The Travel Geek

Inside Taza Chocolate in Boston

The first time I encountered Taza Chocolate was in Vancouver. One of my work compadres (Jaqs) brought to work a highly coveted bar she found at an obscure little foodie place in Vancouver’s East end. It was so prized that the bar remained hidden in her desk except for rare occasions when it was needed.

That bar was the most amazing thing I’d ever tasted and the sight of it’s “stone-ground” red wrapper brought joy to my heart.

You see, I rarely get to eat chocolate because of all the extras that get added to most bars: wheat, high fructose corn syrup, dairy bits and bobs, whey, mysterious “natural flavours,” and little lecithins that never get fully identified. My least favourite addition is always calcium chlorite. I’ve never been able to understand why is calcium chlorite in food because I’ve used it to strip the paint off of swimming pool decks.

My exposure to Taza in Vancouver was just the beginning of the search for artisan chocolate. Since then there’s been Denman Island chocolate, Tcho, and Dagoba. All are good, but I’m sad to say that I’ve not seen a bar of Tazo chocolate outside of Jaq’s desk.

As such, I was pleasantly surprised to discover that Taza is a product of Boston… and they offer daily tours of their factory! This warranted a drive out to their warehouse in Somerville.

I won’t go into details of the tour because others have done it, but I will point out a few things that (in my mind) make Taza the best chocolate factory on the planet:

This is a very exciting time for the company. They are growing quickly and are in the midst of an expansion at their current location. This is good news to me because it (hopefully) means that I will start seeing Taza bars in Calgary.

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