This was a gift obtained at a Zeller shop, and presented in a box labeled "Cacao Selection Maison". There were no ingredients, no allergen information, and no weight listed. There were two thin bars of this, and
two thin bars of Centenario Crudo 70% included.
This was a gift obtained at a Zeller shop, and presented in a box labeled "Cacao Selection Maison". There were no ingredients, no allergen information, and no weight listed. There were two thin bars of this, and
two thin bars of Centenario Concha 48H 70% included.
Sugar, cacao mass, cacao butter, emulsifier (soya lecithin), vanilla extract. (Translated from the French:
Sucre, pâtes de cacao, cacao fortement dègraissé beurre de cacao, émulsifiant, (lecithine de soja), extrait de vanille).
May contain traces of nuts, peanuts, milk proteins, and egg proteins. (Translated from the French:
Peut contenir des traces de fruits à coque, de cacanuètes [sic], de protéines de lait et de proteinès [sic] d'œuf.)
97x110mm (3.8x4.3")
Vic's rating = 8
Deb's rating = 7
This was a gift presented in a tin box with no weight listed. Inside were 3 thin wafers of chocolate.
A nearly identical product is available from Heinemann called Chili Criolloro. Packaging is the same, except for an orange label on bottom. I don't see any Heinemann reviewed here. Theirs is 66% cacao from Ecuador and Java, WITH Mexican chili pepper. This zeller product does not contain peppers it seems. The Heinemann product is very unique, and is maybe the best chocolate out of scores of global products I've had. I order it online at chocolatier-heinemann.de
May contain traces of hazelnuts, almonds, milk, soya lecithin. (Translated from the French:
Peut contenir des traces de noisettes, d'amandes, de lait, de lécithine de soja.)
85x185mm (3.3x7.3")
Vic's rating = 3
Deb's rating = 1
This was a gift. It had no ingredients listed, but because of the 100% cacao indication, one assumes there is nothing besides cacao mass in it. There was no weight listed, but it looked like 100 grams.