asakiyume: (shaft of light)
Apparently I never shared these pictures here! But what better day than Valentine's Day, when people give chocolate to one another.

As you no doubt know, a lot of chocolate is produced using cacao that's obtained and grown in ways that are exploitative and bad for the environment. What I saw, though, was small family production--probably just for local consumption.

Like coffee, cacao *can* be a very beneficial crop to cultivate because it can grow in the shade of larger trees. It can be a forest-preserving crop. (Of course that's not what Big Chocolate encourages.)

Here is a small cacao tree with some cacao pods on it.



If you cut open one of those pods, this is what you see. The milky fruit is **delicious** (and tastes nothing like chocolate. It's full of flavor and reminds me slightly of a mangosteen.) What makes us chocolate are the pips--the beans--in the center of the fruits. Each pod has a bunch of these, as you can tell from how the fruit is packed in there.




Here are pips, drying in the sun. Apparently the recommended process is to ferment the beans and fruit together and then to dry them. So these have probably been fermented. (Obviously if you do that, you don't get to enjoy the fruit!) Some farmers, though, just dry the pips without fermenting them first. According to the article I read, that results in the pips being "overly bitter and astringent." But if you're growing just for your own purposes, you can do as you please. So maybe these pips haven't been fermented.



I had no chocolate when I was there, but my tutor often has chocolate con pan for her breakfast, by which she means hot chocolate: cocoa powder added to boiling water, with then as much milk powder and sugar added as you like. I've tried preparing it that way: it's nice!
asakiyume: (cloud snow)
I saw dreadlock, deadlock, and deadname in quick succession and started thinking about not hair or tangled traffic or trans rights, but about a dreadful lock, a lock that dies--is executed even. A dead lock. And I thought, how do you kill a lock?

Answer:

The key was turned
The bolt slid into place a final time
Then liquid copper was poured into the hole
--the whole plate melted, a metal smear—

Then prayers, candles, incense
No more will people pass through here

--- * * --------- * * ------------ * *


[personal profile] osprey_archer posted a very fun, very short Valentine's extra for her novel Honeytrap, readily understandable even if you haven't read the novel. All you need to know is it's set in the 1950s, and the characters are a Soviet agent and an American agent who are working together (for reasons). It's a discussion of the capitalist nature of Valentine's Day as celebrated in the America. (Read it here!) And then, coincidentally, a friend linked me to this TikTok video where a woman talks about how capitalist Valentine's Day is, and then provides links to her free anticapitalist you-can-use-them-for-Valentine's-or-any-day cards. I liked "Workers are Billionaire Creators" best.

~ -------------- ~ ---------------------

I love this art, located in London, by Colombian street artist Stinkfish:



Detail:



(Source: Hooked: Street Art from London and beyond)

+ ------------ + ------------ + ----------------

I'm doing some pro bono work for a friend of one of my kids, who's written about the Titanic. I reached a passage where it talks about the SS Californian, which was very close but didn't render assistance, and he describes how it seemed to the Californian that this ship--they didn't know what ship it was--that they had noticed was moving away from them, getting smaller, when really what was happening was it was sinking. It made me think of that famous poem by Stevie Smith, "Not Waving but Drowning.

* --------- * --------------* ------------------*

Well that would be a bad note to end on! So some light humor. Someone used Google translate to translate a packet of Chinese rice crackers and got this:


(Twitter source)

One of my kids retweeted it with "tag yourself"

So go ahead: Who are you?

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