Cette barre est fabriquée à partir de cacao Trinitario provenant directement de fermes familiales de Ba Ria, une province du sud-est du Vietnam connue pour ses superbes plages. L'arôme floral du cacao, complété par des notes de café torréfié, fait une impression immédiate. La texture ferme et le profil de saveur riche enrobent le palais de notes de crêpe, de fudge et d'agrumes. Une offre complexe et délicieuse de ce producteur fiable.
Marou Ba Ria 76%
Origine du cacao : Viêt Nam
Pays producteur : Viêt Nam
Poids : 80g
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Marou Ba Ria 76%
Marou founders, Samuel and Vincent, met on a jungle camping trip in Vietnam. They quickly bonded over a shared desire to escape the mundaneness of their day jobs and embark on a life-changing odyssey. A random Google search for "cacao plantation" led them to a farm in Ba Ria Province. On the ferry ride back to Saigon, they decided to try their hand at this chocolate making thing using just a blender, an oven, and cake tins in Sam's kitchen. Easy enough, eh? Well, what came of these experiments was one of the first "bean-to-bar" enterprises in Asia, and one of the few at the time worldwide crafting chocolate at its source. Their efforts also contributed to a growing network of rejuvenated cocoa farms throughout Vietnam, as farmers could now fetch premium prices for their beans. They continue to source directly from farmers in six different parts of the country and have really helped put Vietnam on the bean-to-bar map.
Achetez plus MarouBa Ria-Vung Tau, a coastal province in Southeast Vietnam, lies 90 kilometers from Ho Chi Minh City. Known for its stunning 20-kilometer stretch of blue-water beaches, the region is a favored spot for beach holidays and tourists. The area experiences a tropical monsoon climate with distinct wet and dry seasons, with average annual temperatures hovering around 27°C. The province enjoys 2,400 hours of sunshine annually and receives about 1,500 mm of rainfall. Home to approximately 1 million residents, Ba Ria-Vung Tau significantly contributes to the Vietnamese economy, primarily through its petroleum, electricity, and petrochemical industries, though tourism, fishing, and agriculture also play vital roles in the region's economic landscape.