**The Water Connoisseur

The Water Connoisseur

Navigate the World of Bottled Water
 
Home  / Newsletter  / February 2005 / 
Google Search for Bottled Water

Like water for Chocolate on your Valentine’s Day

 

by Michael Mascha

In Mexico hot chocolate is made with water, not milk. Water is brought to a boil and chocolate is added to the hot water. A person in a state of sexual excitement is said to be "like water for chocolate”.

Water is usually not the beverage that comes to mind when we talk about chocolate but “can water be the right beverage for your Valentine’s Day chocolate?”

Chocolate is known to have healthy effects because of the high content of antioxidants, minerals and vitamins. Cocoa has also a high food value, containing as much as 20 percent protein, 40 percent carbohydrate, and 40 percent fat.

The Aztecs and Mayans were the first to recognize the potency of chocolate. Montezuma, reportedly drank 50 cups of chocolate each day to better serve his harem of 500 women. Seventeenth-century church officials deemed it sinful to partake of chocolate.  Chocolate contains among other things PEA, or phenylethylamine. This is the very same molecule that courses through the veins of one who is in love. Combine our internal stores of this natural amphetamine with chocolate, and one only heightens a sensation called love.

So, during this season of love, what is the right water to drink with chocolate and chocolate deserts?

On the other side of food pairing, conventional wisdom has it that big, bold red wines are the perfect match for chocolate and chocolate desserts.   According to Chris Meeske, former sommelier and wine director for the Patina Group, this thinking is “totally wrong.” Meeske points out that “while there are very few rules for matching wine with food, wine should always be sweeter than the food”.

Chris is on a mission to educate consumers with his new “Mission Wines” Store and he explains that “the texture of the chocolate coats the mouth and leaves dry red wines tasting metallic”. The main reason people think that red wine matches with chocolate is due to the conventional progression of wines through dinner. Usually light white wines are served with appetizers, and the wines progress to bigger reds as the courses continue. By the time desert is served, big red wines are called for and matched with the chocolate.

So, at FineWaters, we decided to apply this thinking to pairing chocolate with fine, bottled water.  

We sampled dark chocolate which usually has a large content of cocoa (40-85%) and started with a soft almost sweet still water and progressed through the FineWaters Balance™ with Effervescent, Light Classic and Bold designated waters. We concluded that a still water is not the optimal match for chocolate.

A sparkling water with the FineWaters Balance of Light or Effervescent is a much better choice as the light bubbles of the sparking water cut through the chocolate without disturbing the sensation. Those waters are surprisingly delightful with the chocolate and our choice for matching water with chocolate and chocolate desserts.

Waters with a FineWaters Balance of Classic or Bold create too much of a distraction to be considered good matches. Nevertheless, we noticed that waters with a FineWaters Balance™ of Classic match very well with chocolate that contains nuts, as the water creates a nice dialogue with the crunchy mouthfeel of the chocolate.

We also sampled white chocolate, which is usually made with cocoa butter, sugar, milk powder and vanilla, with no cocoa. Certainly we would agree that white chocolate is not actual chocolate due to the absence of cocoa. Nevertheless, the same rules for matching white chocolate and water do seem to apply.

Treat your Valentine and yourself to a tasting. Take a box of chocolate, make yourself comfortable on the couch and explore the subtle differences the right water can make in enjoying an ancient drug. Happy Valentine’s Day!

Resources:

Dark Chocolate
Dark chocolate is an acquired taste, but it serves as an exquisite cap to an elegant meal or the center piece of a tasting. As your palate will matures and comes to appreciate dark chocolate, you will soon realize that it is full of subtle distinctions similar to wine. Like grapes, cocoa is an agricultural product that expresses terroir.

 
» email this article email a friend





Navigate the World of Bottled Water The Water Connoisseur
FineWaters Newsletter. Subscribe. It's free!

Order Now
Fine Waters
A Connoisseur's Guide to the World's Most Distinctive Bottled Waters
By Michael Mascha

 

Add a FineWaters Search Button to your Google Toolbar

Water Resources
Bottled water Rules and Regulations, FAQ, Resources and links.
Matching Bottled Water With Food
The FineWaters Balance categorizes the "mouthfeel" of water based on the level of carbonization in five steps from Still to Effervescent, Light, Classic and Bold. This categorization is the basis of matching water with food in a fine dinig experience.
The Water Glass
When one orders water in a fine dining restaurant it becomes rapidly clear that water is, in most cases, an afterthought. We have been served water in all possible contraptions from heavy whiskey tumblers to long highball glasses and the dreaded lemonade glass. A wide variety of wine glasses are also often used as water glasses. This is not appropriate.
The Flavor of Bottled Water
When tasting water the most important factor in its overall integrated sensation we call flavor is the mouthfeel generated by the size, amount and distribution of the bubbles or the absence of it.
http://www.finewaters.com/rss/finewaters.xml
Bottled Water RSS News Feed
(0.91)




Bottled Water of the World