Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Chocolates for the Truly Reformed

I was going to post my next bit about soul care today, but I give you instead this item I came across while working (really):
Chocolates Mark 500 Years of Calvin in a Taste of 'Paradise'

Geneva (ENI). Swiss chocolatier Blaise Poyet believes he has captured the essence of the Protestant reformer Jean Calvin in special chocolate pralines he created to mark the 500th anniversary of the religious figure who made his mark on European history.

"It's not easy to represent theological ideas by using the taste buds," acknowledges Poyet, a master chocolatier from Maison Poyet in Vevey, 80 kilometres (50 miles) from Geneva, where the French-born reformer lived and worked. "But the key thing for Calvin is the glory of God, his excellence, his perfection. So we chose a chocolate that we chocolatiers find exceptional, rare and flawless."

The first layer is based on a classic smooth and runny praline mix. "But we have 'reformed' it," says the Vevey chocolatier, by using crunchy caramelised hazelnuts, and using salt from the Swiss Alps to make the praline slightly savoury.

The second layer uses a "chocolate Grand Cru from Bolivia", made from 68 percent cocoa paste, to represent Calvin's theology of the glory and perfection of God.

"It is a real pleasure," Poyet says of the Bolivian chocolate. "Paradise indeed."

Some historians have noted Calvin was not always an easy person, yet "it is undeniable that in his actions, he demonstrated exceptional tenderness," recounts Poyet. "So we have used a caramel made from Swiss cream that that slightly softens the chocolate to represent in a discreet way this love for one's neighbour."

Finally, a taste of lemon verbena, a perennial, represents Calvin's ability to sow, to plant and to make things grow.

Full story here. (Calvin09 chocolates for sale here.)
Perhaps I'm letting my total depravity show to say so, but I find myself salivating and reluctant to return to the task at hand...

5 comments:

Megan Noel said...

i just ate an m&m just before i read this. mm. maybe not as high falutin' as some but tasty.

Marti said...

just one (1) M&M ?

Anonymous said...

I just love the idea that someone would even TRY to represent spiritual things using the sense of taste. And why not? We sing to God; painters and sculptors create spiritual works. It's an interesting thought!

paulmerrill said...

A little chocolate is ALWAYS good for the soul - until the sugar high wears off, that is...

Marti said...

C., from my office, asks if they are shaped like tulips ; - )