Tatler Dining Singapore

Ingredient­s

Delve deeper into everyone’s favourite indulgence

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We spotlight our favourite indulgence— chocolate—and Southeast Asia’s growing prominence as a world class producer

It’s often our first luxury—comfort in a melting mouthful. Love, solace and joy cloaked in a luscious confection. And make no mistake, chocolate is indeed a luxury. The journey it takes from cacao bean to chocolate bar is a long and arduous one that today is even more preciously valued, as fresh warnings of an impending global cacao shortage resonate around the world.

To make chocolate, cacao pods are first plucked from their trees and broken open. Their beans are cleaned, fermented and dried in the sun before being packed and shipped to chocolate makers. What follows is lowtempera­ture roasting to develop the beans’ flavour, winnowing (separating the nibs or “flesh” from the bean), grinding into cocoa mass, and high-pressure processing to yield either cocoa powder or cacao butter.

The latter is ground, mixed and kneaded with ingredient­s like sugar and milk to form chocolate, which is then conched (a process of rolling, kneading, heating and aeration) to define its final flavour and aroma, and refined for smoothness. Only then can it be shaped into blocks or drops, and tempered so the chocolate reaches its most stable form.

Although French, Belgian and Swiss chocolate are often cited by aficionado­s as their chocolate of choice, none of these countries actually produces cacao beans. It is the Ivory Coast, Ghana and Indonesia that are among the largest cacao producers, and as consumers become increasing­ly conscious about where their food comes from, chocolate makers from Southeast Asia are looking to their backyards for beans to transform into chocolate bars.

Indonesia, the world’s third-largest exporter of cacao, boasts a clutch of fledgling bean-tobar players such as Pipiltin Cocoa and Pod Chocolate. In Malaysia, Ong Ning Geng, the founder of Chocolate Concierge, not only purveys chocolates made from local cacao beans, he’s also gone ahead and bought his own cacao trees. Vietnamese chocolatie­r Marou Faiseurs de Chocolat is already a well-loved brand around the Asian region, while in the Philippine­s, Hiraya Chocolates sources its beans from Davao. Having their bases located close to the cacao farms they buy from means these chocolate makers have an active hand in their raw materials—so the flavour and quality of their chocolate is generally world-class.

Unsurprisi­ngly, chocolate finds an excellent flavour partner in another third-wave product: coffee. The lush, bitter undertones complement one another delectably, as seen in the most basic of desserts: chocolate cake, chocolate mousse and tiramisu, to name but a few. Try it in your own rendition of coffeescen­ted chocolate truffles. Simply mix half a cup of heavy cream with a quarter-cup of espresso and bring to a boil, and pour the boiling mixture over 280 grams of roughly chopped dark chocolate. Stir until smooth and refrigerat­e for 30 minutes before scooping teaspoon-sized balls of the resulting ganache onto a sheet pan lined with parchment paper. Refrigerat­e for another 30 minutes and roll the truffles in cocoa powder before serving.

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 ??  ?? Coffee and chocolates are soulmates— match single-origin variants from Chocolate Conceirge with single origin cuppas
Coffee and chocolates are soulmates— match single-origin variants from Chocolate Conceirge with single origin cuppas

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