Matters of Taste:  Chocolita Chocolate Café

Flag Live! January 16, 2025

Written by Gail G. Collins

Chocolate is chemistry. It is a product of cocao, forged by fire from its inherent ingredients. During roasting, the sugar and protein of fermented beans cause the Maillard reaction, which creates chocolate. Upwards of 800 chemical compounds are found in chocolate with the majority offering allegedly positive effects. And the darker the chocolate, the more compounds it contains.

So, chocolate is healthy … in degrees. There is caffeine and theobromine, also found in coffee, antioxidants, phenethylamine, an aphrodisiac, and more. This brings us to the go-to gift on Valentine’s Day—chocolate. Yes, there chemistry in love as well.

Read more: Matters of Taste:  Chocolita Chocolate Café

“Chocolate is one of the most chemically complex foods on the planet,” said Sarah Lesslie, owner of Chocolita Chocolate Café, located in Kachina Square Shopping Center. “It’s high in iron and magnesium, which relaxes the body, and PEA (phenethylamine), the bliss molecule, so you feel good when you eat it.”

The student of chocolate opened Chocolita on Valentine’s Day 2022. With a background in theater arts and herbalism wand a minor in sustainability, Lesslie wants to do a good thing as an opportunity for the Earth. “The business lent itself to this inherent love of environment.” She takes herbs daily to support her health, but they can be off-putting, so, “I created a chocolate I could eat every day and cover up the bitter flavors of the herbs. It was amazing and effective.” She began sharing her product with friends, which birthed Chocolita.

“Chocolate is a food, and that’s how I approach it,” explained Lesslie. “We don’t use the world ‘candy’ in our shop, which depends on the sweetness. I add superfoods to it <creating> a chocolate vitamin to take each day that is functional—to improve performance or mental acuity, like lion’s mane—in a delicious form.”

Lesslie believes we should be more connected to where our food comes from. “This is the genesis for the botanical chocolate line—to enjoy herbs and the taste as well.”

Products include Moontime Rose, blended smoothly with a bounty of angelica rose petals for female cycle support. Strawberry Passion is an aphrodisiac. Morning Matcha aids the brain.

There is sipping chocolate, and the season begs a warm cup. Ecuador Dark and Sweet, Exotic Mint, Ancho and Cayenne, Heartswell and more tease with a trademark mug for sale among the complementary goods. There are spreads in hazelnut chocolate, which is not oil based, nutty Jaguar Spread with a theobroma base and botanical perfumes on offer.

“It’s hard to make chocolate, and there are levels and science to it,” Lesslie said. “Melting and dipping is easy, but tempering is the challenging part—snap is an indicator of good temper—to create a shell and add a filling. The crystal and structure between the sugar and fat equates temper.”

Lesslie wears multiple toques. As a chocolate maker, she utilizes raw ingredients for couverture chocolate, which is ground to a finer texture and contains higher percentages of cocoa butter for enrobing truffles and bonbons. A chocolatier makes the truffles. Lesslie does both. Her display case contains such fantasies as the pyramid bee honeycomb, dragon heart with dragonfruit jelly, rose cardamom with sweet tahini, sleepy moon with turmeric and blueberry rose and mint magic with blue butterfly PEA powder and coconut mint. “They are vegan, plant-based, soy-free and botanically crafted.”

Chocolate is grown as varietals in regions, as with wine, with flavor profiles. Lesslie sources shade-grown cacao from understory trees, a complementary style of growing.

Now, consider the ceremonial aspects to sipping chocolate—to sit and set intentions—creativity, plans and putting words to an idea followed by steps of accountability. These rituals are practiced in hosted Sip Circles, which meet on the third Thursday each month. These informal gatherings share the magic of cocao and connection with a bonus discount on branded purchases. “I want to do what I can to make healthy food accessible.”

Chocolita supplies a wholesale market at upscale outlets, such as Lassens Natural Foods and Vitamins, Good Earth Markets in Utah and Island Naturals Market and Deli in Hawaii. This has fueled a second location on San Francisco Street.

Lesslie runs a strict certified organic kitchen—everything is catalogued and accounted for. Certified organic is expensive, full of paperwork and has a clear legal standard, but achieves reults.

Production is work, “but chocolate is interesting for me. It extends my artistic side,” she said and smiled. “Chocolate picked me. It was serendipity. I was fascinated to learn about it. It is nerdy and neat. Why does it work that way? My art and science worlds merged there. There is so much math in the kitchen.” There is such mystery and promise in the chocolate. FlagLIVE!

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