Welcome to Chocolate Creations where chocolates rock! Decadent, delicious, romantic ... chocolates are just everyone's favorites - show us someone who doesn't like chocolate. Here you will find all things relating to chocolate. We hope you will enjoy your visit and find some items to convince (do you really need convincing?) to send chocolates ... to pamper, to indulge or just because....... Now I better get into these scrumptious chocolate truffles before someone else does!

Monday, October 24, 2011

Chocolate Creations: Spooky Treats for Halloween


Halloween Chocolate Ghost Sucker
Happy Halloween!

Think Halloween and the following activities come to mind: spooky decorations and images, carving jack-o'-lanterns, trick-or-treating, costume parties, apple bobbing, playing pranks, telling scary stories and watching horror films.

Spooky decorations and scary costumes. Normal homes become haunted houses on the day with homeowners decorating their porches or home entrances with plastic spiderwebs, paper skeletons, scarecrows, and eery jack-o'-lanterns. The more realistic, the better. In invitation for those brave enough to come knocking on the door.


Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Sweet History: Early 1800s … Chocolate Becomes An Industry

Chocolate could never remain as it was; it had to move on, shared en masse. That's what all good creations do, least of all, chocolate creations. And were chocolate creators innovatively inventive!

It must be remembered that in the 1800s there wasn't much utilities available, mostly manpower.
Chocolates were mostly handmade. But that didn't stop a man called Casparus van Houten who, in 1815, set up a small cocoa mill in his house in Amsterdam kept in motion by laborers running around in circles. Now, that's what I call: thinking outside the box.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Sweet History: Don't Leave Home Without Chocolate ... Ich Liebe Schokolade

If Johann or the Jostys couldn't, can you?

That is … leave home without chocolate? And that's what Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, considered Germany's Shakespeare, was said to have done when touring Switzerland in 1797. He loved chocolate so much that he insisted on having it at all times.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Chocolate Creations: Appreciating Them

Since the days of the Aztecs, chocolate has evolved into innumerable chocolate creations of many tastes, shapes and forms. The concept of Chocolate has become captivating and fun. And whether we like it or not, chocolate creations are not simply for drinking or eating. Chocolate has become an entire world on its own. And I have have heard that – like wine and cheese tasting – there are technical ways of appreciating chocolate. Here are a few tips on how best to enjoy your chocolate creations more:

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Sweet History: 1755 … Chocolate Takes off: I Love Chocolate Creations

Ironic, isn't it, that a man named Baker started America's baking-chocolate industry?

Better late than never, but in 1755, America finally discovers chocolate. Why so late? Perhaps because America was not yet the land of plenty.
chocolate

But once they discovered it, America could not be stopped. Baker-Hannon was the unusual collaboration at the forefront of this charge. Dr James Baker was a doctor regularly prescribing chocolate to his patients, while John Hannon was an Irishman who knew how to make chocolate, sweet chocolate creations colonists were willing to pay for generously.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Chocolate Creations: That Masterchef Gingerbread House and Sweets Challenge

It might have been the cook-off from hell – “meaner than a macaroon mountain, crueler than a croquembouche” – but it took me back years to memories from childhood.. Of Hans and Gretel, of The Gingerbread Man, of playing with doll houses. But most of all it brought back memories of the smells of the kitchen.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Sweet History: 1753 … Food of The Gods, Chocolate

Heart Of Cacao Sacred Organic Raw Chocolate
Heart Of Cacao Sacred Organic Raw Chocolate

Affordable and readily available, from the wealthy to the everyday-person, chocolate, by the middle eighteenth century, had secured a place in a person's life. Many varieties chocolate creations – from drinking to eating – were readily available in coffee & tea shops, pastry shops and food shops. But where does chocolate actually come from?

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Sweet History: 1700-1750 … Mi Piace Il Cioccolato

And then it was Italy's chocolatiers to turn the world on its head.

Pernigotti Torroncini Bag
PERNIGOTTI TORRONCINI BAG
A chocolate hazelnut paste became a popular nut-enhanced chocolate variation. They called this Gianduja, named after the tiny island where Columbus unknowingly first saw cacao beans. But the chocolate revolution did not end in Italy, but kept spreading throughout Europe. In 1711, it migrates to Vienna along with Charles VI when he transferred his royalty court from Madrid. And in 1720 Italian chocolatiers are welcomed in France and Switzerland.

