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DANDELION CHOCOLATE

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A Dispatch from the Ferry Building Hot Chocolate Stand

October 13, 2016 by Maverick Watson

The Ferry Building is a lot of things: an iconic bayside tower, a commuter terminal, the beating center of local commerce in San Francisco, and it’s our home. We love the Ferry Building, and we’ve been happy to be a part of the community there for about two years.

Our Mission Hot Chocolate (with treat sleeve) on the Ferry Observation Deck

Our Mission Hot Chocolate on the Ferry Observation Deck

In February we upgraded from our small kiosk near the entrance to a full-fledged café, which we lovingly call our Hot Chocolate Stand, and moved around the corner. You’ll find the same retail offerings on our shelves in addition to our full beverage menu from our Valencia Street Cafe, and of course, our own Lisa Vega’s pastries. Last week we moved up our opening hours to 7am on Monday through Friday to provide Mochas (or just a cup of Four Barrel Coffee) to the commuters and downtown offices around us!

ferrybuildingshot

Our new spot is a tad less obvious than our old kiosk. We’re located outside of the actual building in the North Arcade alongside Marla Bakery, Fort Point Brewery, Blue Bottle Coffee and Sow Juice.

This is really exhausting.

This is really exhausting.

We’re here every day, anytime you need some hot chocolate to go with the kale and persimmons you just got at the CUESA Farmer’s Market on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Occasionally, we have special events too! This week, as part of the Third Thursday “Night Cafe” put on by the Ferry Building, we will be pairing our chocolate with beers from Fort Point Brewery and making chocolate with a metate, the way the Maya have done it for centuries!

Next time you’re down at the Ferry Building, come by and let us make you a hot chocolate or a coffee. On a nice day, you can walk a little ways to sit down and watch the sea lions. Most of the time they’re just sleeping, but with a hot chocolate in hand anything can be interesting. Right?

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The Cure-All

March 4, 2015 by Maverick Watson

It may only be March, but it sure feels like summer outside. If this warm weather is too soon for your taste, we’ve got just the thing to ease you from the winter blues into these sunny days. Enter our brand new drink: The Cure-All! (We actually love the warm weather, but it’s never a bad time to drink something tasty.)

bitters1

 So… What is it?

The Cure-All is an espresso tonic with bitters: a double shot of Four Barrel Friendo Blendo Espresso, a shot of Fever Tree Mediterranean Tonic, and a dash of Work Horse Rye Salted Cacao Bitters served over ice in a Gibraltar glass. It’s at once refreshing, energizing, and delicious. It’s effervescent and foamy, citrusy and rich, light and dark.

Friendo Blendo Espresso has a clean citrus acidity and syrupy body, balanced with sweet berry, stone fruit, and dark chocolate notes. This unique profile interacts playfully with Fever Tree Mediterranean Tonic Water, which combines the traditional quinine with lemon thyme, rosemary, and carbonated mineral water. The floral mingles with the bitters, resulting in a complex, compact, and satisfying beverage. The bitters, of course, are the Salted Cacao Bitters that came about from a collaboration with Workhorse Rye, and feature (among many other things) cacao from Mantuano, Venezuela.

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At various points in their history, all three of these ingredients have been used for their medicinal properties so I thought it’d be fitting to playfully title it “The Cure-All,” and although it is not intended to diagnose, prevent or treat any illness, it is really tasty.

On a side note—since The Cure-All is served in a Gibraltar glass, we will now be able to serve cortados as well!

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A Brief History of Chocolate: Part 1

October 21, 2014 by Maverick Watson

Inspired by Indigenous Peoples’ Day last week, I thought I’d take the occasion to start the first installment of a three-part series on the history and development of chocolate from the New World to Modern Day.  Maya populations still produce some of the world’s best cacao, and you can check out this video about how Maya Mountain Cacao is helping to revolutionize the indigenous cacao industry in Belize.  Cacao was first cultivated, domesticated, and refined by Indigenous Peoples in Central America, by populations that continue to play a vital role—although we don’t necessarily see their contributions on this side of the supply chain. With this in mind, I’d like to talk about the ancient roots of chocolate in the Americas!

