Top 10 Places for Chocolate
Chocolate-dipped churros from Chocolatería San Ginés sustain a group of Madrid young people after a night out.
Photograph by Miguel Pereira
From the National Geographic book Food
Journeys of a Lifetime1. Chocoholic Buffet, Vancouver, Canada
In a setting reminiscent of a European stately
home, Sutton Place
Hotel’s Fleuri Restaurant plays host to an all-you-can-eat chocolate
buffet. The homemade cakes, pastries, and pies, and other goodies
are made of
premium-quality Schokinag chocolate. Even cocktails and liqueurs are
chocolate-themed.
Planning: In the heart of downtown Vancouver,
the hotel offers two chocolate-buffet seatings every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
evening.
2. Magnolia Bakery, New York City
This cozy little 1950s-style bakery shot to fame
when characters from the TV series Sex and the City stopped by for a
cupcake-fueled sugar rush. As well as red velvet chocolate cupcakes, the bakery
dispenses a rainbow of brightly colored cupcakes, plus banana pudding, cookies,
cherry cheesecake, and brownies. The German chocolate cake is a high point.
Planning: Magnolia has four
outlets—including the Bleecker Street branch featured in Sex and the City.
3. Max Brenner, New York City
Known for its hot chocolate served in a specially
designed hand-warming “hug mug,” the Broadway shop and restaurant offer a
mind-boggling array of cacao-based product from chocolate truffle martini and
chocolate fondue to Young’s chocolate stout.
Planning: Max
Brenner is at 841 Broadway and 141 Second Avenue.
4. Maya Chocolate, Tabasco, Mexico
Here in the likely birthplace of chocolate—the
word itself possibly deriving from the Maya xocoatl—taste hot
chocolate Maya style: thick, foamy, bittersweet, and flavored with chili
peppers. The Spanish conquistadors tempered the bitter brew with sugar,
cinnamon, ground almonds, and milk. Try it both ways.
Planning: Comalcalco, Tabasco, has a cacao museum
and cacao haciendas.
5. Sachertorte, Vienna, Austria
A chocolate sponge cake, thinly coated by hand
with apricot jam and then covered with dark chocolate icing, Sachertorte is
named for its 1832 inventor, Franz Sacher. He created the dessert to impress
his employer, Klemens Wenzel, Prince von Metternich, gaining fame and fortune
for himself. In 1876 his son Eduard opened Vienna’s
Hotel Sacher—visit the splendid café or
one of Vienna’s four Sacher shops.
Planning: Top your Sachertorte with unsweetened
whipped cream and drink it with coffee or champagne.
6. Hot Chocolate, Turin, Italy
In Italy’s
chocolate capital, sip a cioccolato caldo. This winter-buster comes
very thick, hot, and agreeably bitter, topped generously with whipped cream.
Sample bicerin, a layered hot-chocolate-and-espresso drink served in
glass cups, available only in Turin, or try giandujotto, a
foil-wrapped, chocolate-hazelnut candy.
Planning: Visit in February for the chocolate
festival, Cioccola-Tò. Buy a Choco-Pass at the tourist office and get discounts
on sweet treats around the city.
7. Valrhona Chocolate, Tain l’Hermitage, France
In wine-making country, on the Rhône’s left bank,
visit the home of Valrhona chocolate,
favored by many of the world’s leading chocolatiers and chefs. Unusually, the
chocolate is made only with natural fat from cocoa butter; no vegetable fat is
added. Chocoholics will enjoy the chance to sample or buy at the factory shop,
while professional chefs can study at Valrhona’s École du Grand Chocolat, a
chocolate-cookery school.
Planning: The factory shop opens daily except
Sundays. Explore the medieval city of Tournon, across the river.
8. Chocolate and Churros, Madrid, Spain
Few institutions offer better evidence of
Madrid’s insomnia than its perennially popular chocolaterías (also
known as churrerías), typically abuzz with late-night revelers from 4
a.m. to breakfast time. Their trademark dish is the churro, a long waffle-like
stick of savory fried dough, eaten dunked into very thick bittersweet hot
chocolate. Stop in at the venerable Chocolatería San Ginés, an 1894 throwback.
Expect entertainingly brusque service, bright lights, and a frenzied
atmosphere.
Planning: Chocolatería San Ginés is downtown on
Pasadizo San Ginés. It's open all night.
9. Nemesis, River Café, London, England
One of London’s
best restaurants and the spawning ground of many a celebrity chef, including
Jamie Oliver, the café’s signature
dessert is the Chocolate Nemesis cake. Gooey with a slight crust on top, it
gains its richness from a staggering quantity of chocolate.
Planning: Chocoholics can join a Chocolate Ecstasy Tour of
London.
10. Chocolate Hotel, Bournemouth, England
To eat, breathe, and sleep chocolate, where
better to stay than this chocolate-theme hotel? Chocolate-tasting and
chocolate-making classes ensure that chocoholics leave satisfied.
Planning: The hotel is on West Cliff,
near both beach and downtown. Work up an appetite by walking along the town’s
magnificent beach. Source Article
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