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My sister sent me a sampler box of bittersweet chocolate, and I'm thinking
of having a small chocolate-tasting party. (see http://www.chocosphere.com/Html/Products/amedei.html and look at the "I Cru" Origin Sampler Box) I'm a bit stumped on what to drink. I want something which will complement the chocolate but not have a strong flavor of its own. I'm thinking along the lines of apricot nectar, cran-cherry juice, or milk, but none of them seem quite right either. Coffee seems like it would be too strongly-flavored, and I don't care for tea with chocolate. My sister suggested port, but I'm not real enthusiastic about the idea. I'm not particularly averse to alcohol, but since we'll be having at least six sips, I'd rather not have anything *too* alcoholic. Red wine would be a possibility, but one of my guests suspects that it's a migraine trigger for her (though chocolate is not). Any suggestions? Bob |
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Bob wrote:
> My sister sent me a sampler box of bittersweet chocolate, and I'm thinking > of having a small chocolate-tasting party. (see > http://www.chocosphere.com/Html/Products/amedei.html and look at the "I Cru" > Origin Sampler Box) > > I'm a bit stumped on what to drink. I want something which will complement > the chocolate but not have a strong flavor of its own. I'm thinking along > the lines of apricot nectar, cran-cherry juice, or milk, but none of them > seem quite right either. Coffee seems like it would be too > strongly-flavored, and I don't care for tea with chocolate. My sister > suggested port, but I'm not real enthusiastic about the idea. I'm not > particularly averse to alcohol, but since we'll be having at least six sips, > I'd rather not have anything *too* alcoholic. Red wine would be a > possibility, but one of my guests suspects that it's a migraine trigger for > her (though chocolate is not). > > Any suggestions? > > Bob > > Light beer, such as Miller Lite, or Bud Light -- so as not to overpower the subtlety of the chocolate. HTH :-) Bob |
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Bob wrote:
> My sister sent me a sampler box of bittersweet chocolate, and I'm thinking > of having a small chocolate-tasting party. (see > http://www.chocosphere.com/Html/Products/amedei.html and look at the "I Cru" > Origin Sampler Box) > > I'm a bit stumped on what to drink. I want something which will complement > the chocolate but not have a strong flavor of its own. I'm thinking along > the lines of apricot nectar, cran-cherry juice, or milk, but none of them > seem quite right either. Coffee seems like it would be too > strongly-flavored, and I don't care for tea with chocolate. My sister > suggested port, but I'm not real enthusiastic about the idea. I'm not > particularly averse to alcohol, but since we'll be having at least six sips, > I'd rather not have anything *too* alcoholic. Red wine would be a > possibility, but one of my guests suspects that it's a migraine trigger for > her (though chocolate is not). > > Any suggestions? > > Bob > > Light beer, such as Miller Lite, or Bud Light -- so as not to overpower the subtlety of the chocolate. HTH :-) Bob |
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In article >,
zxcvbob > wrote: > Light beer, such as Miller Lite, or Bud Light -- so as not to overpower > the subtlety of the chocolate. HTH :-) After a brewing expo, a bunch of executives from various companies decided to go out for drinks. The guy from Miller says, "Give me the 'Champagne of Beers,' Miller High Life." The bartender serves him. The guy from Budweiser says, "Give me 'The King Of Beers', a Budweiser." The bartender gives him one. The guy from Coors says, "I'd like the only beer made with Rocky Mountain spring water, give me a Coors." He gets it. The guy from Guinness sits down and says, "Give me a Coke." The bartender is a little taken aback, but gives him what he ordered. The other brewery presidents look over at him and ask, "a Coke? Why are you ordering Coke?" The Guinness president replies, "Well, if you guys aren't drinking beer, neither will I." -- to respond (OT only), change "spamless.invalid" to "optonline.net" <http://www.thecoffeefaq.com/> |
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In article >,
zxcvbob > wrote: > Light beer, such as Miller Lite, or Bud Light -- so as not to overpower > the subtlety of the chocolate. HTH :-) After a brewing expo, a bunch of executives from various companies decided to go out for drinks. The guy from Miller says, "Give me the 'Champagne of Beers,' Miller High Life." The bartender serves him. The guy from Budweiser says, "Give me 'The King Of Beers', a Budweiser." The bartender gives him one. The guy from Coors says, "I'd like the only beer made with Rocky Mountain spring water, give me a Coors." He gets it. The guy from Guinness sits down and says, "Give me a Coke." The bartender is a little taken aback, but gives him what he ordered. The other brewery presidents look over at him and ask, "a Coke? Why are you ordering Coke?" The Guinness president replies, "Well, if you guys aren't drinking beer, neither will I." -- to respond (OT only), change "spamless.invalid" to "optonline.net" <http://www.thecoffeefaq.com/> |
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Bob wrote:
> My sister sent me a sampler box of bittersweet chocolate, and I'm thinking > of having a small chocolate-tasting party. (see > http://www.chocosphere.com/Html/Products/amedei.html and look at the "I Cru" > Origin Sampler Box) > > I'm a bit stumped on what to drink. I want something which will complement > the chocolate but not have a strong flavor of its own. I'm thinking along > the lines of apricot nectar, cran-cherry juice, or milk, but none of them > seem quite right either. Coffee seems like it would be too > strongly-flavored, and I don't care for tea with chocolate. My sister > suggested port, but I'm not real enthusiastic about the idea. I'm not > particularly averse to alcohol, but since we'll be having at least six sips, > I'd rather not have anything *too* alcoholic. Red wine would be a > possibility, but one of my guests suspects that it's a migraine trigger for > her (though chocolate is not). > > Any suggestions? > > Bob > MANY people like coffee with chocolate, so that should be an option. I actually put cocoa in my coffee daily. Coffee & Chocolate is a great combination. Milk is a good idea. Red wine? Yes. Although the migrain might be becasue of the Tannins. http://wine.about.com/cs/winemaking/a/tannins.htm depending on his or her sensitivity, you could find a low tannin wine http://allrecipes.com/advice/coll/th...cles/207P1.asp The cranberry juice mix could also be a nice option, like the one you mentioned above or maybe cran-apple. Or a fruit juice with strawberry as one of the main ingredients. I think there is a Kiwi-Strawberry juice made by some company. |
