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    • What is Heirloom Cacao?
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  • Our Heirloom Farmers
    • Our Heirloom Farmers >
      • AFRICA >
        • Tujikomboe Farmers Group, Tanzania
        • Akesson's Bejofo Estate, Madagascar
      • CENTRAL AMERICA >
        • BFREE, Belize
        • Maya Mountain Cacao, Belize
        • Quantum Cacao, Costa Rica
        • Kampura Farms, Guatemala
        • Finca Flores de Miriam, GUATEMALA
        • Finca Nahuatancillo, GUATEMALA
        • Nicalizo, Nicaragua
        • Chuno, Nicaragua
      • NORTH AMERICA >
        • Hawaii Agriculture Research Center
      • SOUTH AMERICA >
        • Alto Beni, Bolivia
        • Tranquilidad Estate, Bolivia
        • Hacienda Limon, Ecuador
        • ASOANE, Ecuador
        • Piedra de Plata, Ecuador
        • APOVINCES, Ecuador
      • SOUTHEAST ASIA >
        • Pham Thanh Cong, VIETNAM
        • VO Thanh Phuoc, VIETNAM
        • Puentespina Farms, PHILIPPINES
        • Helen de Vista, PHILIPPINES
    • Buy Heirloom Beans
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    • HCP Producer Guide to Flavor and Quality Evaluation
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HCP in Action

EPISODE 4: COMALCAN & CARMELO

6/29/2023

 
by Rowan Jacobsen
Images & Video: Alyssa D'Adamo of the Heirloom Cacao Preservation Fund​
Greetings from La Chontalpa, the cocoa-coated lowlands near Tabasco’s Caribbean coast, where it’s 99 in the shade, 105 in the sun, and getting into a car is like stepping into a microwave. Actually, two of our vehicles have already expired under the thermal assault. All worth it, because this is the biggest cache of cacao in Mexico.
The state of Tabasco is kind of like the Louisiana of Mexico: A hot, steamy swamp on the Gulf of Mexico steeped in strong local traditions, and catapulted out of poverty in the late 20th century by a sudden infusion of wealth from the oil industry. In Louisiana, it’s the seafood industry that exists awkwardly side-by-side with the oil industry. In Tabasco, it’s cacao.
Cacao goes all the way back in Tabasco. When the Spanish annexed Tenochtitlán in 1521 and pulled the rope on the supply chains to see where the Aztecs were tapping the gushers of cacao beans flowing into the city, it led to two places: Soconusco and “La Chontalpa."
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Soconusco was more famous at the time, but today Tabasco dominates. A few years ago, The Chocolate Life’s Clay Gordon estimated that Tabasco produced 18,000 tons of cacao per year, Chiapas 4,500 tons. Today, HCP’s cacao-wrangler in Mexico, Alejandro Escriche, guesses that Tabasco supplies two-thirds of Mexico’s production, Chiapas the other third. (With Oaxaca kicking in a rounding-error’s worth of strange strains, all consumed locally.)
For centuries, the cacao in Tabasco was a mix of varieties descended from ancient times. Grafting was unknown. Everyone planted seeds from their favorite trees, every tree was different, the trees cross-pollinated, and a distinctive range of landraces took hold in the Chontalpa. Although Chontalpa cacao had a terrible year in 2023, thanks to a double-whammy of monilia infection and wacky weather, Alejandro will be collecting several different samples of classic Chontalpa field blends for heirloom consideration.
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Alma's mother
But the best way to sample that old Chontalpa magic is to taste the chocolate made by Alma Rosa Peralta Moran. For many years, Alma’s father, Rutilo Peralta, led Mexico’s national cacao association. A deep lover of cacao trees, he kept an orchard of all his favorite varieties, planted under the shade of a massive century-old tree. When Don Rutilo died in 2019, he had his ashes buried in a simple grave in the grove, at the base of that tree.