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Cacao pods after harvesting

The first thing that comes to mind when most of us think of chocolate is a delicious, dark brown bar densely packed with a mood-altering je ne sais quoi, and sugar. Or maybe it’s a childhood memory of M&Ms, Hershey Bars, or something more recent. However, for more than 3,000 years, chocolate was consumed primarily as a drink. While our modern conception of chocolate differs from its earliest mode of culinary delivery deep in the jungles of Central America, the cultural significance has stayed relatively constant across the centuries; it is a currency of pleasure, luxury, and ritual.

The manipulation of theobroma cacao extends from prehistory to modernity with a fascinating lineage crossing oceans, cultures, languages and ages.  While I could go on about the intricacies of development from Pre-Olmec to Henri Nestlé (there are many books on the subject such as The True History of Chocolate by Sophie and Michael Coe or The New Taste of Chocolate by Maricel Presilla) I’d like to do an overview of some of the major events in the history of chocolate: its pre-Columbian American roots, the European transformation of chocolate, and the industrialization of chocolate and the rise of American craft chocolate. But more on those later, let’s start at the beginning.

PRE-COLUMBIAN CHOCOLATE

olmec_map

The Olmec

Cacao and its seeds, or cocoa beans, have historical significance with the Olmec, Mayan, and Aztec peoples—a significance that depends upon the context each culture provides. An Olmec archaeological site on the Gulf Coast of Veracruz has yielded at least one ceramic container that evidences the preparation of cacao as a beverage dating to roughly 1900 BC!  Evidence such as this also typically indicates that usage likely preceded that date, but we lack the evidence (rising sea levels destroy archaeology sites), which suggests that at the least, humans have been manipulating and using cacao for 4,000 years! Other evidence in the archaeological record indicates that cacao pulp was fermented into an alcoholic beverage around 1,400 BC.  The Olmec are the folks that left behind colossal stone heads throughout Southern Mexico, and were the first major civilization in Mesoamerica. Unfortunately, the Olmec did not use written language, so we know very little besides what their abandoned sites can tell us, but it is generally agreed that they were the first to domesticate the cacao tree, that the beverages they made from cacao were used for medicinal and ceremonial purposes, and that their cultural lineage extended through the Mayan and Aztec Empires.

Ancient Olmec pots

Vessels for cacao storage, production and consumption by the San Lorenzo Olmec

The Maya

The Maya, in contrast, left behind a rich record of data regarding their fondness for cacao drinks, which they associated with the gods. Incidentally, so did Linnaeus when he named the tree Theobroma Cacao in the 18th century; “Theobroma” from the Greek for “food of the gods,” and “cacao” being a European derivative of the indigenous Mayan “kakau.”  The Maya also had a hieroglyph representing cacao in their art, and left behind depictions of rudimentary recipes for production.

cacao-glyph

Maya Hieroglyph for kakau (cacao)

The Maya Empire spanned across the Yucatan Peninsula in Southern Mexico, crossing modern Belize, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador; the heartland of cacao cultivation. The Maya excelled in math, astronomy, and some huge public works projects from roughly 250-900 AD, and were organized in a city-state system in which cacao was a common form of tribute and currency. Archaeologists have even discovered counterfeit cacao beans! This tradition of using cacao as currency extended into colonial times under Spanish rule.

