Different Supply Chocolate Packing containers We Loved
Uzma Chocolat’s Signature Unique Field for $49: Hailing from Chicago, this was one of some to reach after the date for our January tasting panel—and so could not be included in our prime picks. However among the many latecomers, it was a contender: an enrobed field stuffed with intense however balanced South Asian flavors, and a uncommon chocolate field to promote itself as halal. A ginger bonbon skewed slightly intense, however a date-plum “khajoor” was a quiet riot of texture and taste, and the tea flavors of lapsang and assam offered pretty and delicate accents.
{Photograph}: Matthew Korfhage
Lily & Sparrow’s Bonbons for $45: At lower than a 12 months previous, North Jersey’s tiny Lily & Sparrow was a powerful favourite of a pair members of the January tasting panel. Chocolatier Amanda Sanabria has an exquisite present, specifically, at crafting intense bursts of fruit taste in bonbons that included passionfruit and lemon pistachio. Whereas not fairly as advanced as comparable bonbons from Melissa Coppel or Kreuther, Lily’s mastery of fruit filling places it on a really brief checklist. “Verdict is: That is one chocolatier to look at,” wrote one taster after the panel.
{Photograph}: Matthew Korfhage
AndSons 24-Piece Chocolate Field for $75: As befits a legacy Beverly Hills chocolatier, this can be a fantastically packaged field, a mixture of shiny bonbons and chocolate-enrobed squares. The molded bonbons made the largest impression, whether or not a vivid passionfruit, orange, and guava or a wealthy speculoos patterned after a gingerbread biscuit. The field did not seize me by the lapels and demand to be remembered, however I might be joyful anytime to obtain it: It is a pretty and completed field, absent flaws and off notes. Be aware that we appreciated AndSons’ bonbons much more as a part of a Espresso and Chocolate Set ($109) from Atlas Espresso Membership: Every chocolate, and every espresso [paired with it, tasted extravagantly richer when together than apart.
Photograph: Matthew Korfhage
United Flavors 24-Piece Chocolatier’s Selection for $89: This was another late arrival, and so it missed assessment by our full tasting panel. But this tiny and quite new Virginia chocolatier kept cropping back up in my thoughts, especially for an immaculately fluffy vanilla soufflé square with texture somewhere between sea-foam and cloud: There’s little like it. Molded bonbons were also lovely and deft, if not quite up to the subtle complexity of Melissa Coppel or the trompe-la-langue lulz of Kreuther.
Eclat 16-Piece Signature Assortment for $48: A favorite of Anthony Bourdain and Eric Ripert, Eclat is a Pennsylvania brand with a wide and inventive selection of treats that include Frank Lloyd Wright–themed chocolate bars and wafer-thin chocolate “Mondiants” of chocolatier Christopher Curtin’s own invention. This said, the box we preferred most was the simple enrobed squares and spheres of the signature assortment, prone to culinary flavors such as Sichuan or Aleppo pepper, or the light gush of beer or booze.
Boxes We Don’t Recommend
Photograph: Matthew Korfhage
Compartés’ 20-Piece Signature Truffles Gift Box for $59: Compartés is best known for its wackily creative candy bars, which may contain the tastes and flavors of doughnuts and coffee, a perfect s’more, or a whole cereal aisle—a popularity that’s been cosigned by a Vanity Fair party’s worth of celebrities. Their handsomely packaged truffles didn’t make the same impression.
Forté’s 24-piece Signature Truffles for $110 and Exquisito’s 24-Piece Artisan Collection: Washington State’s Forté and Florida’s Exquisito both come highly praised. Both boxes, alas, arrived at our doorstep in less-than-ideal condition. It’s unknown whether problems arose during shipping or at the chocolate company.
Photograph: Matthew Korfhage
Creo 24-Piece Signature Chocolate Collection for $84: Look, I love Creo’s inventive and lovely white or dark chocolate bars encrusted with thin wafers of dried strawberry or raspberry, which offer a terrific contrast of rich flavor and bright fruit. But the Portland maker’s signature box of mostly enrobed chocolate truffles didn’t always seem in control of its flavors and textures—a fatal flaw in a premium-priced collection.