U.S. anti-cocaine push embitters Peru chocolate makers
Source: Reuters
U.S. anti-cocaine push embitters Peru chocolate makers
By Caroline Stauffer
LIMA | Wed Apr 25, 2012 9:07pm BST
(Reuters) - Connoisseurs who take chocolate as seriously as sommeliers study wine are challenging the widespread use of an inferior cocoa pushed by the U.S. government in its war against drugs in Peru, considered by many to be the birthplace of cocoa.
The U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID, introduced the high-yielding but acidic tasting CCN-51 cocoa hybrid to Peru in 2002 to offer farmers an alternative to planting coca - the key ingredient in cocaine.
The program has had some success but chocolate makers are encouraging farmers to instead cultivate smaller amounts of rare, native cocoa that fetches higher prices from buyers who value complex and subtle flavors and judge chocolate by the personality of its cocoa, like the nose of a fine wine.
~snip~
USAID says it has a foreign policy mandate to curb coca production by encouraging alternative cash crops, not to cater to gourmets. But it also says it may be open to commercializing native varieties in the future and it is sponsoring a contest to encourage farmers to cultivate more native cocoa.
Read more: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/04/25/us-peru-cocoa-idUKBRE83O19I20120425?rpc=401&feedType=RSS&feedName=lifestyleMolt&rpc=401
KamaAina
(78,249 posts)"The stuff tasted, as nearly as he could describe it, like the smoke of a rubbish fire."
msongs
(67,401 posts)Judi Lynn
(160,526 posts)They are WAY out of line.
AndyTiedye
(23,500 posts)mahatmakanejeeves
(57,425 posts)As Santorum would say, "What a snob!"