Posts Tagged ‘Mococha’

Autrement Chocolat by Christophe Potel

Wednesday, March 27th, 2013
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Last Thursday evening Maire-Hélène Gantois of Mococha, our favorite chocolate shop on rue Mouffetard, held an open-house chocolate tasting at her store. She invited Christophe Potel of Autrement Chocolat, a producer of chocolate confections in the nearby town of Colombes, to present his designer chocolates.

Christophe Potel and Marie-Hélène Gantois

Christophe Potel of Autrement Chocolat
Marie-Hélène Gantois of Mococha

Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

“Designer” is the appropriate word to use here, because Potel earned a degree in design from the Ecole Supérieure de Design Industriel and then went on to work for Dior (fashion), Christofle (tableware), Cartier (jewelry), and Léonard (fashion). After a number of years he decided that his true calling was in chocolate, so he founded his own confection company. To learn his new trade he studied with Jérôme Lespinay, the former chief of production for chocolatier Patrice Chapon.

Potel makes several kinds of chocolates, including Tubos (tubes), Amulettes (matchsticks), and Tablettes (tablets). The ones that we tasted that evening were Tubos, which look like lipstick containers.

Tubos

There are fifteen different flavors of Tubo. Each is identified by a distinctive pattern that is stamped on the end of the tube. Potel proclaims that the tube of chocolate can be cut into pieces and shared with friends, which is an advantage to choosing Tubos over other forms.

My preferred was the Caramel Beurre Salé Liquide, liquid salty caramel enrobed in dark-chocolate. Contrary to the other flavors, this one cannot be cut into smaller portions because the sticky caramel is immediately released and makes a mess. After the tasting, it took only two bites to consume the sample that I brought home. No cutting and sharing here! I enjoyed the rich, heavenly-sweet butterscotch flavor as it oozed out of the chocolate tube. Sublime!

Another flavor that I enjoyed was the Ganache Mojito, made of dark chocolate, mint, lime, and rum.

Carrousel

One of the products that Potel has developed (and patented) is a carrousel for producing shaved chocolate. Although the advantage of shaved chocolate is not immediately obvious, Potel’s associate Céline Barbe told me that the “flowers” that are created can be served with espresso, or can be used to decorate cakes, ice cream, and other desserts. And here is another way to share chocolate with friends: place the carrousel in the middle of the table and let each guest cut a shaving for himself/herself.

Origami

Not content with just designing chocolate tubes, matchsticks, tablets, and a carrousel, Potel has created a chocolate origami chicken for Easter. Marie-Hélène brought it out to show to us, but alas! we didn’t get a chance to taste it.

Chocolats Mococha
89, rue Mouffetard
75005 Paris
Tel.: 01.47.07.13.66
Métro: Censier Daubenton (Line 7)

Open Tuesday through Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Christophe Potel’s chocolates will be for sale at Mococha until June 30.

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Alexandra Makes Chocolates

Friday, December 14th, 2012
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Alexandra Whisnant

Alexandra Whisnant
Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

Alexandra Whisnant presented her chocolates last night at Mococha, our favorite chocolate shop on rue Mouffetard.

She tells us that she fell in love with chocolate while studying for her physics finals at university. Her chocolates were sublime! I’m all for science when it can produce results like this.

Alexandra Whisnat and Marie Gantois, Proprietor of Mochoca

Alexandra Whisnat, Chocolate Maker and
Marie Gantois, Proprietor of Mochoca

Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

Alexandra’s chocolates will be on sale at Mococha through Valentine’s Day 2013. More information about her adventures with chocolate can be found on her Web site Gâté Comme des Filles.

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Tasting Rrraw 88% Cacao Pépites

Wednesday, October 24th, 2012
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Rrraw 88% Cacao Pépites

Rrraw 88% Cacao Pépites
Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

We stopped by Marie-Hélène Gantois’ chocolate shop Mococha just yesterday to learn about a new product that she is featuring. It is called Rrraw and is produced by local chocolate-maker Frédéric Marr. He is one of the few in France who transform cocoa beans into chocolate and then into chocolate confections, rather than creating chocolate confections from chocolate that has already been processed from the bean.

Even more exceptionally, Marr’s chocolate confections are made from cocoa beans that have not been roasted, hence the name “Rrraw” (meaning “raw”) that he gives to his chocolate. Most chocolate makers roast their cocoa beans—Frédéric Marr does not. The resulting raw-chocolate confection has a pronounced earthy flavor.

