Belgian chocolatier goes 'bean-to-bar' for best taste
Updated: 2016-01-12 10:01
By Marine Laouchez(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Belgium chocolatier Benoit Nihant with chocolate stars made with cocoa beans in Awans.[Photo/ Agencies] |
Chuao, Baracoa, Hacienda Rio Peripa: When it comes to cocoa beans, it turns out there are vintages just like there are for fine wines, says Belgian chocolate maker Benoit Nihant.
Ina country where chocolate is a source of national pride, Nihant is one of around a dozen "bean-to-bar" makers who go direct to the source in Africa, the Americas and Asia to get the best possible taste.
And it is the Chuao plantation on Venezuela's Caribbean coast, where the beans dry beneath the sun in the village square before a blue and yellow church, that produces the finest chocolate in the world, experts say.
The select group including Nihant and his fellow Belgian Pierre Marcolini are now trying to transform the often traditional world of chocolate making by mastering the process from the bean harvest to the creation of elaborate confections. "It took us three or four years to really master, to understand the impact of the work on the plantations on the chocolate itself," says the 41-year-old Nihant at his shop in Awans, near Liege in southern Belgium.
After starting out as an iron and steel engineer in the Belgian rust-belt, Nihant says he had a revelation just before he turned 30.
"I suddenly realized that I hadn't chosen my career, my destiny," he says. "I really wanted to create something, and to live my passion on a daily basis."
That passion was chocolate, accounting for the attention to detail that now informs his work. "Good chocolate is made with love. Good chocolate is made with beans which come from a small plantation, which have been chosen and not mixed with the harvest from a neighboring plantation," he explains.
"It's chocolate where the grower is aware of what the chocolatier wants and respects all the steps of fermentation and drying without taking shortcuts."
Most of the world's major chocolate makers buy their chocolate ready-made from a small group of multinational firms which mix beans from different sources for a more consistent taste.
But for his chocolate, Nihant has hand-picked nine plantations after a series of journeys, in Venezuela, Ecuador, Cuba, Madagascar and Bali in Indonesia. Soon he hopes to source beans from Peru, where he recently bought land.
He imports 25 tons of beans a year in a country that produces a massive 650,000 tons of chocolate a year, mostly by big brands including Godiva, Leonidas and Neuhaus.
Going direct to the source does not come cheap, though. He buys his beans for between six and 12 euros ($6.50 to $13) per kilogram, whereas ready-made chocolate is sold to manufacturers for 3.50 euros per kilo.
Chocolate fans pay the price in the end for their pleasure: a 50-gram (nearly 2-ounce) Benoit Nihant bar costs between 4.20 euros and 7.20 euros.
- Drug lord closer to US trial as Mexico starts extradition process
- UN chief slams deadly attack on MSF-supported hospital in Yemen
- ROK to restrict access to Kaesong industrial complex
- No Pants Subway Ride puts smile upon faces of fellow passengers
- Obama says US must act on gun violence, defends new gun control rules
- Over 1 million refugees have fled to Europe by sea in 2015: UN
- 'The Revenant' and 'The Martian' big Golden Globe winners
- The world in photos: Jan 4 - 10
- Creative designs create splash in Shanghai art center
- Amazing ice wonderland in Beijing
- Chinese Buddhism's birthplace remains a place of pilgrimage
- Special report: Rise and rise of China's outbound tourism
- Trial data of former senior Party officials on display
- Replica of luxurious chariot from ancient times wows Xi'an visitors
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
8 highlights about V-day Parade |
Glimpses of Tibet: Plateaus, people and faith |
Chinese entrepreneurs remain optimistic despite economic downfall |
50th anniversary of Tibet autonomous region |
Tianjin explosions: Deaths, destruction and bravery |
Cinemas enjoy strong first half |
Today's Top News
Shooting rampage at US social services agency leaves 14 dead
Chinese bargain hunters are changing the retail game
Chinese president arrives in Turkey for G20 summit
Islamic State claims responsibility for Paris attacks
Obama, Netanyahu at White House seek to mend US-Israel ties
China, not Canada, is top US trade partner
Tu first Chinese to win Nobel Prize in Medicine
Huntsman says Sino-US relationship needs common goals
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |