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DANDELION CHOCOLATE

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La Cervezeria, Papua New Guinea Cacao, and Cocoa Crisp

June 2, 2014 by Maverick Watson

On Tuesday June 3rd we will be hosting a sourcing talk about Papua New Guinea in our cafe at 7pm.  Greg D’alesandre will be talking about his recent trip to the country to find new sources of cacao.  And speaking of cacao from Papua New Guinea…

I’ve been hanging out with William Bostwick, a local beer maker that often works at the small brewery La Cervezeria de MateVeza on 18th St and Church a lot lately. We met a few months back when he was buying a bag of Whole Roasted Madagascar Beans and I asked how he was going to use them. “I’m making beer!” he said, as he pulled out a bag of Far West Fungi mushrooms that smelled like maple syrup.  He used the mushrooms and cacao to make a great ale for SF Beer Week.

mate-vezaWilliam is an inventive and enthusiastic beer maker (and writer) that likes to use unusual ingredients in his beer making, which brought him to Dandelion. That beer turned out really well, so I’ve been working with him and playing with new ideas about using cacao in beer making.  We’ve discussed how different origins could be used to get different flavors out of the brews and how to best use the beans.  His batches are only around for a couple weeks at the longest and are served on tap at La Cervezeria.  All of their beers are brewed in just 20 gallon batches, which lets their brewers have fun playing with new ingredients and recipes very often.

photo 3 (1) Our most recent batch is a South Pacific Stout made with our Papua New Guinea beans called “Cocoa Crisp”.  However, it doesn’t come off as a stout.  It is very dark in color with a very creamy coconut body and mouthfeel, but it has a very light flavor profile.  It’s playfully malty and effervescent with undertones of rich prune and… chocolate!  It’s really unique and if I were blindfolded while drinking it, I would think of it as an amber ale; it’s surprisingly light in body for it’s color.

photo 1 (2) Alright, let’s nerd out for a minute.  I’m new to brewing so all of this was very exciting to me.  The base of the beer is Maris Otter Barley, which is a traditional British grain known for it’s “bready” sweetness, that William likened to a honey graham cracker.  These grains were added to oatmeal (for body) and wood-smoked grains, to emphasize our Papua New Guinea beans’ smokiness, and some dark roasted grains (for color).  All of these ingredients make up the “mash” for brewing the beer, to which we then added Papua New Guinea Cacao!  We were thinking “S’mores” when we thought up this profile, but the beer ended up being much lighter and fruitier than we imagined!

photo 5 We ended up adding the PNG beans to the mash whole and cooking the mash below boiling in order to more more gently extract their flavors.  Considering the cacao is naturally about %50 fat (cocoa butter), releasing that much fat into beer isn’t great because it has would decrease the head on the beer, so we decided not to crack them.  So we essentially steeped them like a tea in the mash.

photo 2 (1)After we steeped the mash and drained it, we have “wort”.  Wort is essentially beer tea.  It’s hot, unfermented beer.  It’s got tons of sugar in it that’s been extracted from all of the grains and would make a bountiful feast for yeast… so this is the part where we inoculate with yeast!  We used a Belgian Trappist Ale Yeast, which ferments with a lot of fruity esters and lending flavor notes of plum, raisin or even caramelized banana.  All of these parameters match up with what we’ve gotten out of the cacao in our Papua New Guinea chocolate, so it made sense to use it for the beer.  The brew then took about a week to ferment before it was put into kegs (carbonated) and tapped!  It’s on tap right now at La Cervezeria if you want to want to go try it!

png-e1380957088651 Our Cacao beans from Papua New Guinea are delicious and unique because of the way that they are dried on the farm using wood burning fires that give them a “campfire smokiness”.  PNG has a tendency to be very humid and wet, so drying the beans in the sun, as most farmers do, is out of the question.  To make up for this, the build huts over metal pipes in which they build wood fires.  Then they put place the beans on racks above these pipes to receive heat and dry.  Of course, this is all in a very rural area with limited building resources, so some smoke reaches the beans.  This is where the “smokiness” comes from, if you’ve ever been anywhere near a campfire, I don’t have to tell you that wood smoke has a tendency to stick to things. There are A LOT more ins and outs to the growing cacao industry in Papua New Guinea, their processes and practices that is beyond my knowledge, but if you want to know more, Greg D’alesandre (our Bean Sourcerer) just got back from a trip to Papua New Guinea and is conducting a talk about his trip, the farms he visited there, and their practices on June 3rd at our Factory on Valencia Street!  The presentation will start at 7pm and include photos and lots of fun information.  If you’re interested in beer as well as the chocolate side of all of this, there’s going to be an unofficial “after-party” for the talk at La Cervezeria, where you can try the Cocoa Crisp Papua New Guinea beer!  Hope to see you there!