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![]() "Bob" > wrote in message > > . My sister > suggested port, but I'm not real enthusiastic about the idea. I'm not > particularly averse to alcohol, but since we'll be having at least six > sips, Six sips? Even six ounces is not very much for an adult that is easting over some time. > I'd rather not have anything *too* alcoholic. Red wine would be a > possibility, but one of my guests suspects that it's a migraine trigger > for > her (though chocolate is not). So all the other guests get pansy juice because of one person? Give her a glass of grape juice or milk and let the rest enjoy. I'd consider having a couple of different wines to pair with the chololate. |
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![]() "Bob" > wrote in message > > . My sister > suggested port, but I'm not real enthusiastic about the idea. I'm not > particularly averse to alcohol, but since we'll be having at least six > sips, Six sips? Even six ounces is not very much for an adult that is easting over some time. > I'd rather not have anything *too* alcoholic. Red wine would be a > possibility, but one of my guests suspects that it's a migraine trigger > for > her (though chocolate is not). So all the other guests get pansy juice because of one person? Give her a glass of grape juice or milk and let the rest enjoy. I'd consider having a couple of different wines to pair with the chololate. |
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Bob > wrote:
> I'm a bit stumped on what to drink. I want something which will complement > the chocolate but not have a strong flavor of its own. I think you are making a mistake by eliminating everything that will theoretically go well with chocolate. Chocolate requires something that does have a strong flavour of its own and can stand up to it, as far as I'm concerned. Tawny port (10-year-old and above) will go well with chocolate, as will a good Banyuls, Malmsey or Bual Madeira, or the Hungarian Tokáji Aszú (5-6 puttonyos). Cabernet Sauvignon-based wines can sometimes match bitter chocolate surprisingly well. Try also a good Asti Spumante or, better yet, a good sparkling Moscato d'Asti. The latter two are usually light and low in alcohol. 5-6 puttonyos Tokáji is low-alcohol, too. Still, I would say that chocolate and any of those wines should be served separately... Victor |
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Victor Sack wrote:
> Bob > wrote: > > >>I'm a bit stumped on what to drink. I want something which will complement >>the chocolate but not have a strong flavor of its own. > > > I think you are making a mistake by eliminating everything that will > theoretically go well with chocolate. Chocolate requires something that > does have a strong flavour of its own and can stand up to it, as far as > I'm concerned. Tawny port (10-year-old and above) will go well with > chocolate, as will a good Banyuls, Malmsey or Bual Madeira, or the > Hungarian Tokáji Aszú (5-6 puttonyos). Cabernet Sauvignon-based wines > can sometimes match bitter chocolate surprisingly well. Try also a good > Asti Spumante or, better yet, a good sparkling Moscato d'Asti. The > latter two are usually light and low in alcohol. 5-6 puttonyos Tokáji > is low-alcohol, too. > > Still, I would say that chocolate and any of those wines should be > served separately... > > Victor I was joking in my previous message about lite beer, but how about a Belgian abbey ale, or an oatmeal stout? Best regards, Bob |
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gourmet coffee, of course. The best!
smithfarms.com Farmers of 100% Kona Coffee & other Great Stuff |
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gourmet coffee, of course. The best!
smithfarms.com Farmers of 100% Kona Coffee & other Great Stuff |
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On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 04:40:50 GMT, smithfarms pure kona
> wrote: > gourmet coffee, of course. The best! > Since I didn't see the beginning of this thread... I thought had surely someone had mentioned coffee before this. If coffee overwhelms the chocolate, then that chocolate isn't the "gourmet" item the poster thinks it is. ![]() sf Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 06:55:55 GMT, sf > wrote:
>On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 04:40:50 GMT, smithfarms pure kona > wrote: > >> gourmet coffee, of course. The best! >> >Since I didn't see the beginning of this thread... I thought >had surely someone had mentioned coffee before this. If >coffee overwhelms the chocolate, then that chocolate isn't >the "gourmet" item the poster thinks it is. > > ![]() > >sf >Practice safe eating - always use condiments The coffee I am drinking right now has chocolate qualities. I have a chocolate fancier friend and she has served exactly my coffee for her chocolate tasting. My Kona is good with chocolate. aloha, Thunder smithfarms.com Farmers of 100% Kona Coffee & other Great Stuff |
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Why not have coffee, red wine, and milk ? I'd prefer a good Zin, such
as Storybook Mountain's Eastern Exposure, but I don't pretend that eveyone else should have the same opinion. Others might suggest a Banyuls, but that can be bit on the alcoholic side for your needs. And yes, tannic red wines can be a headache trigger. It is for me, and I like red wine. Moderation and rehydration are key. And worrying about it only makes it worse. Dean G. |
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