Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Bean-to-Bar Chocolate made in Madagascar

105 bytes added, 09:53, 23 December 2020
no edit summary
{| class="imageTable"
|-
|colspan="3" | [[File:20120329_072220_dsc05114Sambirano 111.jpg|600px]]
|}
In the [[Sambirano|Sambirano region ]] all three types of cocoa grow: Criollo, Forastero and Trinitario. Criollo is a rare species, which only grows in rainy regions such as at the foot of the mountains in the Sambirano valley. Criollo is a very sensitive and not very fruitful species. Compared with the other cocoa species, the Criollo pods have an uneven surface. The beans have a delicate flavour which is especially suitable for chocolates with a high percentage of cocoa. A cut Criollo bean has an almost white colour inside.  {| class="imageTable"|-|colspan="3" | [[File:Sambirano 112.jpg|600px]]|-|[[File:Sambirano 113.jpg|196px]]|align="center"|[[File:Sambirano 114.jpg|196px]]|align="right"|[[File:Sambirano 115.jpg|196px]]|}
<!--
The soft, white fruit pulp of a ripe cocoa pod is sugar sweet and rich in Vitamin C. Children, but also adults, like to chew on fresh pulps.
 
<!--
{| class="imageTable"
|-
|colspan="3" | [[File:20120327_110234_img_1219Sambirano 116.jpg|600px]]
|-
|[[File:20120328_092955_dsc05030Sambirano 117.jpg|196px]]|align="center"|[[File:20120327_101132_dsc04960Sambirano 118.jpg|196px]]|align="right"|[[File:20120327_101905_dsc04977Sambirano 119.jpg|196px]]
|}
-->
Cocoa trees grow best in the shade of other trees, such as fruit trees, acacia or wild ylang-ylang. Most of the cocoa fruits grow on the tree stem, others on branches. The quality of cocoa does not depend on the colour of the pods. Ripe cocoa fruits can be harvested throughout the entire year. Harvesting usually takes place in the morning hours, whereby the farmer carefully chops the fruit off their stems with a special harvesting knife (a type of machete on a stick with a round peak, similar to a hook). The farmer needs to be very careful not to harm the floral button, from where a new flower will grow. Thereafter the farmer opens the pod and separates the beans from the fruit pulp by hand. Each fruit contains about 50 seeds.
The fresh cocoa beans are brought to a fermentation station, which is usually a 3-level wooden box fermentation device. The beans are thrown into the upper wooden box and every second day they are shuffled by hand from the higher box into the lower box. The fermentation is one of the most important steps in the production procedure of quality cocoa. Due to the high sugar contents of the fruit pulp the fermentation begins immediately. During the 6 to 7 days of fermentation a temperature of up to 50°C develops and the fruit pulp evaporates. The shifting of the beans is very important in order to add necessary oxygen for the right chemical process to occur. Beans of the same size ensure an even fermentation.
 
<!--
{| class="imageTable"
|-
|colspan="3" | [[File:20120327_110830_img_1238Sambirano 120.jpg|600px]]
|-
|[[File:20120330_114431_img_2909Sambirano 121.jpg|196px]]|align="center"|[[File:20120327_112436_img_1243Sambirano 122.jpg|196px]]|align="right"|[[File:20120329_154008_img_2523Sambirano 123.jpg|196px]]
|}
 
-->
After the fermentation the beans are dried for 1 to 2 weeks in the direct sun (5 days in the dry season and 10 days in the rainy season). The sun affects the flavour of the beans. The beans must dry equally and steadily and are therefore turned upside down several times a day. The drying makes the beans durable and storable. Insufficiently dried beans are just dry outside and still moist inside and will easily moulder. Too fast drying creates unwanted flavours. Throughout the drying process the weight of the beans reduces to about half or even less and the moisture content is reduced to 7%.

Navigation menu