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Dandelion Chocolate at Caledonia Alley

May 15, 2014 by Maverick Watson

4B DANDELION MAROCCHINO

If you like our Marocchino, this weekend you should stop by Caledonia Alley behind Four Barrel!  This little treat is our version of a traditional Northern Italian drink (Drinking Chocolate + Espresso + Nib Whipped Cream), and for this weekend only Four Barrel is serving their interpretation (think bourbon whipped cream)!

Caledonia Alley is a small kiosk that harkens back to 4B’s earlier (build-out) days, and is located directly behind the building in the alley. They’ll only be open from 9am-3pm for a few weekends coming up, during which they are hosting signature drinks from a number of their favorite wholesale accounts (we’re one of ’em!)!  This definitely aught to be a fun way to start a weekend morning, so check ’em out!

Marocchino

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Next Saturday — David Lebovitz!

April 28, 2014 by Todd

Next Saturday from 11am-12:30pm, David Lebovitz will be signing copies of his new book, My Paris Kitchen in the café. Lisa will also be making one of his signature desserts (made with Dandelion Chocolate of course!) for sale during the signing, or until sold out.

Anyone would be honored to host David. Chocolate lovers have long followed his Great Book of Chocolate, his blog detailing his food adventures in Paris, and his impressive collection of dessert and ice cream books.

However, there’s actually a much bigger backstory that connects David to Dandelion Chocolate.

To set the context, in the mid-2000s, my wife, Elaine, and I started making chocolate in our home kitchen. At the time, there wasn’t much information for making chocolate outside a factory. However, we found the chocoaltealchemy forum, ordered a few unroasted cocoa beans, and did our best to approximate winnowers and roasters with hair dryers and popcorn poppers. We roasted the beans in our oven. We peeled the beans, one by one. But the next step was tough. We needed to crush the beans and sugar into a smooth liquid. Our mortar and pestle wasn’t up for the task and determined to finish our first batch before the weekend closed, we followed a forum recommendation to try a juicer. We called every kitchen store nearby to see who was still open late on a Sunday night with a juicer in stock. Finally armed with our shiny new juicer, we dropped the nibs in and – voila – we were horrified to see all of the nibs spew out the other end, untouched. Apparently we had the wrong type of juicer – an expensive mistake!

The following weekend we researched and located juicer #2. Again, we dropped all of efforts into the feeder and from our first bag of beans, out popped about one tiny Hershey kiss-sized drop of chocolate. It wasn’t much and it didn’t taste great, but it showed that it was possible. We split the little drop into two and made two cups of very diluted hot chocolate. Looking back at our weekends, we could see a thousand things we could improve. We didn’t realize it at the time, but that was the start of a multi-year chocolate adventure. (By the way, if you want to learn how to make chocolate at home, consider our chocolate 201 class — it will save you some trouble!)

A while later, David posted a blog offering a small group a personalized week-long food tour around Paris. We were lucky to secure two spots before it instantly sold out. One plane trip later, we were tasting our way through Paris. There were the farmer’s markets, the cheese shops, the cooking classes, the confectioner’s factory — this tour is a foodie’s dream.

The vision of a small-batch American bean-to-bar factory started to take shape. As we went from chocolate shop to chocolate shop, we were charmed by the French chocolate tea salons, the delicate chocolatiers, and the hot chocolates always served with a little cookie on the side. We met the incredible Mort Rosenblum, author of the book Chocolate, and discussed the New American Chocolate Movement, then in its infancy.

The highlight of our trip was a day trip to Lyon where we saw the small Bernachon chocolate factory. A petit cafe and pastry shop upfront belied a cozy bean-to-bar factory in the back with small batch roasters and artisan chocolate makers. We learned that it was this factory that had initially inspired Scharffen Berger too. With clumsy high school French and a long list of questions, we interrogated their staff about roasts and beans, conching and winnowing, and making great chocolate.

