Cocoa Apocolypse Ghanaesque Blend



Origin:  Blend

Type: Forastero, Amelanado, and a few others.

Year: Various

We are sort of in what might be the early days of the Cocoa Apocalypse.  I talk a bit about it in Ask the Alchemist 327.

One of the causalities is that an old and very much loved stand by is no more so I've come up with a blend the comes quite close our beloved chocolate powerhouse.

Flavor Notes:

The aroma is soft and direct chocolate aroma layered together with fresh berry high notes

This is the epitome of a well rounded chocolate flavor profile and is the chocolate flavor we all grew up with and came to love.  The chocolate is deep and rich like fudge with walnuts.  I also get warm graham cracker and rich rum that leads an extra deep of flavor.  The bitterness and astringency are there and fully in check further lending structure and body.

There is a soft backdrop of slightly dried red fruit and dates.

This is a very forgiving origin and a good one to start with and will go well in light milk chocolate all the way to brooding dark chocolates.

RIP Ghana Cocoa.  A week didn't go by when someone didn't ask what was like it and I had no answer.....until now.  I've been blending my buns off and found a blend of sustainable beans that evoke many of the qualities that people loved about Ghana.  Chocolate, dates, cured tobacco, red fruits; basically the flavors of chocolate many of us grew up with.

Drum Roasting

The drum roasting profile I used for the evaluation sample was 11:20/13:15/17:30 @ 262 F.  After that, you can treat this bean pretty strongly as there is tons of chocolate and fruit.   You absolutely want to pay attention to the aroma and reduce your power/ramps if you smell it trying to be acrid but that is going to be pretty difficult with this bean.  You will notice the Development time is a mere 2 minutes and barrels on strongly to the lower 260s.

Behmor Roaster

Roast 2 lb and use P1 on the one pound setting, for 16 minutes or until you hear a pop or two.  Then take it longer.  2-3 minutes.  It is virtually impossible to over roast in the Behmor with 2 lb in there.  If you are using the current model with Manual control, turning down the power to P4 (75% power) when it starts to become aromatic (or smells sharp) is a nice way to keep the EOR tempering in check.

Oven Roasting

Pre-heat your oven to 325 F. Put 1-2 lb of beans onto a tray single layer deep.  Check the temperature every 5 minutes, stirring at that time.  When the beans are in the 205-215 range, reduce the oven temperature to about 10-15 F above your target EOR, so if you are going for 265 F, set it to 280 F.   When the beans reach your desired temperature and/or are smelling sharp, another 15-30 minutes, remove them and let them cool. This should give you a nice fully developed roasted bean that is in little danger of being over roasted.

Overall it really isn't too fussy.