For the Maya, the cacao beverage was a treasured drink of the ruling class, and a treat to families who cultivated cacao in their home gardens. For the drink, the beans would be fermented, dried, and roasted, much like today, then ground on metates and mixed with a variety of spices: achiote, all-spice, peppers, cinnamon, vanilla, and honey. The paste made with these ingredients would be heated and poured from vessel to vessel to produce a frothy foam.

ingredients mayan

Ingredients for Mayan drinking cacao

chocolate maya

A Mayan woman preparing a cacao drink

The Maya traditions of cacao reverence, cultivation, and consumption extended from the Pre-Classic Period (2,000 BC-250 AD), to the Classic Period (250 AD-900 AD) and into the Post-Classic Period, which ended with the Spanish Conquest in the 1400s.  Spanish priests thoroughly documented many of the Pre-contact Maya traditions, including their treatment of cacao—a record that directly catalyzed cacao’s journey to Europe in the following centuries. One of the most important things to remember when thinking about chocolate, cacao, and the Maya, is that many of these traditions are still practiced in the places where Maya communities still exist.

The Aztecs

There are competing theories on the etymology of the word “chocolate,” but most have at least some connection to the Aztec language of Nahuatl.  Some attribute the word to the Nahuatl word “xocolātl,” meaning “bitter water.”  My inquiries have lead me to another theory in which the word is a hybridization of a Mayan word “chokol,” which means “hot,” and the Nahuatl word “atl,” meaning water.  It could also be a combination of “kacau” (cacao) and “atl,” simply “cacao water.”  Either way, the word “chocolate” itself represents a combination of Maya and Aztec cultures, an appropriate blend considering the historical transmission of knowledge through the cacao trade.

An Aztec Figure holding cacao

An Aztec Figure holding cacao

The Aztec prepared cacao as beverage specifically for the elite, as to consume cacao was essentially to drink money. Their preparation of the beverage was quite similar to the Maya, the primary difference being that the Aztecs consumed it cold rather than hot.  The cacao would be ground with the other spices, mixed with water, filtered, and agitated to froth it. This mixture would then be poured back and forth between two vessels to create more foam.  The foam was considered the highest delicacy. An inferior drink would have diluted the cacao with ground corn. This drink was consumed habitually by the Aztec elite and was served to Hernán Cortés and his companions when he met with Moctezuma II, the Aztec Emperor in 1519.

The Aztec relationship with cacao is interesting because they did not and could not have grown cacao in their semi-desert climate of Southern Mexico. However, they valued cacao highly and the products that could be made from its beans. Allegedly, Moctezuma II consumed up to 50 servings of the spiced foamy cacao drink a day. He even had a cacao warehouse that at the time of contact contained roughly 960,000,000 beans! The beans were imported through trade or tribute into the Aztec empire from the Putún Maya, their coastal neighbors and trading partners. These people are also likely to have introduced the use of cacao beans as currency to the Aztecs. The Aztec Empire began with a unification of neighboring powers around 1428 and lasted until their defeat at the hands of the Spanish Conquistadors led by Hernán Cortés in 1521. The Aztecs had a very complex culture which we know about largely due to the ethnographic accounts of Franciscan Friars who learned Nahuatl and worked with Aztec priests and scholars to thoroughly document Aztec life before their contact with the Europeans. The Aztecs also used cacao ritually, both to be drunk during ceremonies and even symbolically in acts of human sacrifice.  In this context, the cacao pod would symbolize the human heart.

Moctezuma and Cortes

Moctezuma and Cortes

Cacao eventually played a large role in the subsequent colonization of the Americas, thanks to the large part it played in America’s native cultures. Later,  enthusiasm for chocolate spread across Europe, a legacy that continues today.  These ancient and living histories are fascinating to contemplate when one considers chocolate as an everyday, commonplace food.  The development of chocolate has been thousands of years in the making and is still changing today, an evolving story in which I’m grateful to take part.  Coming up in the next installment of A Brief History of Chocolate, we will talk more about European contact with cacao in the New World, how it was introduced it to the palaces of Europe, and how the first chocolate bar was made!

 

Bibliography 

Coe, Sophie D., and Michael D. Coe. The True History of Chocolate. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1996.

Coe, Michael D. The Maya. 5th ed. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1993.

Presilla, Maricel E. The New Taste of Chocolate: A Cultural and Natural History of Cacao with Recipes. Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 2001.