We purchased a 50-gram bar called 88% Cacao Pépites. True to its name, it is a dark chocolate with grainy texture and an earthy taste that is neither too sweet nor too bitter. Its only ingredients are raw cocoa-bean, cane sugar, cocoa butter, and salt.

Rrraw chocolate is available at Marie’s shop until December 15.

Mococha
89, rue Mouffetard
75005 Paris
Telephone: 01.47.07.13.66
Open Tuesday through Sunday from 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m.

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Last Scream for Ice Cream

Thursday, July 26th, 2012
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Ice-cream Counter at Mococha

Ice-cream Counter at Mococha
Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

Marie at Mococha will close her shop this Sunday and go away for a well-deserved vacation. Before she closes, stop by to try a scoop of Jacques Bellanger* ice cream. It comes in two flavors, Chocolat Macarons and Vanille Bourbon de Madagascar. And that’s not all! Marie tops it off with morsels of Fondant Baulois, a dense chocolate-butter cake. She has recently installed a counter where you can sit to enjoy this special treat.

Mococha
89, rue Mouffetard
75005 Paris
Tél.: 01.47.07.13.66
Tues to Sun from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Ice cream
3.00€ for one scoop
5.00€ for two scoops

The shop will reopen on Tuesday, August 21, 2012.

*Meilleur Ouvrier de France

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Three Single-origin Chocolates by Fabrice Gillotte

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012
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Three Single-origin Chocolates by Fabrice Gillotte

Three Single-origin Chocolates by Fabrice Gillotte
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Fabrice Gillotte creates fine chocolates at his factory in Burgundy. He has been honored with a number of awards for his work, including Meilleur Ouvrier de France in 1990.

We stopped by Mococha on rue Mouffetard where Marie-Hélène Gantois sells a selection of fine chocolates from French chocolate makers, including single-origin chocolates by Fabrice Gillote.

We purchased a 70g tablet each of Equateur, Sâo Thomé, and Papouasie – Nouvelle Guinée, and took them home to taste.

We found the Equateur (72% chocolate) to be quite bitter. Firm to the bite, smooth on the tongue, it did not melt rapidly nor reveal many flavors.

The Sâo Thomé (75% chocolate) had a firm, smooth texture and tasted earthy. It expressed animal notes and a “welcome to the farm” flavor. This chocolate is not for the timorous! We liked this one the best.

The Papouasie – Nouvelle Guinée (72% chocolate) was the mildest of the three, with notes of fruit and spice.

Mococha
89, rue Mouffetard
75005 Paris
Telephone: 01.47.07.13.66

Bonne dégustation!

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Wine and Chocolate Pairing at PhiloVino

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012
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Porto Quinta do Infanada Ruby and Fabrice Gillotte Equateur 72%

Porto Quinta do Infanada Ruby
Fabrice Gillotte Equateur Chocolat 72%
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

On Thursday, March 29, I attended a wine and chocolate pairing organized by Bruno Quenioux of PhiloVino and Marie Gantois of Mococha.

At the PhiloVino wine shop, a group of about twenty persons gathered to taste three wines that Bruno had paired with three pure chocolates of origin that Marie brought from her shop. (See Marie’s YouTube video of the event here.)

Marie Gantois of Mococha
Bruno Quenioux of PhiloVino
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Apart from enjoying from enjoying the wine, the chocolate, and the company the people who gathered at PhiloVino, the purpose of the tasting was to see what kind of harmony or complementarities we could detect when a certain wine was paired with a certain chocolate. During the event, I was balancing a glass of wine in one hand and a camera, pen, and notebook in the other, so was rather distracted. At the first opportunity, I decided to repeat the tasting exercise at home with the first wine/chocolate pair that was presented that evening.

Yesterday, I purchased a bottle of Porto Quinta do Infantado Ruby from PhiloVino and a tablet of Fabrice Gillotte Equateur Chocolat 72% from Mococha. At home, Monique and I each poured a small glass of port and broke off two squares of the chocolate. We then sipped the wine and noted our impressions.

While Monique found the port soft with a long dry finish, I found it dry, not soft, on the tongue with a peppery finish. Both of us agreed that the wine had a fruity bouquet and was not overly sweet.

We then nibbled the chocolate and noted our impressions. The chocolate was quite bittersweet. Monique declared that it had earthy qualities with a hint of fruit. The best I could perceive was that the chocolate was intense (and at 72%, it should be!).

Finally, we nibbled the chocolate and sipped the wine at the same time.

