Snickers, Milky Way, Mars bars. Lovely confections, all. But are they fine chocolates? Not at all - passable chocolate is just a component of the overall confection, and not even the dominant flavor in most. Still, those flavors, that taste, that confectionary concept, has made the Mars Company very large, very successful, and the Mars Brothers extremely rich.
Ethel's Chocolate Lounge is a new concept from Mars - a chain of fine chocolate shops with seating and cafe-type service, offering beverages, including hot chocolate (dark, milk, or blended) as well as chocolate fondue and tasting platters of their chocolates. For $15 one gets two hot chocolates, and a platter of 10 chocolates of your choice, as well as a sprinkling of white, dark and milk chocolate chips. It is enough chocolate. The room is fun, a sort of pink Eloise fantasy, and the web site gives you a good feel for the style if the place, if, strangely, no on line menu:
http://www.ethelschocolate.com/
They have 10 locations, all around Chicago, so there is probably one near you, and I imagine the plan is to roll it out nationally once they prove/improve the concept.
So the Bride and I had to go. I was excited. While I am neither a chocolate gourmet, nor a fanatic, I enjoy the rich complexity of fine chocolate, the mouth feel, the entire sensual experience. A few years ago in Treviso I ordered a hot chocolate for some reason; I suppose I wanted something warm and had already had enough expresso, and out came a molten cup of chocolate with some cream on the side to mix in as one wanted. Sinful, overwhelming and totally memorable. Three members of my family attacked it together and were unable to finish this 8 ounce confection, but it was wonderful.
I was hoping to relive that memory at Ethel's. If I had understood that it was a Mars operation before I arrived, perhaps I could have recalibrated my expectations to a Snickers rather than a Caillebaut experience.
In short, the chocolate was disappointing, almost across the board. To my palate, all the flavored chocolates were unbalanced, with the flavors dominating the chocolate. A great chocolate should be dominated by the flavor of the chocolate, with the flavoring providing a counterpoint which accents the chocolate, or at worst is coequal with the chocolate. Not so with Ethel's - flavorings were added with a hamfisted force that would have done Paul Prudhomme proud - Earl Grey Truffles tasted of fine quality bergamot, with a taste of chocolate somewhere in the back if one took the time to discern it. An Etheltini chocolate was fun, clearly a Martini in flavor; a Key Lime chocolate was beautifully painted and chock full of a creamy, coconutty and slightly limey filling, and surrounded with some chocolate, I believe.
The hot chocolate was loaded with whipped cream and sugar, and clearly had some chocolate in it. But, most telling, the Bride had the milk chocolate, and I had the dark chocolate, and it was really difficult to tell the difference.
To be fair, a dark chocolate truffle was pretty tasty, and bursting with chocolate. And we took home a bag of chocolate toffees that are very good, if pricey at close to $40 a pound. But even the chocolate chips seemed more emulsifier and less cocoa butter than they should have been.
Ethel's seems to come from the same parentage as Mars' fine chocolate enterprise, Ethel M's which has been posted on here:
http://www.lthforum.com/bb/viewtopic.php?p=22017#22017.
Perhaps if my expectations had been different, or the prices a bit more reasonable, I would have enjoyed the experience more. But I was expecting a temple of chocolate, where I was going to enjoy a mini-chocolate bacchanalia, and instead I got something more akin to a vist to Hershey, Pa., which is fine in its place.
Are they right - does America love chocolate so long as it is not too chocolatey? Given Mars success at targeting America's sweet tooth, it would not surprise me. But I have no need to go back. There are much better chocolate stores, that also are less expensive, around here, and I can buy good chocolate and cocoa to make wonderful hot chocolate at home, reproducing that Treviso experience when the mood hits me.
d
Feeling (south) loopy