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Island Mild Cacao Beer

August 4, 2014 by Maverick Watson

Dandelion Beer Post card

Island Mild

Woods Beer Co. + Dandelion Chocolate

The last time William Bostwick of Woods Beer and I blended our knowledge of cacao and beer making, we came up with Cocoa Crisp: a porter inspired by the South Pacific and made with cacao from Papua New Guinea. We were so pleased with the outcome of that collaboration that we knew, immediately, this was the beginning of a fun, fruitful, and chocolatey friendship. Since Dandelion is currently out of our cacao from Papua New Guinea, we decided that this time we were going to play with some of our favorite beans from the Akesson Farm in Ambanja, Madagascar.

beans

Grain + Cacao + Yeast

Since cacao is already a fermented fruit product, it makes sense that we would want to integrate cacao into other fermented foods. Our unique approach to processing our cacao also brings forth latent flavors—like fruits or nuts—in the bean that are not usually associated with chocolate or “chocolatey” products. Unlike the first beer we made, this one will be closer to a brown or an amber ale, rather than the typical porter or stout. While the Cocoa Crisp looked dark but tasted light, we wanted to make a light, refreshing summer brew to compliment the bright red fruitiness of our Madagascar beans. These are the same beans that we use to make our Madagascar Iced Coffee, and the bright acidity and fruitiness are highly complimentary to the green papaya and lime notes of the Motueka hops.

Fermented

In the brew process, William introduced ground Cacao nibs and husks to the mash (beer tea) in order to cold brew a nib concentrate to add to the wort during the fermentation process.  However, because we weren’t very excited about the flavors that came out of the concentrate, so we just added more nibs to steep in the wort and provide more tasty sugars for the yeast.

Island Mild

People wonder how Dandelion Chocolate added all the fruit to their Ambanja bars. They didn’t — they used tangy, lemon-and-cherry-flavored Madagascar cacao beans. With an extra kick of lime and green papaya from New Zealand-grown Motueka hops, our ISLAND MILD is a taste of the tropics — deliciously disguised as beer. -William Bostwick
 
Dandelion-bar.bathbeans

Our final product—the Island Mild Cacao Beer—is the perfectly bright, crisp, and quenching answer to summer. Stop by Cervecería de Mateveza on 18th and Church to give it a try!  We will be celebrating the release of this beer with a little get together at La Cervecería on Friday, August 8th, where Becky and I will be sampling Dandelion Chocolate Bars and Roasted Madagascar Cacao Beans!  Come on by if you want to have some tasty beer and chocolate combinations! This is going to be a fun warm up for Becky and my weekend as we will be participating in the American Craft Council San Francisco Show at Fort Mason on Saturday August 9th selling and talking about our chocolate!  Hope to see you there!

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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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Pour-Over Coffee and Chocolate

May 20, 2014 by Maverick Watson

I love coffee. A lot. (It’s even how I met my fiance, but that’s another story).  I also love chocolate and the two make a great pair.  My experience in coffee is how I got started at  Dandelion Chocolate.  I got involved with Dandelion through our mutual friends at Four Barrel in January of 2013 and I’ve had a great time helping to develop our drink menu.  I’ve experimented with different ingredients, origins and methods of preparation for hot chocolates, mochas and coffees alike and it’s tons of fun to be able to adapt our menu seasonally… or whenever we feel like it.

We already have a variety of drinkable chocolate options and a few Café Mochas made with Four Barrel Friendo Blendo Espresso, combined in ways that we think blend our single origin chocolate with their seasonally varied ‘spro.   Four Barrel has been a great partner to us in the past year as we’ve learned and grown into a full fledged chocolate cafe and we think that their coffee and our chocolate go great together.  They roast their coffee only a few blocks down from us on Valencia Street here in San Francisco, and their dedication to ethical coffee and education is super rad and pretty similar to our approach to chocolate; light roasts, small batches, single origin, and personal relationships with farmers.