When I tasted them together, I thought that the chocolate smoothed out the dryness of the wine. Monique said the opposite—that the wine smoothed out the taste of the chocolate. This, for her, was a complementary effect. I thought that the flavors of the wine and chocolate were fighting for dominance, which, for me, meant that the two together were not a harmonious pair.

Regardless of the conflicting opinion, we’ll enjoy this bottle of port over the next several days (without the chocolate, which has already been eaten). It will make a great after-dinner drink!

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Tasting Chocolates Made by Vincent Guerlais

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012
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Vincent Guerlais Chocolates

The other day we entered our favorite chocolate boutique—Mococha on rue Mouffetard—where the owner Marie Gantois immediately announced some wonderful news. She was featuring the products of Vincent Guerlais, a chocolate maker in the town of Nantes, and would we like to try some? We purchased a small box containing twelve pieces of assorted ganaches and pralinés and took them home to taste.

As soon as we bit into the first chocolate, we knew that Marie had a winner. Each had a firm, yet delicate shell, and the interiors were smooth (ganaches) or crunchy (pralinés). We both liked the one named Ganache infusée au thé earl-grey. Although I found the flavor of tea a bit too subtle, Monique thought it was prominent, yet not overpowering. The Praliné fleur de sel contained delightfully crunchy salt particles mixed into a soft hazelnut purée. Gianduja noisette et noix de coco contained grated coconut suspended in gianduja, a chocolate-hazelnut paste. Although gianduja and coconut are an unusual combination, we found the flavor to be heavenly. Monique’s favorite was the Grand cru pur Madagascar, a single-origin dark-chocolate ganache that she found to be buttery and slightly fruity.

For the last three years in a row, Vincent Guerlais has won the Meilleur Chocolatier Français award conferred by the Club des Croqueurs de Chocolat. Marie will feature the chocolates in her shop until the end of April.

Vincent Guerlais has two shops in Nantes:

11, rue Franklin
Tel.: 02.40.08.08.79

Marché de Talensac
Tel.: 02.40.35.49.02

Mococha is located at 89, rue Mouffetard in Paris. The telephone number is 01.47.07.13.66.

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And the Winner Is…

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012
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Ganache Chocolates

From top to bottom: Michel Cluizel, Pierre Marcolini, Debauve & Gallais, Fabrice Gillotte, and Servant

In January we invited four colleagues, Richard Nahem, Eric Fraudeau, Yetunde Oshodi, and Sir Robyn Blaber to participate in our annual product tasting. We tasted five ganaches, each made from Venezuelan chocolate by a different artisanal chocolate maker.

The chocolate maker whose ganache scored the highest mark was Fabrice Gillotte, edging out Pierre Marcolini by a narrow margin.

Congratulations, Fabrice Gillotte! His chocolates can be purchased in Paris at Mococha, our favorite chocolate shop on rue Mouffetard.

Full details of the tasting can be found in the February edition of our newsletter, Paris Insights. It is published monthly as a downloadable PDF file and is available only to paid subscribers for an annual subscription fee of $30.

If you are not a paid subscriber and would like to download the newsletter, please click here. Enter promotional code 11473309154 to receive a $5 discount off the price of an annual subscription.

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Four Chocolates

Monday, August 2nd, 2010
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Four Chocolates
(c) Discover Paris!

Yesterday, we purchased four chocolates from Mococha, our favorite chocolate shop on rue Mouffetard: Dôme praliné fondant, Carré blanc avec pépites de praliné, Ganache pain d’épices, and Dôme vert avec caramel. All are made by Patrice Chapon, who won the Grand Prix de la Mairie de Paris 2003.

The Dôme praliné fondant (upper right in photo) has an assertive flavor. It is composed of a crispy mix of nuts (almonds, hazelnut, and pistachio) enrobed in dark chocolate. A touch of salt (sel de Guérande) gives it zest.

The Carré blanc contains a sweet hazelnut filling. The confection is topped with grains of crunchy hazelnut seed. The subtle flavors of the white chocolate and light praliné filling blend into a delicate taste sensation!

The Ganache pain d’épices with its intense spice-cake flavor of cloves and nutmeg stirs memories of the Christmas season!

Finally, the Dôme vert avec caramel (lower left in photo), is made with smoked and salted butter, lime, and dark chocolate. The finely speckled, tangy lime-chocolate dome contains a soft filling of delicious caramel.

Marie Gantois, proprietor of the shop, told us that it will close for the summer holiday from August 9 through August 23.