​To honor her dad, Alma began making chocolate from the grove’s cacao. She tends the trees, harvests the pods, ferments the beans, and makes the chocolate. Today, Chocolates Don Rutilo is considered to have the finest aromatics in La Chontalpa. (And that’s saying something. When La Chontalpa throws its annual festival, 45 local chocolate makers show up with their creations.) Alma even runs a chocolate pozole delivery service, waking up at 3 in the morning to make and hand-deliver her pozole to her clients in time for breakfast.​

But that’s not our main story today. That involves another cacaotero, as they’re called here, named Carlos Echeverria. As you’d expect from a cacao region that predates the Conquest, La Chontalpa was traditionally a mix of Criollo strains, many of which produced white beans with low bitterness and buttery flavors. Such beans are known as almendra blanca, and they have been prized for centuries.
​

In the 1940s, Carlos Echeverria inherited an abandoned farm scattered with overgrown cacao trees. Many were forms of almendra blanca. Carlos began experimenting, selecting his favorites for propagation, searching for the perfect combination of flavor and vigor, and also doing something unheard of in Tabasco: grafting the trees onto better rootstock to improve their yield. Eventually, he landed on a tree that knocked it out of the park on both flavor and productivity and began cloning it, the first true white-beaned varietal. He named it Carmelo.
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Abandoned La Jolla Ranch
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Rossanna Hernandez Echeverria
And it was awesome. Intensely aromatic (when properly fermented), gentle on the palate, a good producer. For years, it stayed a local phenomenon, and eventually Carlos died and the farm, Finca La Joya, passed to his daughter, Clara Echeverria. And she would turn out to be a force of nature.

​In the 1990s, the fine-chocolate craze surged to life in Europe. Companies like Bonnat and Valrhona began marketing single-origin bars from regions like Chuao, and Clara Echeverria was ready. She was a classy
cacaotera with a stately ranch, an excellent handler of trees and fermentation protocols, and Finca La Joya became Mexico’s first famed single-origin. There were prizes at the international cocoa awards. Scientists and chocolate-industry bigwigs came to stay at Finca La Joya, which accrued the cache of a top wine estate.
And prices exploded. $10 a pound for Carmelo beans. Then $20. A kind of tulip mania took hold. Everyone in the region wanted to plant Carmelo trees and get in on the game. Clara spread the wealth, selling trees as well as beans, and La Chontalpa hitched its wagon to Carmelo.

And then it all came crashing down. The other farmers in Tabasco weren’t used to working with grafted varieties, which need more TLC than trees planted from seed (pie franco in the local parlance, a term borrowed from the wine industry that means “free feet”). Worse, their Carmelo didn’t taste like Finca La Joya’s. This would not have surprised anyone in the wine business. It wasn’t just the genetics of the trees. It was the terroir of the place. It was the soil, the landscape, Clara’s management and fermentation skills. 

It was also supply and demand. Soon, there was a glut of Carmelo on the market, most of it not very good. The bubble burst. Prices tanked. And when monilia hit Tabasco like a hurricane in 2005, the Carmelo craze came crashing down.

The good times didn’t even last at Finca La Joya. Clara died in 2013, the family squabbled over the ranch, and a few years ago Rancho La Joya was abandoned. We stood outside its locked gate and flew a drone over the overgrown ruins, a source of profound heartache to Clara’s daughter, Rossanna Hernandez Echeverria, who lives a kilometer away and has started her own young orchard of almendra blanca to continue her mother’s legacy.
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But the legacy of La Chontalpa’s almendra blanca isn’t just in her hands. She has help a few kilometers away, where her young cousin, Clara’s great niece, Alma Delia Magaña Peralta, is stewarding a few hectares of Finca La Joya’s trees at Finca Las Delias, a lush organic and biodynamic orchard in her family’s back forty. About 83% of the trees are almendra blanca, interspersed with a handful of other varieties for diversity and an abundance of shade trees and other fruit crops—a classic biodynamic fruit forest.

“We’re sort of hippies,” explains Alma. “Maybe the only hippies in Tabasco.” Alma, who is in her 20s, had actually left the Chontalpa for the big city, where she was working as an architect, but the pandemic brought her home, where her mother had planted the trees in honor of her Aunt Clarita. Soon, Alma was drawn to the rhythms of biodynamic farming, and she took it to the next level.

