+ What do you mean by "unflavoured"?
Here it refers to plain dark, milk, and white chocolate, where all the flavour you experience comes only from the cocoa bean itself, and not from other flavours or ingredients added. For instance, red wine can have notes of cherry, without cherry being added. Oolong tea can have nutty notes, when it is simply just tea leaves and nothing else. These interesting flavour notes come from the grapes, the tea leaves, and the ways in which they were processed. In the same way, chocolate can contain an array of interesting flavour notes that come from the cocoa bean itself, and how it was processed and turned into chocolate.
The dark chocolate here contains only cocoa bean, sugar, and sometimes cocoa butter. Cocoa butter is optional, and is simply the fat pressed from the cocoa bean. The flavour here comes from the bean itself (similar to an espresso or black coffee).
Milk chocolate here contains cocoa bean, sugar, milk powder, and cocoa butter. The flavour here comes only from the bean as well as the milk (similar to an latte or flat white).
White chocolate here contains non-deodorized cocoa butter. That is, unflavoured white chocolate where all the aroma comes from the non-deodorized cocoa butter. Non-deodorized cocoa butter carries the natural flavour of the cocoa beans it was pressed from.
The bars on this page, both dark and milk, are a reflection of the diversity and variance in flavour of the various cacao from around the world. Each bar has its own unique distinct flavour true to the cocoa bean itself. Even chocolate bars of various makers using the same cocoa bean can vary as well due to the manufacuturing process such as roasting temperatures and refining/conching time.
If you see a dark chocolate bar here with berry or nutty notes, look at the ingredients list, and you will see no berries or nuts or flavourings were added. The flavour comes from the bean itself! That's fine chocolate.
+ Where do you ship?
Across Canada & USA, as well as many other countries worldwide (Australia, New Zealand, Europe, Middle East, Brazil, and more).
If you are unsure if I can ship to your country, please contact me to ask! I will be happy to look into it for you and let you know if I can ship to you.
Shipping rates are fair, as I absorb part of the shipping cost billed to me by the courier.
For more information on shipping and to learn how you can qualify for free shipping, click here.
+ Shipping In Heat
**Temperatures headed above 22 Celsius or 70 Fahrenheit is entering the risk zone for chocolate bloom or melt. **
I have had an extremely high success rate shipping bars to hot US States, Middle East, Australia, and Asia without product melt or bloom.
I pack orders with heat protection during summer months, or to hot destinations.
** It's always helpful for me if you let me know in the "notes" section during checkout if temperatures in your region are headed above 22 Celsius or 70 Fahrenheit where you are. It's also recommended you choose expedited shipping if you know temperatures are quite high.**
I often don't ship these orders out before the weekend (to avoid packaging sitting in hot warehouses over the weekend). I also may suggest to delay your package if need be during extreme hot weather conditions. As well, during very hot summers I only allow for expedited shipping (no standard) until temperatures drop.
+ Best Before Dates On Bars
Keep in mind best before dates you see on some images do not necessarily reflect bars in stock. Images of bars are not replaced with each new batch, therefore best before dates reflect when the image was taken.
If you need a list of Best Before Dates, check this list.
Also keep in mind that solid chocolate does not expire if stored properly. So if you purchased chocolate bars here that you took a while to get to, keep in mind they may be perfectly fine to eat!
Solid chocolate is a low-risk non-perishable food, and have best before dates, not expiry dates. There is a difference. Just like wine, if kept sealed and stored well, solid chocolate can be enjoyed well beyond the best before date. No need to throw away perfectly wonderful chocolate bars when past their best before dates. To learn more, check out this blog post here.