Why Doesn't Chocolate Taste Like Cacao Fruit?
Fresh cacao fruit tastes of pineapple, lychee and tropical flowers, while chocolate tastes rich and familiar. Why are they so different? The answer reveals the remarkable relationship between trees, microorganisms and people.
Why Does Chocolate Taste Different Around the World?
Why do some chocolates taste fruity while others are nutty, floral or earthy? Discover how cacao varieties, climate, fermentation and maker decisions shape the flavors we experience in chocolate.
Can Chocolate Exist Without Cacao?
Can chocolate exist without cacao? As cocoa-free chocolate alternatives begin appearing around the world, it's a question more people are asking. While science can recreate some of the flavors we associate with chocolate, cacao is more than a collection of flavor compounds. It's a fruit, a tradition, a livelihood, and one of the most diverse ingredients in the food world. Let's explore what makes chocolate taste like chocolate—and what makes real cacao impossible to fully replace.
What Happens During Cacao fermentation?
Fermentation is one of the most important—and least understood—steps in chocolate making. Discover how microbes, time, and careful handling help transform fresh cacao into the rich and complex flavors we find in fine chocolate.
How Chocolate Is Made: From Tree to Bar
Every chocolate bar begins as a tropical fruit. Discover the fascinating journey from cacao pod to finished chocolate and learn how fermentation, drying, roasting, and chocolate making shape flavor.
What is tree to bar chocolate?
Deep in the lush forests of Costa Rica’s Caribbean coast, cacao grows directly from the trunk of the tree — a living reminder that chocolate begins as a vibrant tropical fruit long before it becomes a bar. Tree-to-bar chocolate starts here: close to the land, the farmers, and the cacao itself.
Fermented vs Unfermented Cacao: Flavor, Nutrition & Why We Work With Both
Fermentation changes more than flavor in cacao — it changes nutrition too. At Cacao Huasi, we explore both fermented and unfermented cacao through handmade bars, brittle, and raw nibs, balancing deep chocolate flavors with the bright, mineral-rich qualities of raw cacao. Inspired by research from São Paulo State University and generations of cacao knowledge from farmers and tree to bar makers in Costa Rica.