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Nocciolata

by Rigoni di Asiago
Info Details
Country Italy   
Type Flavored   
Strain Hybrid   
Source Ivory Coast   
Flavor Sugar   
Style Mainstream      
lo
med
hi
CQ
Sweetness
Acidity
Bitterness
Roast
Intensity
Complexity
Structure
Length
Impact
Dolce far niente (Italian for 'sweet doing nothing')
Appearance   4.2 / 5
Color: pudding brown
Surface: runny
Temper: ripples & wavelets
Snap: n/a
Aroma   7.7 / 10
fairly true to its constituents except for a grape pop at the back
Mouthfeel   12 / 15
Texture: lubricious
Melt: pre-melt
Flavor   32.2 / 50
gianduia slides in on a wafer note + cavity-inducing sugar to rattle the enamel
Quality   10.6 / 20
Hey, some wonder, what the hell the C-spot® covering spreads. Because high cacáo-content Dark Chocolate, once the gold standard of purists, now shares the spotlight with nutella in receiving ribbons & trophies. Sure the stuff belongs on pizza dough or in some suntan lotion &/or sunscreen. But commercial prostitution can be so profitable.

Add to that an object lesson in how modern life continues to confuse evermore. Palm oil, once hailed as a spear tip to sustainability, now fallen in disfavor as Rigoni di Asiago proudly boasts 'No Palm Oil' on the label (click image upper right). Which puts it right up there with agave & "raw" chocolate. Presumably palm "nectar" (aka coconut sugar) will be next.

As per the experience of this Nocciolate: it thins out pretty quickly due to insubstantial chocolate & a sugar load to freeze the flavor into extreme sweetness. Rigoni needs to reformulate. Then again, this kind of staple fetches accolades & acolytes.

INGREDIENTS: sugar, hazelnut paste, sunflower oil, skim milk powder, cocoa powder, cocoa butter, sunflower lecithin, vanilla extract

Reviewed October 7, 2015

  

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