 46 incredible chefs participating!

Way back in 2013 when Todd and myself sat down with Emily Luchetti (who’s joining us this year with April Bloomfield, Traci Des Jardins, and Loretta Keller ) to discuss how we could do something fun while giving back to the community, it was Emily’s idea to host a 12 Nights of Chocolate chef series, and we jumped at the idea. Our first year we had six chefs and had no idea that it would evolve into an event where some of the best chefs in the country collaborate alongside up and coming rising stars.

Some highlights this year include an elegant coursed dinner with Laurent Gras from Saison alongside Nick Muncy from Michael Mina, plus a special guest chef; a demo with Stella Parks aka @bravetart involving a six foot Yule log, a night we’re calling Bakery, BBQ, Booze where our factory will be taken over by 4505 Burgers & BBQ, Jane the Bakery, Manresa Bread,Kantine, Breadbelly, Cowgirl Creamery, Stonemill Matcha, Fort Point Beer, Neighbor Bakehouse, Tartine Bakery & True Laurel, plus more. And of course, our annual screening of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory in a Chocolate Factory – and we encourage you to bring your kids!

We hope you’ll join us as we bring our chocolate and chefs community together for 12 Nights. The dates are December 4th through 15th, and we’ll be hosting all of the nights, unless otherwise noted in a beautiful loft above our 16th Street factory.

As years past, all proceeds benefit the SF-Marin Food Bank, where in 2018 alone Dandelion Chocolate raised funds to provide over 65,000 meals.

Tickets sell out quickly, so click here to get the line-up and book your tickets.

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Pairing Sake with Chocolate
at Umami Mart

September 4, 2019 by Karen Solomon

Kayoko Akabori is one of the founders of Umami Mart, an Oakland importer and retailer of Japanese food, barware, and household goods, and an online blog of food and drink. Brandon, our staff accountant, is a huge fan of the store, and he noticed that they expanded their space to include a tasting bar that can host events. He made an introduction to Leah and Christine, who happily worked with the Umami Mart team to taste chocolate after chocolate, and sake after sake, to find complimentary flavors between them. Together they hosted a sold-out event to highlight how sake and single-origin chocolate are made, and how complimentary they can be side by side. Kayoko blogged a recap of the event, and she kindly allowed us to share it here.

 

A few weeks ago, we hosted an event with our neighbor across the bay, Dandelion Chocolate, for a special event pairing sakes with chocolates. The event focused on chocolate and sake production, and we tasted through Dandelion’s bars made in San Francisco and Japan, paired alongside sakes that are also from the Bay Area, and Japan. It was an awesome night of discovery and our taste buds were awakened!

The event came about because as a chocolate lovers, we weren’t getting quite the right pairings with sake – but we knew there’d be a pairing out there! There is a lot of literature written about sake and chocolate. Many Japanese blogs and books suggest pairing sweeter style sakes like sparkling sakes and nigoris with chocolate. But we tried these pairings over and over again, and it wasn’t quite clicking.

It was time to bring the chocolate pros in – Dandelion Chocolate from San Francisco. Tasting through the chocolates with Christine really helped us open our eyes on how to taste chocolate and the production method of chocolate (from cacao fruit bean to bar).

The resulting pairings did not involve one sparkling sake or nigori! In fact some of the sakes we paired alongside these dark and complex chocolates were on the dry side. The only only outlier that was on the sweet side was the aged, vermouth-like Hisui red, which worked wonders for the extra dark Ecuador 85% bar we tried at the end.

Dandelion opened an outpost in Kuramae, a neighborhood in Tokyo, in 2016 where they make and sell chocolate. We were lucky enough to taste one of the bars made in Tokyo, along with three others made in San Francisco. We had worked with Christine and Leah from Dandelion to come up with these chocolate/sake pairings:

Pairing 1
Cahabon, Guatemala 70% (made in SF) with Enter Gold Daiginjo (brewed in Aichi, Japan)

Pairing 2
Maya Mountain, Belize 70% (SF) with Den Nama (Oakland)

Pairing 3
Gola Rainforest, Sierra Leone 70% (Tokyo) with True Vision (Fukui)

Pairing 4
Camino Verde, Ecuador 85% (SF) with Hisui Red Rice (Kumamoto)

Christine started off the event by cutting open a cacao pod!

The pods were slimy and tart, and when chewed, definitely tasted like a mild bean.

The tasting led to many lively discussions with our guests. I had personally never tasted sakes and chocolates alongside one another before and was astounded by how one enhanced the other. We all learned so much about sake and chocolate, and how to taste each individually, and together.

