odyssey06 wrote: » Butlers or Skelligs. Think Brown Thomas stock Skelligs.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Skelligs for either eating cooking or hot chocolate FTW It’s beautiful, delicious and they deliver direct I’ve ordered a number of times, most recently in the last weekhttps://skelligschocolate.com/
phormium wrote: » Bean and Goose, yum
august12 wrote: » Any recommendation of a particular type, the higher the percentage of dark chocolate, the less additives and sweeteners. I have tried 100 % dark chocolate and won't be going there again, 85 seems to be my tolerance level.
_Fluffy_ wrote: » I’ve been meaning to try Magic Mayan chocolate, also made in Ireland, just haven’t got around to it: https://www.magicmayan.com/ Again, they use coconut sugar which is why I’d want to try it.
caviardreams wrote: » I've tried the Magic Mayan - I just don't get on with raw chocolate to be honest. It's the texture and mouthfeel - just feels gritty. If you are into Raw chocolate it might be lovely though! Would also mention Milsean's 80% - really smooth and nice https://milsean.ie/ Wilde Irish chocolate are decent too - I don't find skelligs great but I am an 85-100% cacao type so not one for truffles and milk bars, hence a lot more fussy! I think you really notice the quality of the beans at much higher %s. Proper Chocolate company - expensive but nice for a treat: https://properchocolatecompany.com/ I found hazel mountain chocolate very underwhelming (but again, this was only based on their higher % range, and most people rave about their hot chocolate etc.) Wilkies do a nice selection up to 89% (used to do 99% too I think) https://www.wilkieschocolate.ie/ Exploding Tree in Cork do some nice flavours if that is your vibe: https://explodingtree.com/ NearyNógs in Armagh too - https://www.nearynogs.com/collections/chocolate-bars I don't think O'Conaillls in Cork sell online anywhere - but if you are down that way that would be an option too
the beer revolu wrote: » On the coconut sugar ; is that not just sugar made from coconut rather than cane or beet? Is it actually less processed?
caviardreams wrote: » I would say that bean to bar small batch processing is a lot more labour intensive and expensive (especially if using top quality beans that are single origin) than the chocolatiers who just buy in the processed product in bulk and and flavouring or make into bars etc.
the beer revolu wrote: » How many Irish producers are actually making the chocolate themselves?
Markcheese wrote: » Not many ... Most are buying in chocolate from somewhere like begium ,and melting it ...
Darc19 wrote: » BTW, I don't think any chocolate is "made" in Ireland. Most premium chocolate is brought in from different Belgium producers and then transformed into various styles.