Unfortunately, not everything goes smoothly. Like when chocolate first made its appearance in Germany in 1704, Frederick III of Prussia imposed tax – perhaps to keep this 'delicacy' within reach of the rich only?

 

Monday, July 25, 2011

Pralines: What Is Unique About Belgian Chocolates?

Belgium should be proud.

When sharing a box of chocolates with friends and told to choose one only, how many times do we fear that we'll have the last choice and when our turn comes, we can't just make that selection? Fortunately, when it is a box of Belgian chocolates, any choice is always good. I have to say there are no gross Belgian chocolates; you can eat the entire box. Chocolate in its finest form, Belgian chocolates can be addictive.

Large Leonidas Chocolate Jewelry Box
LEONIDAS CHOCOLATE JEWELRY BOX

Belgium is one of the biggest producers of chocolate world-wide. It is especially famous for its pralines. Unlike in the USA where pralines consist of whole nuts (almonds, hazelnuts, pecans) individually coated in caramelized sugar, European pralines refer to the powder (or the paste made from it) resulting from grinding sugar-coated nuts which is then mixed with chocolate.

Belgian chocolates or chocolate bonbons are chocolate that contain this type of pralines … simplifying, in general, pralines may refer to filled-chocolate pieces and when you say chocolate, you're talking about the former, pralines.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Sweet History: 1600-1700 ... J'aime Le Chocolat

You can never keep a good thing hidden!

Almost a century after the Spanish court discovered the goodness of drinking chocolate, the French became aware of cocoa in 1615 when Spanish Princess Anne introduced this luxurious beverage to the French royalty after marrying French King Louis XIII. Rumors abound that Princess Anne gave her soon-to-be-husband an engagement gift of chocolate packaged in an elegantly ornate chest. No wonder, chocolate is reputed to be romantic.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Pralines: The Accidental Confectionery

It's 1671 and here you - Clement Lassagne - are the personal chef of Marshal César, duc de Choiseul, comte du Plessis-Praslin. A sugar industrialist, an ambassador serving King Louis XIII, expecting nothing but perfection! It's a rush, it's a stress to get the food perfect. And you've got a clumsy apprentice accidentally dropping a bowl of almonds and spilling a pan of hot burnt sugar. Can't start over again; there's no time; you don't have more ingredients.

What are you gonna do?

Friday, July 22, 2011

Sweet History: 1500-1600 … Me Gusta El Chocolate

Buy Chocolate Drinks

Too bitter, too spicy … so the Spaniards changed the Aztecs' way of preparing and flavoring this chocolate drink. Sweeter and milder, frothed with a wooden whisk called molinillo, this new “chocolate drink” became a favorite by 1520 of the Spanish King, Charles V, and his court and afterwards quickly became popular as a luxury throughout Spain.

Years earlier – 1502 – Christopher Columbus blew his chance of making chocolate history and instead it was his fellow conquistador successor Hernan Cortes to do so. Columbus had captured a Mayan trading canoe whose cargo included grains, metal wares, fibers and some large seeds, like almonds. In the process of transferring these to Columbus' ship, some of these seeds spilled and the natives ran for them, gathering and treating them with great value. Sorry for him, but Columbus didn't put value in this incident.

Sweet History: -1500 ... Ancient Beginnings

Everybody just loves chocolate!

My first memories of chocolate was on the Sunday morning – every Sunday without fail – when my Dad would take out this heavy-bottom pot, start beating a tune with his steel ladle to wake up the kids. Then he would take out his tin of cocoa powder and proceed in concocting his special hot chocolate drink. It was a truly comforting drink, a wickedly creamy treat. Though I thought that was it, it was always the best. Growing older, I learned that chocolate wasn't limited to the chocolate drink. I became truly captivated from the small brown squares to cakes, fudges, chocolate truffles, pralines, caramels, and numerous chocolate creations. I just keep wanting and coming back for more.