As someone who has paired lots of savory foods with sake, pairing chocolate with sake was pretty intimidating. With a little guidance and help from the pros of chocolate, exploring outside our usual pairing comfort zone was eye-opening and ultimately delicious.

Thank you to everyone who attended the event – it was our first ticketed event at the bar and we were so happy that it was a packed house. A very special thanks to Christine from Dandelion – she was so knowledgable and gracious. We hope to partner with Dandelion again in the future!

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12 Nights of Chocolate 2018

November 9, 2018 by Jennifer Roy

In just a few weeks, we’ll be hosting our sixth Annual 12 Nights of Chocolate!

Each year, Dandelion Chocolate invites chefs to take over our factory to create a unique holiday culinary experience for charity. This year we have 38 chefs participating, and there’s only one rule: use Dandelion chocolate on the plate. Each evening is unique in that we ask chefs to create a menu that is entirely their creation – from elegant seven-course dinners to chocolate beer, concretes and burgers! All proceeds from the event go to the SF-Marin Food Bank. In 2017, we helped to raise over 65,000 meals.

The dates are December 2nd through 13th, and we’ll be hosting all of the nights, with exception of movie night, in a beautiful loft space on the second floor of our soon to open chocolate factory on 16th and Alabama Street. Our annual Willy Wonka movie night will take place at our Valencia café.

Donation bins will be located inside our cafe on Valencia Street as well as the event space for the duration of the event. Stop by to drop off cans and non-perishable food anytime during the holiday series.

For the amazing chef line-up and tickets click here.

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Los Angeles Pop-Up Debut with Salt & Straw Ice Cream

August 31, 2018 by Jennifer Roy

When Salt & Straw ice cream invited Dandelion Chocolate to be the pop-up shop in their Los Angeles-based Arts District DTLA scoop shop (829 E. 3rd St.), we were thrilled and jumped at the opportunity. We could not think of a better way to introduce ourselves to the LA community than inside our favorite ice cream maker’s store.

Salt & Straw retail shop in LA

Our pop-up shop inside Salt & Straw’s Arts District DTLA scoop shop.

In 2017, Dandelion Chocolate’s Executive Pastry Chef Lisa Vega taught a class with Salt & Straw’s co-founder Tyler Malek at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa. Lisa made her chocolate “Nutella” celebration cake and Tyler made nib-infused ice-cream. Soon after, Tyler and the Dandelion kitchen team collaborated to create the Smoked S’more ice cream flavor for their limited edition chocolate menu. Since then, all of Salt & Straw’s San Francisco scoop shops have served a rotating flavor that includes Dandelion Chocolate. A friendship made in chocolate ice cream heaven!

Tyler, Lisa, Meredyth of Dandelion Chocolate and Salt & Straw

Tyler of Salt & Straw, Lisa and Meredyth of Dandelion

In the LA pop-up shop, we will be offering a curated selection of our bars, hot chocolate mix, cocoa nibs, and ground chocolate, as well as our book, Making Chocolate: From Bean to Bar to S’more. And, of course, visitors will be able to taste samples of our chocolate. Norah, one of our long-time employees who now lives in Los Angeles, helped bring the pop-up to life, and we are so grateful for all of her hard work!

The pop-up will run through February 2019 during regular store hours, 11am to 11pm daily. Please stop by and say hello!

 

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Our Week in NYC

December 2, 2017 by Jennifer Roy

We’re almost at the end of our nine-day pop up in New York City, and…WOW. We are just so humbled.

Day in and day out, our tiny little corner café in Chelsea has been flooded with such warmth and enthusiasm, and we can barely keep the s’mores in stock! Chef Lisa and her team have doubled down in their little commissary kitchen, rolling out impossible numbers of cookies and tarts and brownies and more. We’ve made more hot chocolate this week than we thought we ever could, and we’ve been teaching chocolate making classes to the best and most welcoming crowds.

We have a few more classes and book events before we hit the road back to California on December 3rd, so come see us before then! The full list of events is here.

Thank you New York. We really do love you.

(And we hope we’ll be back!)

Follow us on Instagram for more pics.

Thank you Gennaro Pecchia for the photos!

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12 Nights of Chocolate 2017

November 13, 2017 by Jennifer Roy

12 Nights of Chocolate is an annual fundraising event where we invite the best chefs in the city (and beyond) to take over our space and create an experience, and there’s only one rule: use our chocolate, and run with it.

