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Metiche Soconusco avec Piloncillo 68%

Origine du cacao : Mexique
Pays producteur : Mexique
Poids : 70g

Le piloncillo est un type de sucre de canne entier non raffiné traditionnellement utilisé dans la cuisine mexicaine. Il est obtenu en faisant bouillir et évaporer le jus de canne à sucre, que l'on laisse ensuite durcir. Le résultat est une substance dense et brun foncé avec une saveur riche de caramel et une profonde nuance de mélasse. Contrairement au sucre blanc raffiné, le piloncillo conserve ses nutriments naturels ainsi que les notes inhérentes de bois et de vanille. Sa douceur est sensiblement différente, offrant des notes de rhum, de noix de coco, de cannelle et de dulce de leche. Combinés au chocolat, des saveurs de Kahlua, de fudge et de caramel noir émergent également. Quelle délicieuse gourmandise !

Prix ​​habituel $14.99

Metiche Soconusco avec Piloncillo 68%

Based in Guadalajara, Metiche is dedicated to sharing Mexico's pre-Hispanic heritage through chocolate, as both a sensory and visual experience. Their packaging features traditional calligraphy and an emblem depicting a woman with a cocoa plant, symbolizing chocolate's origins in the area. Fabiola, the founder, meticulously sources all her ingredients - including cacao beans, sugar, cocoa butter, inclusions, and even printed packaging - from within Mexico, aiming to keep that money circulating in the local economy. Metiche works directly with farmers in Tabasco and Chiapas, visiting both the farmers and their farms regularly. The name "Metiche," meaning "nosy" in Spanish, reflects the Mexican culture's curiosity and desire for connection. Metiche believes that sharing chocolate is a way to foster meaningful connections and conversations, inviting others to join in the joy of discovery and indulgence.

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Soconusco, located at the very bottom of Mexico in Chiapas' southwest corner along the Guatemala border, has a history dating back to at least 5500 BC. It was home to Mesoamerica's oldest known culture as well as the earliest signs of cocoa cultivation, dating back 4,000 years ago. The region influenced the rise of the Olmec and Aztec civilization, in addition to the many that preceded them. Its modern political status was unsettled in the 19th century, and its isolation has preserved a persisting distinct cultural identity separate from the rest of Chiapas, let alone Mexico. Geographically, Soconusco is a narrow strip between the Sierra Madre de Chiapas and the Pacific Ocean, with diverse climates and ecologies that vary by elevation. Its long coast has 200 km of uninterrupted beaches and mangroves, while lowlands contain dry forests with scrub and woodlands, and at higher elevations, where the mountains intercept winds from the Pacific, it is cool and humid with a tropical evergreen montane forests. The region has fertile volcanic soil and lots of humidity, making it ideal for agriculture. Cacao and rubber were the primary crops for millennia, but coffee became the first modern export in the 1890s, introduced by German immigrants. Since then, a multitude of crops like tropical fruits and flowers have been cultivated.

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