Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh 72% Chocolate, Province of Kénitra, Chocolarder

This bar’s tasting notes are: Warming aromas of orange and pine needle with undertones of red fruit and green apple. The cacao beans for this bar were grown in Peru. The frankincense and myrrh come from small independent farmers in Morocco who very carefully draw tree sap from the boswellia tree and allow it to crystallise.
Total Weight: 70g.
Ingredients: Cocoa Beans, Unrefined Sugar, Cocoa Butter Infused with Frankincense and Myrrh, 23ct Gold Leaf.
£8.50

About the Producer

Chocolarder are a Cornish company who make small batches of bean to bar chocolate. The team take inspiration from ingredients on their doorstep such as Cornish honey and wild gorse flowers, and then use traditional techniques to craft the finest chocolate.

They work directly with cocoa farmers to ensure that a fair wage is paid for their work and product and guarantee that all the crops are organically grown and free from pesticides. All of the cocoa that goes into Chocolarder chocolate come from pods which are split and fermented at their place of origin so the farmers have a huge role in helping to attain the final flavour of the chocolate.

The raw sugar cane that Chocoalarder use is grown in Brazil as part of the Native’s Green Cane Project. This ensures a traditional harvest during which the cane is cut down while green rather than burnt down. This sees a lower yield but is significantly more sustainable and saves the habitats of innumerable animals, birds and insects.

Sustainability

Chocolarder have a number of governing principles: plastic free packaging, slavery free and fairly traded ingredients direct from farmers, palm oil free and emulsifier free products, and supporting reforestation projects around the globe.

There are no artificial ingredients in Chocolarder chocolate and only the best natural ingredients are selected, in the most eco conscious way possible.

Chocolarder use cocoa beans grown by charity projects. This means huge efforts are going into saving rainforests and their inhabitants, and funds and resources are given to farmers who are specifically working to preserve rainforests in Peru and Sierra Leone.