Ottawa Citizen

Chocolate maker gets ready for legal edibles

Award-winning Hummingbir­d pairs up with cannabis company Canopy Growth

- PETER HUM

Having won the Academy of Chocolate’s 2016 Golden Bean for making the world’s best bean-tobar chocolate, the Almonte couple behind Hummingbir­d Chocolate Maker have to wonder if one day their company might be comparably recognized by the High Times Cannabis Cup.

That’s because Hummingbir­d, which was launched in 2011 by Erica and Drew Gilmour, recently partnered with Canopy Growth Corp., the Smiths Falls-based, publicly traded marijuana company, to press ahead with creating a THClaced chocolate product that could arguably appeal to gourmets who fancy a tasty buzz.

There is, of course, one big proviso. Production of such a product could only begin “if and when it becomes legal to do so,” Erica Gilmour says.

Recreation­al cannabis became legal in Canada this week, but the legalizati­on of edible pot products, hugely popular in other markets, has been put off because regulating them is especially complex.

Hummingbir­d is one of the few Canadian companies that makes chocolate from scratch from cacao beans. Some of their high-end bars, which are carried in about 50 Ottawa stores, including Farm Boy produce chocolate for sale, even if it contains no cannabis. Linton is pleased that his facility, which is the former Hershey plant in Smiths Falls, will once again produce chocolate.

He said he jokingly tells people that he bought the Hershey plant, which closed in 2008 after 45 years of operation, because he “needed to find out why the Oompa Loompas were so happy.

“A big place that makes marijuana and chocolate, people generally appreciate the symmetry of that,” he added.

Most of the equipment needed to make chocolate has been installed at the Smiths Falls facility, Erica Gilmour says. She said that in the next few months, the facility should be able to make chocolate “just to get ready for possible legalizati­on.”

The Gilmours will help manage chocolate production there, but Hummingbir­d chocolate proper will continue to be made in Almonte.

The two product lines will “continue to be completely separate,” Erica Gilmour says.

It hasn’t been decided how the products of the CanopyHumm­ingbird partnershi­p will be branded. Meanwhile, Canopy Growth will make recreation­al marijuana products under the Tweed brand and medical marijuana products under the Spectrum brand.

Erica Gilmour is piqued by the challenge of creating a truly tasty blend of chocolate and cannabis.

“It’s an interestin­g thing from a taste perspectiv­e, because cacao beans have a very unique flavour based on the origin of the bean and how they’re treated.

“I think there’s an opportunit­y here to play with the flavours of cannabis, and maybe pair those with different cacao beans. We’re still in the early stages … so we’ll see how all that plays out.”

Says Drew Gilmour: “It’s going to be a three-ingredient product. Cacao beans, sugar and cannabis … We may add some flavours.”

He even brings “terroir” — the notion beloved by foodies that food and wine reflect and reveal where they came from — into the conversati­on.

“With regard to the THC, it’s grown right here, and with regard to the cacao beans, we go down south, we meet the farmers and their families and their communitie­s and we see it being cultivated,” Drew Gilmour says. “It’s really an interestin­g story about origin and terroir.”

Could the Gilmours see one of their cannabis chocolate products one day vie for an award for the best edible?

“That’s certainly possible,” Erica Gilmour says.

TONY CALDWELL/FILES

 ??  ?? Erica and Drew Gilmour proudly display their award-winning best bean-to-bar chocolate.
Erica and Drew Gilmour proudly display their award-winning best bean-to-bar chocolate.

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