Monthly Archives: October 2014

Halloween Review – Alma Chocolate

Alma Chocolate – Halloween Chocolate Bars
$3.25ea / $6 for 2
3/5
75% Dark Chocolate and Milk Chocolate Bar
Dark Chocolate Ingredients: Pure Cocoa Mass and cocoa butter
Milk Chocolate Ingredients: Cocoa Butter, whole milk powder, sugar, cocoa beans, brown sugar, barley malt, and vanilla extract.

Happy Halloween!

Was planning on reviewing a chocolate bar I bought last week but an unexpected trip to Alma Chocolate changed that (sorry mystery bar, you’re up next). This was my first time in their shop and I really wish I could have spent more time there but I had to get back to work. Next time I will pick up their signature bars but today I was feeling festive. I couldn’t help but pick up a pair of the undead, also, shiny! I also picked up something else chocolate related but I’m going to share that later!

This chocolate hit the spot, after every meal I need some form of dessert. The dark chocolate is simple, has a bitter finish and I love the luster powder on it. The milk chocolate bar was smooth and very sweet and I actually preferred the milk to the dark today. Perfectly fitting as a holiday treat to someone but I wouldn’t go out of my way to get it. I’m sure I would for Alma’s other chocolate bar.

Overall very nice and it was awesome to finally go to Alma, next time I will sit down and have their liquid chocolate drink. Yes. Liquid chocolate.

www.almachocolate.com
140 NE 28th Ave Portland Oregon 97214

Till the bar!

Marou – Tiên Giang 70%


Marou

Marou Faiseurs de Chocolate – Tien Giang 70% Single Original Dark Chocolate
$9.00
70% Dark Chocolate
4/5  
Batch number: 1225
Ingredients: Cacao, Cacao Butter and Palm Sugar
Soy, Dairy and Gluten Free

A few years ago I was researching food packaging when I stumbled about Marou Faiseurs de Chocolate. I was gawking at how beautiful their packaging was. It would be a years later till I could actually try their chocolate.

Learning that Marou is set up in Vietnam was really heartwarming for me. One of my favorite memories of Vietnam was of my family eating the little dark chocolates that were left for us during turndown service. At this resort we were staying at turndown service was twice a day (you nap a lot in Vietnam), so our opportunity for chocolate was pretty high but that didn’t stop us from grabbing a few off the maid’s cart when we walked by. My mother asked where the chocolate came from and we learned it was from a small chocolatier studio up North in Ha Noi. Luckily we were heading there and made sure to find them. I never seen anyone buy so much chocolate. We gave most of them as presents when we returned to the states but they were every where in our house. Biting into Marou’s chocolate is a reminder of that time I spent in Vietnam and the start of my love for dark chocolate.

The bar itself is beautiful, it’s a dark mocha color and cast in a simple mold with the chocolatiers’ branding. The pattern of the bar lets you break off the bar into small diagonal pieces that are perfect sizes to put into your mouth. The first bite is a satisfying dull snap that releases a wonderful bittersweet warmth throughout the month. I love how slightly sweet it is. I recommend taking a bite of the bar, chewing once or twice and then just letting the chocolate melt in your mouth. The chocolate has a slight bitter taste but offers a clean finish.

Like the chocolate I had in Vietnam the Marou bar is a dark chocolate. Personally I love dark chocolate and think this would be great to bring to party to share with other dark chocolate lovers. It would also be a great  gateway bar to those who prefer milk chocolate.

As for paring this chocolate, it would go great with a nice shot of espresso. I plan to take some with me next time I go to the coffee shop. It’s sweet taste would compliment a strong dark espresso while providing a clean finish. It also would be great made into hot chocolate with cinnamon.

As I mentioned before, their packaging is beautiful. The paper, the ink, the design, all of it is beautiful. Marou has also done limited edition runs of their chocolate for Air France and La Grande Épicerie de Paris and I’m so sad I won’t be able to get my hands on them. Its one of the first bars I go to pick up and hold when I visit Cacao, local chocolate haunting ground. Just looking at the slight shine from the gold ink makes it feel so special and a true luxury item. Their branding is simple, a blend of Vietnam and of France. A little side note about chocolate in Vietnam, the word for chocolate in Vietnamese is Sô Cô La, a phonetic spelling of the french word for chocolate, Chocolat. Like many things in Vietnam there is a french influence. The typography used reflects the typography common in Vietnam, the use of all cap characters. This style was really prominent in the Vietnam war, but their type choice really portrays elegance, quality and importance. The overall feel of the packaging is a nod to the past. You can really see that in the pattern the created for the packaging, the simple diagonal lines and the beautiful hand drawn illustrations of thte cacao plant.

I like to think the designers of the packaging, Rice Creative wanted Marou to feel familiar and yet luxurious. We all have found memories of eating sweets and as we grew up we want to relive those moments. Growing up doesn’t have to be a bad thing, what is wrong with enjoying a really nice piece of chocolate every now and then, absolutely nothing.

So. Would I buy this again? Absolutely. I’ve had their Lam Dong 74% bar before but I absolutely need to get it again to do a full review.

You can find more information about Marou Faiseurs de Chocolate and the video that started my love of their packaging and ultimately their chocolate below. Also below is the Behance link for the design agency of Rice Creative.

http://marouchocolate.com
https://www.behance.net/Rice_Creative/

 Want me to review a certain chocolate bar? Please let me know in the comment section!

Till the next bar,
Mimi

Micoco Chocolate

For me this isn’t just a chocolate review blog, it’s a way to improve my writing, it’s an outlet to gush over packaging and design and it’s a way to improve my palette (cause I’m a lady). This blog will review chocolate from all over the world. Living in Portland there has been a surge of fine chocolate coming in and I want to try them. Come back for soon for my first review.