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Finca Las Delias
It’s still a work in progress, but things are looking promising. Yields have bounced from 1.2 tons in 2019 to just half that in 2020 and 2021, before bouncing back to well over a ton in 2022 and another good year in 2023, as Alma got her farm management dialed in.

Fermentation, too. “When I started,” Alma says, “I couldn't make any connection between what was a good smell in the beans and what was a bad one. For me, everything was bad, because it smelled like vinegar!” But after tasting enough of the chocolate, she began using a lighter hand with fermentation, which suits such gentle beans, and today her beans have brought Carmelo’s reputation right back to its 1990s peak. They command some of the highest prices in the world, and they are snapped up by Mexico’s handful of bean-to-bar chocolate makers.
​
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Almendra Blanca Finca Las Delias
So while Finca Las Delias needs no help from HCP to find the market or prove its quality, Alma was still thrilled to get a visit from HCP because of the promise of greater community. It’s a bit lonely being the only hippie organic cacaotera in Tabasco, and she would love to have more pros in her network to swap tips on tree management, to share trials and tribulations, to be reminded of the value of growing great cacao. It’s a good reminder that underlying HCP’s mission of Discover, Identify, and Preserve is an important foundation of community-building that is essential to the people working for a future of amazing chocolate.
That’s the unexpected takeaway from Tabasco as we hop another series of buses and trucks for the Lacandon Jungle, the most pristine and remote rainforest in North America, where we hope to get insights into the earliest communities to cultivate cacao in North America—and maybe even get a few glimpses of the feral descendants of those efforts. Wish us luck, and please send more mosquito repellant if you can.
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Alma and her parents

Episode 3:The Real White Chocolate

6/4/2023

 
written by Rowan Jacobsen
Meet Dionisia Garcia Juárez, a Chinantec woman who lives in the town of San Felipe de Léon, tucked deep into a fold of the Chinantla, a vertiginous corner of northeastern Oaxaca. She’s a spry 55, still climbing the steep paths of her farmstead in a traditional huipil, the woven tunic of the peoples of southern Mexico that captures the history and beliefs of her ancestors in embroidered symbols.
​
The Chinantec people have lived here since forever, and they’ve cultivated cacao approximately that long. They self-governed for centuries until the Aztecs rolled into town around 1455, happily allied with the Spaniards in the 1520s to boot their oppressors, and then of course wound up rebelling against the Spanish a decade later.
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The valleys and slopes of the Chinantla are so steep that the Chinantec developed a unique language that includes a variety of sharp whistles that can be used to convey complex information from one ridge to another. The language has been studied extensively by anthropologists, and there are still about 100,000 Chinantec speakers, but it’s mostly just the old people these days who know how to make and interpret the whistles. The kids use cell phones.

​San Felipe de Léon has just enough altitude to exist in that rare band where both coffee and cacao can thrive. Any lower and its too hot for good coffee; any higher is too cool for cacao. The people of San Felipe de Léon grow both in a delicate dance. The coffee is new, but the cacao is a constant. “When I was a kid,” says Dionisia, “these mountains were covered in cacao. We just treated it like any other fruit.” They used it in their drinks, especially atole and pozol, and sold anything extra to coyotes—middlemen who are like traveling pawn shops, rolling into town with a truck and a roll of cash and buying anything farmers are desperate to sell at extremely low prices. Coyotes are always a last resort, but if you’re a farmer without the means to haul your cacao to a distant city where you might get a better price, they can be better than nothing.

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Thirty years ago, the Mexican government encouraged farmers in the Chinantla to plant new hybrid varieties of cacao with better disease resistance. Many did. Dionysia didn’t. Why not? “It’s my heritage,” she says. “And I prefer the flavor.”
But to make a living off those trees, she needs to get a better price than the coyotes are willing to pay. And that means stepping up her fermentation game. As in most places in Mexico, the cacao in the Chinantla traditionally wasn’t fermented at all. Mexican cacao is washed and dried immediately after harvest, which results in a strongly astringent cacao without rich chocolae flavor, and that’s what the domestic market has always consumed in drinks, which are so sweet that the flaws in the chocolate are barely noticeable.
But to earn the higher price paid by both domestic and international bean-to-bar customers, good fermentation is essential, and that’s the next step. Alejandro Zamorano, HCP’s lead on this project, is kick-starting the first fermentation fenter in San Felipe De Leon, with support from HCP. Soon quality Chinantla cacao will be finding its way into craft chocolate for the first time.
And craft it will be. Dionisia asked us if we wanted to see her “cacao antiquo”—the old cacao that was always here. You bet we did. She led us about a mile up a steep footpath through several hectares of hillside intercropped with food plants of all kinds. The land was her childhood home. Her parents are gone, but the house remains in the middle of the groves, surrounded by a few fruit trees.

