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Info Details
Country Grenada   
Type Beans   
Strain
Source Grenada   (St. Mark; Nonpareil; Crayfish Bay)
Flavor Earthen   (looking to Crossover)
Style Old School      
lo
med
hi
CQ
Sweetness
Acidity
Bitterness
Roast
Intensity
Complexity
Structure
Length
Impact
A year on since Mott Green, one of the bright lights in the chocolate firmament, has died & this post, originally prepared last summer in his wake, has sat unpublished. It conveys what’s fondly referred to around these parts as Mott’s Last Chocolate Will & Testament.

A meeting of the editorial board decided to publish rather than let it languish perpetually.


**************************************************

On the morning of June 1, 2013, the C-spot® received this message:

They're in the sky right now -- Mott

Mott being Mott Green, founder & head of The Grenada Chocolate Company.

Within 2 hours, he was suddenly & unexpectedly dead.

In the days leading up to his death, Mott & this office exchanged a flurry of IMs. It all started with a project to catalog the prized flavor cacáos of the world.

Ever since Grenada Chocolate Co.'s 100% unsweetened bar &, moreover, its Nib-i-licious scored high ratings a couple years ago in The Chocolate Census, cacáo on this island has been commanding attention.

Mott was therefore contacted for his assessment of Grenada's various cacáo orchards & estates. He singled out one particular property as la crème de la crème / the best-of-the-best.

Great. Send some, please. He said 'no problem'.

A couple weeks later, the parcel had yet to arrive. Mott explained that he wanted to mule them himself on a trip to the States at the end of the next month. But once he understood the urgency, he agreed to FedX it.

Another week flies by -- nothing. Mott then complained that FedX would cost $50 to $100. "Fine, just put 'em onboard & you'll be reimbursed."

Cool. Roger that.

More time elapses & still no cocoa.

A proud squatter in his former life in NYC & Philadelphia, no doubt Mott could be frugal. And maybe the economy was still in recovery but, c'mon, let's get this done.

Another phone call. To expedite matters. he was offered a credit card or PayPal. Then the plea: just send the effin beans.

The tone of the conversation turned a little tendentious. Mott snapped, "Dewd, don't you understand? To send 'em FedX by themselves instead of me bringing them as carry-on luggage creates a larger carbon footprint".

Now F me.

"Jesus, Mott, good thing God or evolution didn't pick you for Adam on the original childcare delivery or else none of us would ever be here."

"Don't worry I'll get 'em there & you'll have 'em soon."

Sounds so reassuring.

After some more verbal sparring & bumping each other around like brothers, we hung up.

It's hard to argue with such fanaticism (stated here with affection). Remember, his company practices Sustainable Delivery… certain payloads of their bars are shipped from the Caribbean to Europe via the ancient mariner route: harnessing the power of the wind on a sailboat... a pre-steam engine move in the age of aviation. That truly & literally enjoins the slow food movement. No doubt he'd probably swim them over if he could.

Uncompromising in his standards right down to the last nib, Mott embodied “chocolate energy” from his first commercial bar. Even at 60%, hardly a superpower percentage, it was the little bean that could… & did power up the Grenada Chocolate Company, which pulls cacáo from several local properties — about 200 hectares in total – each a shareholder in the venture.

Collectively their organic pods consist of mixed cultivars, some inter-cropped & others of pure-stand cacáo under shade-canopy. By the time these reach the company’s centralized fermentary, they merge into relative uniformity inside a solar-powered manufactory that processes the whole blend & keeps the valued-add at home to complete the vertically-integration, a pioneer among the micro-processors of premium chocolate. Its family of 50 islanders who toiled alongside him is a testament to what they envisioned together: a grassroots movement on the up, without the skullduggery & stealth that mars so many businesses. Well beyond fairtrade, organic & the raft of certifying regimes, it's home-ground chocolate at its fullest.

It wasn't about the money; it's about enacting a creed faithfully.

True to his word, the following morning, his last, Mott delivered that message with the subject header They're in the Sky Now, detailing
"ok, I sent 3 kilos from the 1 grove, as discussed, on a plane with our Prime Minister Tillman Thomas. He happens to be our friend & neighbor here at the chocolate factory. Please call him to arrange pickup." Then he closed with "Enjoy analyzing the best chocolate in the world, perhaps."
Pretty declarative (with a dash of humility & equivocation.... in life ya never know so it's always good to have a scintilla of doubt... keeps one humble); very Mott.

A couple hours after sending this, Mott Green, supporter of this site &, moreover, friend of the Earth, was accidentally electrocuted while upgrading the factory where he worked & lived.

Mott, if you're in the sky right now, damn the ratings, such as they are, always ephemeral at best, this, at least symbolically, earns a perfect 10.

You're heirluminesce... may your soul be well-kept & long may your memory live for the example you set.
Appearance   4.4 / 5


Color: husks a bright orange crush
Surface: diverse but some plump Big Boys in the mix tipping the scales at 1g+, many with strong definitional chunks
Temper: hyper-active like onyx
Snap: resistent (unroasted, naturally)
Aroma   7.8 / 10
volcanic baslamic... call it "vinegrenade" (vinegar from Grenada)... among the most pungent ever
Mouthfeel   13 / 15
Texture: slightly moist & thus some flexion to...
Melt: ... compensate for only moderate fat
Flavor   44.9 / 50
cocoa -> banana -> Belizian chicle -> grinds into minerals - magnesium & sodium -> a bitter back to vegetative green, then black olive -> crunches down to cassava chip -> malted barley & lightly stringent hops -> pink bubble gum in the after-hang (more Belize) -> pencil shavings at the very bottom of the gullet
Quality   18.1 / 20
Mott Green personally selected these seeds from Crayfish Bay Estate, fka Nonpareil (which in French stands for "without equal"). Unparalleled indeed for Grenada, which often features raucous & unruly cacáo.

Proprietor Kim Russell of Crayfish Bay tends to this 200 year-old, 15-acre estate overlooking the NW coast of the island. A former molasses plantation during French colonial rule, he now husbands these beauties during a fermentation-drying continuum that lasts upwards of 2 weeks. The combination of some predigreed cacáos & favorable terra account for its standing out from its neighbors that make up the bulk of the Grenada Chocolate Co.'s supply.

Exceedingly well-mannered yet dynamic for a raw cocoa nut. Low acidity replaced by medium-hi umami & ungrilled vegetals. Makes for a solid bar of core cocoa principles complimented by savory-sweet highlights (eat up those vegetable & chew gum at the same time), as evidenced by Barsmiths™ Grenada 75%. And those bubble-yum aspects translate into deep purples in Pump Street's sweeter 70%.

True single-estate Grenada. Unparalleled.

INGREDIENTS: cocoa nuts

Reviewed August 1, 2013
Revised August 22, 2014

  

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