This is our fifth year and we couldn’t be more excited to announce the amazing line-up of chefs – 15 Michelin stars – not that we’re counting!  Every evening is so unique, creative and different from the next: State Bird Provisions will be cooking from their just-released book; the ultimate ice-cream social with Salt & Straw, Revival and Smitten; Manresa Bread, Neighbor Bakehouse and Jane The Bakery are teaming up for “Bakery Night”; Toothache Magazine celebrate their forthcoming issue with Nick Muncy, Shawn Gawle, Kim Alter (Nightbird), Val Cantu (Californios), Rupert & Carrie Blease (Lord Stanley) – an all-star line-up.

The dates are December 4th through 15th and most evenings will take place in a beautiful loft space on the second floor of our upcoming chocolate factory on 16th and Alabama, and others at our Valencia cafe. As in years past, all proceeds will go to the SF-Marin Food Bank, for whom last year’s event raised over 65,000 meals.

A donation bin will be located inside our cafe for the duration of the event. Stop by to drop off cans and non-perishable food anytime during the holiday series.

For tickets and more information, click here.

 

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Come to our book launch party!

November 6, 2017 by Molly Gore

We still have tickets left for our book launch party on November 14th at The Archery! Our book hits shelves that day, and we’re really excited to share it with you and celebrate. We’ll have cocoa nib-infused beer from Almanac Beer, Co., smoked brisket from Central Kitchen and bites from The Cheese School, cocktails from Workhorse Rye, and of course, a decadent spread of cakes and more from our own Lisa Vega and her team. We’ll be signing books, too. Hope to see you there!

And for those of you in Southern California, we’ll be throwing a second launch party at Hedley & Bennett in Vernon on November 16th, from 6:30-9pm. The event is free and open to the public, and you can RSVP here. On November 17th, you can also catch us signing books from 10:00am to 11:30am at Thyme Café and Market. We look forward to seeing you and sharing our chocolate!

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Dynamic Duos: The Inside Scoop on Pairings

May 25, 2017 by Jessica Robin

Here at Dandelion Chocolate, we LOVE food.  The chocolate-y items, of course, but it doesn’t stop there. Talking about flavor and taste is an everyday occurrence around here. It’s also a big part of  our jobs. As the Event Manager, one of the things that I get to do is organize and enjoy all of our pairing events, which means tasting a lot of delicious things, with a lot of nice people.

I often think of pairings in the following way: individually, chocolate and another food item may each taste amazing, but when you pair them together, they could taste like pond water, soap, or an unidentified yuck. That’s what I consider a bad pairing. No offense to pond water. But, if you taste two yummy things alone and when they’re combined, they create a whole new taste sensation that calls to mind something that neither product was able to reveal on it’s own, that’s a great pairing. And sometimes a great pairing is also an opportunity to get to know your fellow tasters a little bit better.

 One of the things that I love most about these types of events is hearing what other people taste when we pair different things together. Barbecue potato chips? Margarita pizza? A rocky stream bed? Birthday cake? Chocolate croissants? Orange blossom water? What?! I mean yum! It is exciting when a particular pairing really invokes a specific emotional response for someone, like memories from childhood or travel. Usually these taste sensations are really, really specific and include time, place and people. Like the milk left over from that cereal with colored marshmallows. Or a bowl of summer berries with not-too-sweet homemade whipped cream. Or that time that you burned the chocolate chip cookies just a little bit, but ate them all anyways. It is amazing that so many nuances can often be discovered with such simple ingredients, like sugar and cocoa beans.

For me, it’s a treat to really get to savor a pairing combination. To spend the meditative time, projecting my laser-focused attention on the textures of a floral tea, or the peachy melon sweetness of an unpasteurized sake. To just think about the notes that I taste. That’s it. The slightly malty, slightly bitter quality of melting dark chocolate. The breezy berry notes and pinging acidity of an African coffee.The toothsome hamminess of a great gouda. It also helps that there are no wrong answers or very many rules. Everyone tastes differently and will prefer one pairing over the other. Sometimes, I even play Devil’s Advocate and try to match the two most outlandish items together — just for fun!

Hosting, planning, and participating in these chocolate pairing events has made me change my mind about what my favorite and not-so favorite Dandelion chocolate bars are – welcome back to #1, Madagascar! I the love the challenge of trying to find a good match for a strong Pu’er tea, or a bold blue cheese. If you think that you know all the nuances of your favorite Dandelion Chocolate bar, that there is nothing new left to discover, I invite you to pair it with a great quality cheese, sake, coffee or tea. See where it takes you. Hopefully to a newfound sense of excitement and curiosity about food and flavor.

Check our website here for the listing of our upcoming pairing classes in May and June.