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Bernachon Factory; Their roaster looking tired after being asked a lot of questions.

It was on this trip that I confided to David that there could be another chapter to this chocolate making hobby. Back in the states, we started experimenting and working towards the vision. My friend and business partner, Cam, caught the chocolate bug and together we started a mini factory in a friend’s garage. We dreamed of someday opening a cozy café with hot chocolates made from our personal small-batch chocolate. In the meantime, we started roast after roast, making tiny test batches, learning how to make great chocolate — and finally — a few years later we launched and opened our doors.

It’s such an honor to host David whose books, blogs, and tours have inspired us. And it’s exciting to see him inspire a new line of chocolate artisans who are just as excited and passionate about chocolate as we are.

We hope to see you next Saturday!

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The 12 Nights of Chocolate

December 4, 2013 by Todd

12nightsheader

We’re very excited to announce a new holiday tradition that we are starting at our chocolate factory on Valencia Street: the 12 Nights of Chocolate!

Starting next Tuesday the 10th for 12 whole nights, we will be hosting a series of festive events celebrating our love of chocolate. The highlight of this series are the pastry chef nights where local pastry luminaries Emily Luchetti, Janet Dalton, Jessica Sullivan, Lincoln Carson, Angela Salvatore, and Terri Wu will host intimate dessert evenings made with our chocolate. The profits from these pastry chef nights will go to benefit the San Francisco and Marin Food Banks, which seeks to end hunger in San Francisco.

We’ll be posting more details as the month progresses, but here’s a quick overview of what we have planned:

#1 – Guatemala Sourcing Talk – Tuesday December, 10th
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Greg, our resident Bean Sourcer-er, will give a talk about his recent sourcing trip to Guatemala at 7:30PM in the cafe. FREE
 

#2 – Book signing and demo – Wednesday December, 11th
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Local Mission author Andrea Lawson Grey will be doing a book signing and demo for her new cookbook: CELEBRACIONES MEXICANAS – History, Traditions, and Recipes. Andrea will show us how to make Mexican Hot Chocolate and Chocolate Dipping Sauce for Churros starting at 7:00PM in the cafe. FREE
 

#3 – Food drive – Thursday December, 12th
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We’re kicking off our food-drive, by giving a free, special treat to anyone who brings in a food item for the San Francisco and Marin Food Banks this day. The most needed items are: tuna, canned meat, peanut butter, soup, chili, beans, cereal, canned fruit and vegetables, and granola bars. Food collection bins will be available through the 21st. PLEASE NOTE: Cafe will be closing at 7 for our staff holiday party.
 

#4 – Dolce Delfina – with Pastry Chef, Jessica Sullivan – Friday December, 13th
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Hailing from our fellow neighborhood restaurant, Delfina, Pastry Chef Jessica Sullivan is taking over Dandelion for a night to showcase the decadent side of Delfina. She will present a wintery 3-course Italian dessert tasting including a Warm Panettone with Dandelion Chocolate Gelato. To complete the evening, a special selection of wines and spirits from Locanda will be available as pairing for the desserts. 8:30PM $50 – PLEASE NOTE: the cafe will be closing at 8PM this night. More info and tickets here.

All profits from this night are donated in support of the San Francisco and Marin Food Banks
 

#5 – Wine and Chocolate – Saturday December, 14th
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An intimate evening with a wine and chocolate pairing in our upstairs mezzanine. Wines by Sonoma / San Francisco based Wattle Creek Winery. Limited to 14 people. More details and tickets here. 7PM. $75
 

#6 – Holiday Cookie Popup – Sunday December, 15th
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All day Sunday our pastry chef, Lisa Vega, will be exclusively making holiday cookies in the cafe. Come try her creations or bring some home. ALL DAY
 

#7 – Movie Night – Monday December, 16th
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We’re setting up the cafe as a small movie theater and screening Willy Wonka and the Chocolate factory. There will be (chocolate-covered) popcorn and golden tickets of course. Popcorn and treats at 7:45, movie starts at 8:15 sharp. $15 Tickets here. PLEASE NOTE: the cafe will be closing at 7:30PM this night.
 