Most of the cacao was a mix of varieties that go back to the 20th century—interesting, but not unusual. But the real prize was just below the old homestead: 14 “antiquo” trees, each more than 100 years old. There used to be 16, but Dionisia got into a big fight with her sister, and her sister cut down two of the trees in spite, because she knew it would really hurt. It did.
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Alejandro surveyed the trees with barely contained fervor. “Look at the pale color of the new leaves!” he shouted, snapping photos. “You can tell it’s white-beaned.” The genetic mutation that drained the color from Criollo beans did the same to its leaves. These trees were the real deal, a living chunk of Oaxacan history.

And there was another important piece of Oaxacan history and culture growing all over those hillsides, mixed in with the cacao and coffee: pataxte, aka
Theobroma bicolor,
or white cacao. Pataxte is cacao’s less flashy sibling, and it has always played a supporting role in Oaxaca’s traditional beverage culture. Its white beans have less fat than cacao, a milder taste, and they are exceptionally good at producing a froth

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Dionysia says pataxte has always grown “wild” in the hills of the Chinantla, and she remembers her grandfather cultivating it in his garden. The trees are clear cousins to cacao, with similar leaves and shapes, but they are much taller, and their pods hang from the branch ends, not the trunks. The pods themselves are shaped like cacao, but light in color and much harder. They have strange lace patterns etched into the husks that makes them feel like they are carved in ancient runes.

Pataxte was a big deal in prehistoric times, an essential part of the mix. Somehow Europeans never understood this. Even today, there seems to be some confusion among chocolate connoisseurs. Early references to “white cacao” are almost certainly referring to pataxte, not white-beaned Criollo. And that’s what Oaxacans mean when they use the term today. Oaxaca grows just 30 tons of
cacao and 10 tons of bicolor
a year, and consumes virtually all of it.

Now pataxte is having a moment. Next-gen Oaxacan eateries are featuring it more prominently. Leading the way is Olga Cabrera’s remarkable Tierra del Sol, which uses it in a sublime white mole, as well as in a veriety of mixed-cacao drinks and pastries.

A trickle of pataxte is even making its way to the wider world through exporters like Alejandro, who pays Dionisia $16 a kilo for all the pataxte she can get her hands on. (He buys her cacao and coffee, too.) That makes it more expensive than virtually any cacao in the world, but it’s necessary to cover the meager yields and difficulty separating the beans from the pods. Alejandro had never seen a whole hillside of his newest obsession before, and he gaxed around in astonishment. Most of the pataxte in the world is coming from this one valley.
​

Dionisia handed us small white disks of pure pataxte chocolate to try, containing nothing but pataxte and sugar. It was rich, creamy, mild, and nutty, like peanut-butter fudge. It didn’t taste remotely like chocolate, but we could immediately comprehend why people have been mixing the two together for centuries. They are natural partners. Dionisia likes to mix 1/4 pataxte into her drinking chocolate, along with sugar and a touch of cinnamon.
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As we left the lovely valley, crossing mutliple bridges as the red dirt road zigzagged back and forth across the small creek, heading back to the paved road that would lead us to Tabasco, Mexico’s commercial cacao powerhouse, we felt we’d been reminded of the need for this journey of discovery. The cacao of the Chinantla is a unique mix that, if it tastes good enough, may have a shot at heirloom status. But what to do with the pataxte? It isn’t cacao, so it doesn’t qualify. But it checks every other box. Delicious, fascinating, culturally vital. And the world’s commercial supply was coming almost entirely from one hardscrabble valley.

And who knows what else is out there? 

There’s work to be done. Flavors to be saved. And they aren’t getting any younger.


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