Marocchino

The Marocchino

Since opening, we have offered a seasonal rotation of coffees brewed in the french press method.  We are now offering single origin coffees brewed in the pour-over method.  I think that french press tends to make a cloudy and relatively weak brew in contrast to my personal preference of a strong and clean cup of coffee.   French Press produces very pleasant earthiness and silky mouthfeel, but in brewing tends to lose some of the brightness and unique flavors that make our coffee selections really stand out… and that is why we are now offering Four Barrel Coffee brewed via the pour over method.

Kettle, V60 cone

Why Pour-Over?

When making a single cup of coffee, the pour-over method makes a really delicious cup of bright, flavorful brew with a crystal finish and I think makes a great pairing with chocolate.  Similar to the way some people pair wines with chocolate or Lisa Vega uses different origins to help certain pastries shine (see: Papua New Guinea S’mores), the unique flavor notes in coffee can pull out flavors in chocolate that one may not have noticed before and vice versa.  For this reason we are introducing a seasonally rotating pour over coffee option with a pairing suggestion depending both on the coffee that we are currently serving and the chocolates we are currently making.  Instead of combining the Espresso and Hot Chocolate, we want to also show how the can complement each other.

Brewing robot mataThe coffee that we are currently serving is from a co-op farm in Robot Mata, Ethiopia.  On its own, this coffee has flavor notes of kiwi, lemon, ginger, green tea, and honey with a very pleasant sweetness that lingers at the back of the palate and followed by a clean finish.

Cup with Camino Verde

While the flavors of the coffee can stand on its own, when paired with chocolate we get new interesting notes.  Our newest bar from Ecuador (Camino Verde), has the quintessential flavor of fudge brownies that many people look for in chocolate and is definitely the mellowest of our bars.  Having a couple pieces with the Robot Mata is like putting cream in your coffee.  The smooth chocolate melts over your tongue and slightly mutes the brightness in the coffee in a pleasantly sweet texture and mouthfeel that makes me forget that I’m drinking black coffee and eating a 70% dark chocolate.

Coffee Bag

When paired with our chocolate from Mantuano, Venezuela, the slight fruitiness of the chocolate and the coffee play off of each other resulting in a roasty, dried cherry flavor with cinnamon notes at the end and a buttery mouthfeel.  This pairing is definitely spicier and more interesting than the Camino Verde, but it really depends on your preferences or mood as to what you want.  I like a square of the mellower chocolate with my coffee in the morning, but enjoy a more fruity pairing in the afternoon or evening, which is especially nice if you’re sharing it with someone.  Everyone’s palate is different, so not everyone will get the same tasting notes out of every chocolate or coffee, so these foster great conversation for the coffee or chocolate connoisseur!

Mantuano, Venezuela

If you come in and order a coffee, you can feel free to taste our varieties of chocolate samples on the shelf and think about flavor profiles for yourself and if you find something that you like in particular, you can take home a bar and a bag of the coffee (yes, we sell Four Barrel Coffee Beans!) that we are brewing so you can have the pair that you like at home!  Our coffee offerings and pairing suggestions will change seasonally, but each new variety will be chosen thoughtfully with specific pairings in mind.  And as always, everyone at Dandelion is more than happy to answer any questions that you might have regarding any of our products or practices.

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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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Beans Beans Beans!

February 5, 2014 by Maverick Watson
photo

Truck! Truck! Truck!!!

At Dandelion, we all wear multiple hats.  My name is Maverick Watson and most days you’ll find me in the cafe, serving up hot chocolates or coffee, but every Tuesday I am Dandelion Chocolate’s go to truck driver.  I pick up our cacao beans from warehouses in Hayward and Bayview and deliver them right to our factory on Valencia Street.

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And sometimes I make Greg deliver me to the bean room!

Today I delivered beans from Mantuano and Guaniamo, Venezuela, and Camino Verde beans from Ecuador!  It’s a really great experience to be able to see how the vast stacks of cacao in a warehouse in Hayward are gradually turned into the chocolate bars that we have on our shelves.  So until next week, I’ll be serving the chocolate, not trucking it.

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