#8 – Crunchy Creamy All Chocolate Pop Up Party with Emily Luchetti and Janet Dalton – Tuesday December, 17th
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Executive Chef, Author, and James Beard Board Member Emily Luchetti is teaming up with Janet Dalton, former pastry chef of Postrio to a host a night of desserts! Buy tickets in advance (some available at the door) and drop in between 7-9PM to try hot chocolate milk shakes, desserts, and other treats made by these amazing chefs. Lots and lots of treats.

The chefs wanted us to warn you to eat something savory before you come. Not responsible for overdosing on chocolate.

Drop in any time between 7-9PM. $35 – PLEASE NOTE: the cafe will be closing at 7PM this night. More info and tickets here (or at the door).

All profits from this night are donated in support of the San Francisco and Marin Food Banks
 

#9 – Wine and Chocolate II – Wednesday December, 18th
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An intimate evening with a wine and chocolate pairing in our upstairs mezzanine. Wines by Sonoma / San Francisco based Wattle Creek Winery. Limited to 14 people. More details and tickets here. 7PM. $75
 

#10 – Lincoln Carson – Thursday December, 19th
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Join Lincoln Carson, corporate pastry chef for the Michael Mina restaurants and Neyah White, brand ambassador for Suntory Whiskey in an evening of chocolate creations and whiskey which will include The Hibiki served ceremoniously Oyu-Wari style, as well as some unblended individual barrel samples to compare and contrast with each chocolate. 8:30PM $50 – PLEASE NOTE: the cafe will be closing at 8PM this night. More info and tickets here.

All profits from this night are donated in support of the San Francisco and Marin Food Banks
 

#11 – Angela Salvatore and Terri Wu – Friday December, 20th
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Angela Salvatore of Waterbar and Terri Wu of Farallon will be hosting a sweet and savory prix fixe chocolate menu with spirit pairings by Craig Lane of Bar Agricole. 8:30PM $50 – PLEASE NOTE: the cafe will be closing at 8PM this night. More info and tickets here.

All profits from this night are donated in support of the San Francisco and Marin Food Banks
 

#12 – Fondue Night – Saturday December, 21th
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We’re ending the 12 nights with Fondue! Starting at 6pm we will be offering fondue with a series of toppings in the cafe until close. 6PM until close (or until sold out).
 

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Off to new adventures!

November 8, 2013 by Alice

I’m writing to let you all know that I’m off to new adventures in sunny LA, beginning next week! I’ve been incredibly fortunate to watch Dandelion grow from our days in the garage and at the Mission Community Market.

MCM

I’ve grown immensely during my time here, and I’ve found a great family of friends in the Dandelion folks. Over the past three years, I’ve stayed up all night making chocolate, met a lemur, and seen the opening of our space on Valencia Street. It’s been a treat! I’m leaving a great group, and I’m so excited to see how Dandelion evolves.

Our team

If you’d like to email someone at Dandelion, and you need a new contact, feel free to reach out to events@dandelionchocolate.com, jobs@dandelionchocolate.com, or info@dandelionchocolate.com. I hope to see you all again soon!

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Calling All Pastry Chefs!

July 31, 2013 by Todd

dandelion cake

We’ve had a great run this summer with our guest pastry chefs. From Kika’s s’mores to Jenn’s amazing cheesecake bars and the Babes’ pies, it’s been so much fun hosting such talented chefs. As the summer begins to wind down, we’ve started thinking about what comes next and we are looking for a permanent pastry chef to join our team.

Our ideal candidate would have a passion for chocolate and desserts, have significant restaurant pastry experience, and be extremely nice, communicative, and flexible. If you know of someone who fits this description, please send him or her our way. We will start reviewing resumes next Tuesday, so please send us a note before then.

You can find the full job description here: http://dande.li/PastryChefJob

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Cheese puns and endless jealousy

July 12, 2013 by Alice

We have the most amazing neighbors on Valencia Street. One of them, Sarah Dvorak, opened Mission Cheese in 2011 and became our very first wholesale customer in June of that year. She served our bars in a chocolate flight along with dried fruits and nuts. The Mission Cheesers now make their own desserts in house and no longer serve our chocolate, but we’re still benefiting from our neighborly relations. Greg loves the “Alotta Burrata” sandwich so much that we hear him asking, “Mission Cheese?” at least once a week.

