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Monday, December 26, 2005


Xocolatl - Mexican Chocolate
By
Roger X. Navas-Balladares


Xocolatl - Mexican Chocolate is a natural product made with sugar, cacao (chocolate), almonds and spices like cinnamon, clove and even chilies. It is this precise blend which gives Mexican Chocolate its exquisite flavor and aroma.

How to prepare your own delicious batch of Xocolatl - Mexican Hot Chocolate

-Ingredients-
12 ounces of Whole Milk
Xocolatl Table

Mexican Chocolate is prepared by heating milk right before boiling point. Once the milk has reached the desired temperature, mix in a chocolate tablet per 12 ounces of milk. I recommend you break each tablet into two or four pieces before adding it to the milk. Stir slow and constant with a wooden spatula or a traditional molinillo and serving it hot.

This beverage is mostly consumed during the cold weather months. It is traditionally served for breakfast or after dinner and it is usually accompanied by a piece of sweet pastry, in our case we recommend an Alfajores or to add a good-old American touch, try one of our Marshmallows.

Mexican Style Chocolate is the beverage of choice at many holiday celebrations including Christmas and New Years. During these holidays people prepare large pots full of hot chocolate which will serve as the perfect compliment to traditional dishes such as tamales and buñuelos. Try adding a pinch of chili powder for an alternative and wild experience. In Spain Hot Chocolate is slightly thicken with very fine corn meal or corn starch. This is great for making fresh made churros stand in your chocolate.

A very brief introduction into origin of chocolate:

Chocolate was first cultivated and used in Pre-Columbian Central America. It was perhaps the Mayas or the Olmecs who first made use of the cacao plant from which chocolate is derived. Archeological evidence and written texts have shown that the Mayas used the cacao beans as currency and food. The Aztecs inherited from the Mayas the knowledge of cultivation and usage of the cacao plant. For the Aztecs, cacao was a gift from the god Quetzalcoatl's, who at the time of being expelled from Paradise, promised his people that he would return.

When Hernán Cortés appeared on the shores of the Aztec Empire, they thought he was Quetzalcoatl's reincarnation, so they graciously welcomed him with a drink made from the cacao beans. This drink, which the Aztecs called Xocolatl, “Food of the Gods", was served to Cortés in cup made of gold. It is believed that the original Xocolatl was a bitter-sweet drink perhaps seasoned with honey, nuts, and chilies. Keep in mind that neither cow's milk nor sugar was available in pre-Columbian America.


The History of Chocolate is long and tragic, and for a long time it's importation and processing were a monopoly of the Spanish Crown. After having been the Kings' Official Drink and of the Court's in the New Spain and Europe, symbol of distinction and elegance, at the end of the XVIII Century, chocolate started being prepared with milk and sugar. It is not until the early years of the XIX Century when chocolate is manufactured in the shape of tablets, such as we know it today.


www.SplitBeanCoffee.com

Monday, December 19, 2005

Split Bean Coffee's Alfajores La Misión - Miami Herald

We are honored to have made the "What's in Store" column of The Miami Herald. Our Alfajores were reviewed by Maricel E. Presilla is chefco-owner of Cucharamama and Zafra in Hoboken, N.J. and Food writer for The Miami Herald.




What's in store


BY MARICEL PRESILLA


• SWEET: Alfajores -- crumbly, shortbread-like wafers filled with dulce de leche -- are the Oreo cookies of Argentina and Peru. You can order a delectable Peruvian-style version fresh from the ovens of California-based Split Bean Coffee Co. For $9.95 plus shipping, you get either 12 standard-size or 24 bite-size cookies. Chocolate-coated alfajores are also available, as is a $16.95 ''holiday fancy'' box. The ordering deadline for holiday shipment is Friday at www.splitbeancoffee.com or 818-448-5185. (Phone ahead for large orders.)

Thursday, December 08, 2005

Split Bean Coffee for Mister Impossible


Split Bean Coffee Gets a Thumbs-UP



from
The Daily Candy
This was another surprise! We got a call from Sarah Daniels of the Valley Social to congratulate us for our mention in The Daily Candy. This is great since, it had been a few months since I last spoke to the folks at the Daily Candy. I guess patience does pay off ! Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays to All!





Mister Impossible

When it’s present time, there’s no arguing that it truly is the thought that counts. But what to do when the very thought of wrapping another tie or pair of socks bores you to tears? Check our guy’s gift guide, that’s what.

For the Rock Starry-EyedA limited-edition Rocker watch by Nixon (made from goods donated by Ozzy, Slash, Anthony Kiedis, and Jeff Buckley), a reissued design tee from Worn Free, or a beat-up yet luxe leather BlackBerry case by David Winter (Milk, 8209 West 3rd Street, between Harper and La Jolla Avenues; 323-951-0330) will make him feel like he’s with the band.

For the Neo DandyTuck a gift certificate from newly opened men’s barber and body care stop Service Station into a Jack Spade dopp kit (Flight 001, 8235 West 3rd Street, at South Harper Avenue; 323-966-0001), and he’ll get the picture. Throw in a terry loop robe to send the well-groomed message home.

For the OutdoorsmanCater to his inner Boy Scout with a Coleman Mountain Lodge king-size sleeping bag, a handy Vortex travel blender, and Lomography’s souped-up Color Flash Holga (Fitzsu, 7970 Melrose Avenue, between Edinburgh and Hayworth Avenues, West Hollywood; 323-655-1908). So what if the presents were intended for the great outdoors? They’re all pretty great indoors, too.

For le Dude SportifIf he’s got athletic leanings and design-driven taste, cardigan sweatshirts at WE (144 South Robertson Boulevard, between Melrose and West 3rd Street; 310-385-9315), Ryan McGinness’s soccer ball, or white sneaks customized by Oliver at Kicks Sole Provider (3938 West Sunset Boulevard, at Sanborn Avenue, Silver Lake; 323-644-1272) should get his heart rate up. He might even break a sweat.

For the Ponderous PunditSatiate his studious side with the iPod-friendly Model One Tivoli desk radio in classic walnut (Alpha, 8625 Melrose Avenue, between Huntley Drive and San Vicente Boulevard, West Hollywood; 310-855-0775), a pound of dark roast coffee from local roasters Split Bean Coffee, and William Claxton’s gigantic new book, Jazzlife. After all, he really is as smart as he looks.

Want more inspiration? We’ve done Gift Guides for Guys in all our editions today. Start with Everywhere.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Split Bean Coffee Alfajores Featured in The Dallas-Fort Worth Star Telegram

Split Bean Coffee Alfajores
Featured in
The Dallas-Fort Worth Star Telegram

-- Reported by The New York Times, Patricia Rodriguez and Amy Culbertson
Dulce de leche alfajores. As soon as we tasted this cookie from Southern California's Split Bean Coffee, we bookmarked the http://www.splitbeancoffee.com/ Web site. Various regions of Latin America have their own styles of alfajores cookies; Split Bean honcho Roger Navas-Balladares makes his from a family recipe. Baked the day you place your order, each cookie is made of two impossibly buttery shortbread wafers sandwiching a rich but not-too-sweet caramel filling. They're $9.95 for a dozen (or 24 bite-sized); $16.95 in a holiday package of 12.
P.S.: Split Bean also sells some extraordinarily flavorful small-batch, roasted-to-order, fair-trade coffees. Order by Dec. 15.