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Twelve Nights to Remember

December 22, 2016 by Roman Licea

The Bay Area is home to  beautiful produce, and our best chefs know it well.  To this day, a dessert option at our chapel of cookery, Chez Panisse, is a fruit bowl. The archetype for desserts, the fruit bowl, has made its way into the mass-produced mainstream, and out of season, drowned in corn syrup. But chefs and cooks will stand by Alice Waters’ fruit bowl like sentinels because it’s everything those syrupy bowls aren’t: fresh, local, delicious. It’s our best produce, standing on its own, at the right time of year.

Chef Judy Rogers keeps the focus on the bounty of our Bay in the introduction to her classic, “The Zuni Cafe Cookbook,” where she states, “Méfie-toi du cinéma dans la cuisine.” What she means is: beware of chefs who use unnecessary ingredients, including those that are out of season, and over fussed with in the kitchen in hopes of creating a great show because even at our most accomplished, as cooks and chefs, we can’t surpass the quality of our basic ingredients by using technique.

At our fourth annual 12 Nights of Chocolate, some of the most talented chefs in the Bay Area take their skills into our kitchen and design a night with no rules except two: use our chocolate, and don’t hold back. This year, I felt Judy’s words in my bones when I saw what came out of our kitchen. Sometimes simple and always incredible food, showcasing what nature has to bring us this season, and how it can make chocolate sing. 

Concluding our fourth annual  “12 Nights of Chocolate,” we were taken to some of the most accomplished and exclusive cooking styles in the Bay Area. There was Chef Matthew Siciliano from the brand new SingleThread Farms—an inn, farm, and restaurant in Healdsburg. Near our Valencia location is the Michelin two-starred Lazy Bear, where Chef Edward Martinez creates delicate and artful desserts. And then there’s Ramon Perez, a chef that has dedicated his career to chocolate work and produces beautifully executed truffles and bars in Sacramento, who returned for another year of his tasty creations.  

As a member of the pastry team, I was lucky enough to attend most of the twelve nights either as a guest, a server, in the back polishing glassware, or even helping plate with the city’s greatest chefs.  The most difficult part of an all-dessert tasting menu is the sugar overload, and the guilt from a lifetime of knowing desserts for dinner isn’t the decision of an adult… but these three chefs appeased any objections we might’ve had from our mothers with flavors and textures that were seasonal, playful, and a healthy balance of technique and simplicity.

Chef Martinez started the night with a delicate brown rice cracker punctuated with drops of burnt citrus gel and cocoa nib custard.  Adding to the texture of the cracker was puffed brown rice finished with petals of sunflower to add a gentle pop of color. In true Lazy Bear fashion, Chef Martinez and his cooks can be seen hunched over with laser focus, assembling each dish with surgical precision. The earthy, crisp, and tart bite was a successful beginning to the night. 

Our Madagascar chocolate is one of our most distinctive flavor profiles. It’s bold, with cherry and citrus notes, and a thick viscosity that keeps our tempering skills sharp.  Chef Ramon Perez took this chocolate and lightened its boldness into a mousse while still retaining the tasting notes that make it so special. Sitting atop a sable-like base, the mousse round had a strip of candied pink lemon to coax out the notes of our chocolate while showcasing a beautiful but unconventional citrus that can found along some of the great stalls at the Ferry Building’s farmer’s markets. Shrouding the dessert were shingles and shards of eucalyptus meringue, over a refreshing lemon granita. The fluff of mousse, sandy sable, chewy lemon peel, crunchy meringue, and cool granita was symphonic, and the dessert unraveled its bold nuances into one of the most thoughtful and memorable experiences our Madagascar chocolate has seen.

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By this point in the night, I was already impressed, and in no way prepared for the ending by Chef Matt Siciliano. His final dish was a showstopper that deserved a backing track of strings on an episode of “Chef’s Table.”  

A bowl was presented with a green apple, and a simple crumble below that might look like a forgotten centerpiece on any of our kitchen islands, but on a closer look, I realized that this was our chocolate, tempered into an apple mold and dusted with green to look like a Gravenstein.  I struck down on the apple with my fork and it shattered open to reveal a dream.  Inside was Gravenstein apple butter, layered with a fine brunoise of Pink Pearl apple that offered a rosy color contrast. It was phenomenally impressive, the kind of thing that I could see a temperamental, perfectionist chef sweating and shouting over in the kitchen. But Chef Matt Siciliano is kind and soft-spoken, as sweet as the chestnut cream he coaxed inside that apple.resized_20161212_205356

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It’s amazing to see how seasonal flavors can make our chocolate dance; apples, citrus, chestnut. It’s an experience of flavor I’ll never forget.  With all proceeds from the nights going to the SF – Marin food bank, I can’t wait for next year when new and recurring chefs take the seasons and our chocolate to create a memorable evening for a great cause.

 

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