Valrhona Ivoire White Chocolate Chips
Description
Valrhona ivoire is often voted the best white chocolate you can buy, including ‘the cream of the crop’ from American food website Serious Eats. Valrhona white chocolate couverture has everything you would look for in the perfect white chocolate. It has the rich mouthfeel, fresh milk flavours, hint of vanilla, floral aromas, light cocoa taste, and a gentle sweetness which leaves you wanting more – and all in perfect balance.
Valrhona ivoire contains a minimum of 35% cocoa butter which helps the chocolate melt and flow in baking, and gives the white chocolate its creamy taste. The individually moulded chocolate chips are easy to weigh out and very quick to melt with their trademark Valrhona feves or bean shape.
Ingredients: sugar, cocoa butter, emulsifier: soya lecithin, natural vanilla extract. May contain traces of nuts, egg proteins, gluten and peanut
Quick Comparison
Settings | Valrhona Ivoire White Chocolate Chips remove | Basque Piperade with Espelette Pepper remove | Eiffel Bon Bons Apple remove | Pommery Wholegrain Mustard - Moutarde de Meaux remove | Pommery Espelette Pepper Mustard remove | Basque Veal Axoa Stew with Espelette Pepper remove |
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Price | 36.19€ | 6.88€ | 3.60€ | 8.13€ | 6.88€ | 15.63€ |
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Content | Valrhona ivoire is often voted the best white chocolate you can buy, including 'the cream of the crop' from American food website Serious Eats. Valrhona white chocolate couverture has everything you would look for in the perfect white chocolate. It has the rich mouthfeel, fresh milk flavours, hint of vanilla, floral aromas, light cocoa taste, and a gentle sweetness which leaves you wanting more - and all in perfect balance. Valrhona ivoire contains a minimum of 35% cocoa butter which helps the chocolate melt and flow in baking, and gives the white chocolate its creamy taste. The individually moulded chocolate chips are easy to weigh out and very quick to melt with their trademark Valrhona feves or bean shape. Ingredients: sugar, cocoa butter, emulsifier: soya lecithin, natural vanilla extract. May contain traces of nuts, egg proteins, gluten and peanut | Basque piperade with espelette pepper is the authentic taste of Basque cuisine in a jar. It’s made with green peppers, tomatoes and onions to reflect the colours of the Basque flag. To enjoy the piperade in true Basque fashion, heat through and serve with pan fried Bayonne ham - but thick slices of any cured ham will do! It’s also popularly served with a beaten egg stirred through the piperade towards the end of cooking. Maison Arostéguy is a Basque institution. The Arostéguy family opened a unique grocery store in Biarritz in 1875, importing goods from all over the world. In the 1930s, their reputation for high-quality products even attracted famous musicians and actors. Photographs and keepsakes are still on display in the store today. As a family of spice grinders, they also created their own spice blends. Current owner, Pierre Arostéguy, travels the globe looking for inspiration and rare ingredients. He is also passionate about promoting his native Basque food culture. Pierre sums up Maison Arostéguy’s philosophy with the following phrase: ‘For us, no table is good without generosity, creativity & conviviality’. Ingredients: tomatoes (59%), peppers (16%), onions (14%), sugar, vegetable oils (sunflower, olive), salt, corn flour, garlic, thyme, pepper, espelette pepper PDO. | All the taste of France in a chewy fruit ball! Each of these sweet apple Bon Bon candies is like a night in Paris, but better! Fun fact: The Eiffel Tower was almost destroyed until it was given radio antennas in 1898!