I really do love our neighbors, but these days I find myself walking past their shop, hanging my head in shame, and sighing. I am endlessly jealous of their sandwich board and their clever cheese puns.

Go your own whey

They’re amazing. Really. And do you know how hard it is to think of a chocolate pun!? In six months, I’ve thought of one. When we got back from Hawaii, I updated our sandwich board to say that our trip was “co-coa-nuts”! Truthfully, I stole the pun from Caitlin. As I struggle, the folks at Mission Cheese  keep coming up with gold. Here are a few more of my favorites:

Come to Cheddar

Let It Brie

Bleeeat It

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Thanks, Mission Cheese, for all your creative punning. It actually makes me very happy. If anyone has a good chocolate pun, send it my way. I’d love it.

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The Summer of Pop-ups Continues…

June 1, 2013 by Todd

We’ve been having so much fun with our weekly guest pastry chefs that we’ve decided to keep it going! Every week is like starting a new chocolate cafe and getting to try the amazing dessert menu that each of our artisans creates.

To catch you up on what you may have missed — Cristina from Kika’s Treats did indeed do a take on a s’more…

kikasmore

… but in pot de creme form! She also had an amazing array of small chocolate-dipped treats and strawberries. And people keep writing in about her chocolate chip cookie recipe (which she was nice enough to share with us).

Next up was Shawn Williams from Feve Artisan Chocolatier, whose chocolate-covered almonds and nibs you may recognize from our shop.

fevelogo

Shawn also did a s’more, but in hazelnut cookie form:

fevesmore

And after Shawn was the Three Babes…

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thebabes

… whose pies, pies in a jar, and cookies delighted all of Valencia street:

babessetup

And finally, you’ve got just another day or two to see all of Jewel Zimmer from {COCOA}‘s creations, including her amazing chocolate toffee brittle:

brittle

And we’ve got a bunch more amazing San Francisco pastry chefs lined up for the next few weeks, so come by and check them out!

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Pop-up Season!

April 30, 2013 by Todd

If you’ve stopped by the factory in the last week, you’ve probably heard that we recently parted ways with our pastry chef, Phil. Phil was amazing and we’re grateful for the time we got to spend together. He spent six months perfecting our hot chocolate recipes which will always remain on the menu. Since we have a chance to do something new with our pastries, we’ve come up with a crazy idea: pop-ups!

For the next 6-8 weeks, we are inviting our pastry chef friends to take over our kitchen for a week at a time. We’re asking that they funnel their creativity and passion to work magic on our chocolate. It’s exciting thinking about all the great treats our chocolate can be transformed into.

We’ve just finished a pop-up with the awesome Amy and Joe from Marla Bakery:

marla bakery

They made many delicious tarts and cookies and we were especially wowed by their pain au chocolat — something we’ve dreamed of snacking on since before we opened. Hopefully they will teach us a few of their tricks!

marla bakery

If you missed them at our shop, they are taking their amazing pastries on the road and popping up for brunch at State Bird Provisions starting in May.

kika's treats

Next up, Kika’s Treats! You’ve probably tried Cristina Arantes’ chocolate-covered graham crackers, but for the next two weeks you’ll get a chance to try her fresh baked treats. Cristina was born and raised in Brazil, one of the tropical lands of cacao, where she spent her days baking and eating all things chocolate. In 1999 she moved to San Francisco and worked at a variety of wonderful restaurants and bakeries before starting her own company.

kika's treats

I’m hoping she makes us some of her famous s’mores!

kika's treats

Thank you to all the chefs coming into our space and showing us their talents!

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The challenges of bean sourcing

March 5, 2013 by Alice

A large part of chocolate making is deciding where and how to source your cacao. Recently, we’ve partnered with Sarah Krupp to source beans from Colombia. The beans come from a village that uprooted their coca plants to grow cacao. The villagers removed the coca crops themselves, hoping to end continued violence that affected their community. Greg’s working closely with Sarah to bring in beans from this village, but there are recent obstacles. Two of the village’s most influential leaders have been threatened by a FARC commander and have been forced to leave the community.

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Many of the regions that grow cacao have substantial economic and political turmoil. Sarah wrote this piece on the current political state of Colombia and its effect on the village growing our beans. We thought you would be interested in hearing more about where some of our cacao comes from.

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