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Theo Chocolate
It’s all good
There’s
something very right about a business that improves the lives of
its suppliers while making products that taste so good. Even as a spark
in Jeff Fairhall’s mind, Theo was always about fair trade and organic
ingredients.
Photo: marketer Pam Hinkley and chocolatier Autumn Martin (right)
Fairhall was one of the founders of The Essential Baking Company and
had a yen to start a chocolate company. He found Joe Whinney in Boston,
a man with ties to organic cacao growers. Jeff sold his portion of the
baking company and saw his chocolate vision come true before he passed
away in the summer of 2007.
Whinney shaped Theo from his deep relationships with farmers and the
idea of being a chocolate maker versus making the end products
from someone else’s chocolate. He was the first importer of organic
cocoa beans into North America in 1994. Theo is the only roaster of
organic cocoa beans and the first roaster of Fair Trade certified cocoa
beans in the U.S. Joe’s mission has always been to help the farmers and
it is what fuels Theo’s every move.
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Theo Chocolate
3400 Phinney Ave. N.
Seattle, WA 98103
206 632.5100 phone
206 632.0413 fax
www.theochocolate.com

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In February 2005, the staff consisted of Joe, Debra Music (now the
vice president of marketing and sales), engineer Aaron Holzer and a
production manager. The next hire was chocolatier Autumn Martin. After
graduating from culinary school, she worked at Canlis as a pastry chef.
"While at Canlis, I discovered the depth of chocolate. I didn’t even
know it came from fruit. One of our purveyors brought in samples from
all over the world. I realized that working with chocolate as a creative
outlet could cover everything I cared about—social and environmental
responsibility, flavor artistry and art."
She left Canlis with a loose plan of traveling and studying, but
heard about Theo, interviewed and got the job. "Joe saw a similarity in
belief systems, passion and drive," she said. "He knew I’d have to go to
school and get training, but he took a chance on me."
Pam Hinkley, Chief Grand Ambassador (yes, really her title), laughs
at the "chance" Joe took. "At the Fancy Food Show in New York last
summer, Autumn took the gold medal for most outstanding chocolate. It
was a huge honor. Joe definitely made the right decision!"
Pam came to Theo in December 2005, prior to the actual start of
chocolate production in March 2006. Interestingly, Pam started the
Redhook store and tours in the very building Theo now occupies. After
leaving Redhook, she was in the process of starting her own company when
a mutual friend of hers and Joe’s introduced them. Pam was the perfect
ambassador for Theo. "I’d already spent 15 years in the building," she
laughs. "Plus I had the experience of starting up a store and tours."
Education is a huge part of her job. "We can only continue to help the
farmers if we sell more product and educate more people," she explains.
"We’re really just beginning the process of helping."
Their tours educate consumers about where beans come from and how
slave and child labor is often used in the production of cacao (not from
Theo suppliers). "We want to change how people look at commodities—cocoa
beans, flour, sugar—and help them realize that the way things get
changed is when we vote with our dollars," says Pam. Theo’s
chocolate-making process is expensive, but customers are willing to pay
more, even if it means eating less, to ensure that people and land
aren’t damaged in the process. "It’s about making choices," says Pam.
"We were lucky to start this company in Seattle. The food community is
sophisticated and supportive. People prioritize what they buy."

Theo is now working with local electric companies (Seattle City Light,
Puget Sound Energy, Tacoma Power) to encourage people to purchase
electricity from renewable sources (Green Up!). A chocolate bar and
two-for-one factory tour admission go out to everyone who signs up.
Theo’s factory is powered by electricity created by wind.
Like other products, cocoa beans reflect their terroir. Theo offers
two lines of chocolate bars—origin designated and 3400 Phinney. Both are
organic and fair trade certified. "People really taste the difference
when they do a side-by-side tasting," says Pam. Origin-designated bars
are made from cocoa beans and sugar, without vanilla. "You should
be able to taste the flavor of the nib—that’s as true as it can get,"
explains Autumn. When first used, cacao was a savory ingredient.
Europeans turned it into something sweet (we should probably thank
them). 3400 Phinney are milk or dark chocolate with innovative flavors
like coconut curry and fig/fennel/almond. Everything is made on site,
even down to Autumn’s own curry blend.
Beans
are seeds from the fruit of cacao trees. Farmers eat the fruit and toss
the seeds. Now the seeds are sent all over the world. Beans are tart
before fermentation and cleansed at the factory through use of air
and vibration. Outer shells are removed before roasting. "We sell the
shells for mulch," says Pam. After being broken into pieces, beans are
called nibs. Each batch of beans is different and roasters watch
carefully to determine when roasting is complete. Coarse nibs are ground
into a syrup and sugar or organic milk power is added and it becomes
coarse again. Rollers break it down and it goes into the conche where it
is circulated with oxygen and acidity is released. It is then tempered
and moved, 20 pounds at a time, from the tempering unit into molds and
cooled. Theo sold to 1,800 locations last year and hopes to double in
another year."
The
Fremont factory is a great destination. Along with daily tours, there
are monthly chocolate and wine pairings, truffle Fridays and seasonal
confections. "Nationally we’re known for our bars," says Autumn. "In
Seattle, it’s about the confection family." On Fridays, they also offer
pain au chocolate—a French baguette from Tall Grass Bakery in Ballard with
melted chocolate inside. Wedding and corporate gifts can be ordered and
chocolate classes are offered.
It’s good to know that by feeding your craving for high-end
chocolate, you’re actually helping farmers lead a better life, curbing
the use of inappropriate labor and helping land to be used in more
organic ways. In our own small way, we can help Theo continue to make a
difference.
Connie Adams/May 2008 |
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