| Pommery wholegrain mustard is known all over the world for being one of the finest wholegrain mustards ever made. Well-balanced with a rich, nutty flavour, this wholegrain mustard is the perfect partner for ham, beef and chicken. The recipe has remained unchanged since at least 1632. The world-renowned gourmand and epicure, Brillat-Savarin, dubbed Pommery wholegrain mustard as ‘the mustard of gourmets’. When it was first made, the mustard could even be found on the dining table at the French royal court! As well as serving as a condiment, try using the wholegrain mustard in a salad dressing. Or mix with mayonnaise and stir through new potatoes with pieces of crispy bacon. Garnish with parsley, and serve as a warm alternative to potato salad. Moutarde de Meaux are regarded as one of the world’s great moutardiers. Their award-winning Pommery mustards are a favourite of professional chefs. All of their mustards are packed in traditional stoneware jars. These jars help to preserve the mustards’ characteristic pungency, so they taste fresher for longer. Pommery mustard is made in Meaux, a cathedral town 60km west of Paris. The town has a long history of mustard production. It began in 771 AD, when Charlemagne decreed that canons and monks in cathedral towns like Meaux should cultivate mustard. Meaux was also a centre for the quarrying of millstones, which brought many craftsmen to the area. In 1760, a dignitary of the Meaux cathedral chapter passed on the canons’ secret mustard recipe to a stonecutter. The stonecutter was called J. B. Pommery, and the recipe is still used by Moutarde de Meaux to make their famous Pommery mustard today. How to Open This jar is stoppered with cork and sealed with wax in the traditional way. To open the jar, use the back of a knife to break the edges of the wax until only a circle is left in the middle. Use a stiff bristle brush to clear away any wax fragments so they don’t fall in the mustard when you open it. Carefully insert the blade of the knife under the seal and run the knife around to separate the wax from the rim of the jar. Then lever the cork stopper out. Ingredients: water, mustard seeds, vinegar, salt, spices. Contains allergens: mustard. | Pommery Espelette pepper mustard is a nutty wholegrain mustard with the distinctive hot flavour of Espelette pepper. Serve with any grilled meat at the table, or use to coat steaks or chicken breasts just before cooking. Espelette pepper is from the Basque region of France. It is the defining flavour of traditional Basque dishes like piperade fish stew, and also of Bayonne cured ham. It’s a mildly hot chilli pepper with a sweet-smoky flavour. Moutarde de Meaux are regarded as one of the world’s great moutardiers. Their award-winning Pommery mustards are a favourite of professional chefs. All of their mustards are packed in traditional stoneware jars. These jars help to preserve the mustards’ characteristic pungency, so they taste fresher for longer. Pommery mustard is made in Meaux, a cathedral town 60km west of Paris. The town has a long history of mustard production, spanning over one thousand years. It began in 771 AD, when Charlemagne decreed that canons and monks in cathedral towns like Meaux should cultivate mustard. Meaux was also a centre for the quarrying of millstones, which brought many craftsmen to the area. In 1760, a dignitary of the Meaux cathedral chapter passed on the canons’ secret mustard recipe to a stonecutter. The stonecutter was called J. B. Pommery, and the recipe is still used by Moutarde de Meaux to make their famous Pommery mustard today. Ingredients: water, mustard seeds, vinegar, salt, pimento from Espelette (3%), spices. Contains allergens: mustard. | Basque veal axoa stew with espelette pepper is an instant taste of classic Basque cuisine – just heat through! Veal axoa is a warming dish that was traditionally served at fairs and on market days. To serve the veal axoa, empty into a pan and heat through. Serve with rice or potatoes. Maison Arostéguy is a Basque institution. The Arostéguy family opened a unique grocery store in Biarritz in 1875, importing goods from all over the world. In the 1930s, their reputation for high-quality products even attracted famous musicians and actors. Photographs and keepsakes are still on display in the store today. As a family of spice grinders, they also created their own spice blends. Current owner, Pierre Arostéguy, travels the globe looking for inspiration and rare ingredients. He is also passionate about promoting his native Basque food culture. Pierre sums up Maison Arostéguy’s philosophy with the following phrase: ‘For us, no table is good without generosity, creativity & conviviality’. Ingredients: French origin veal meat (74%), peppers, onions, salt, vegetable oils (sunflower, olive), corn flour, garlic, espelette pepper PDO (0.08%), thyme. |
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