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I just read this in an article in the New York Times about the founder
of Dagoba chocolates. Apparently you can use a juicer in lieu of a conch? Has anyone heard of this? Comments from the chocolate mavens please! It's late September and Schilling is showing an appreciative crowd at Portland's Forest Discovery Center how to make chocolate. After roasting whole cacao beans in a toaster oven, Schilling separates the edible parts, or nibs, from the husklike hulls by running the beans through a hand mill made by an outfit called Crankenstein. He then passes the nibs through a sturdy juicer several times, each cycle making the mixture smoother. He uses a mixer to beat in sugar, and the chocolate is ready. The audience is transfixed by the enticing aroma of the roasting beans and the alchemy of the process, and packs of people converge on the demo table to try the chocolate, still gritty but definitely the real thing. Schilling, whose title at Dagoba is "founding alchemist," is in his element, answering question after question from the audience, his hands covered with chocolate. |
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