What’s New?
Using my new dragon bowl for fruit, for candy, and for leeks vinaigrette. |
Using a new set of little bowls for tomatoes, artichokes, mushrooms, and grated cheese— to go on pasta. They were perfectly designed for this use: mis en place. |
Cooking in April
Preparation for making stir-fried pork. |
Salad and roasted peppers. |
My kitchen this month has been busy, as we have had a few invited guests to share meals. I’ve just selected a few of the foods that Len and I cooked or prepared. I’ve posted already about our Passover food, our first outdoor cooking, and some of the things we ate elsewhere. I’m sharing these food images with a group of bloggers who post kitchen thought each month at Sherry’s blog in her link-up called “In My Kitchen.” Now for some thoughts about the possible fate of one of my favorite foods!
Climate Change Is Coming for the Chocolate Supply
Climate change and its effect on farming is often in the news, but reading about it seems very distant and maybe not even urgent. If you love chocolate as much as I do, you’ll see one issue as more pressing; specifically, rising chocolate prices due to supply disruption. Ultimately, the problems with the global chocolate supply are caused by poor growing conditions in the tropical areas where cocoa is produced. Recently, these areas have had bad weather — temperatures are high or rainfall is too little or too much, leading to stressed or diseased trees, lower harvests, higher prices, and instability of processors.
Many factors prevent the logical response; that is, the expansion of cocoa farms. The main obstacle is that it takes years to grow new productive trees. Expansion is limited because chocolate can grow only in a narrow area within 20 degrees of the Equator.
According to the trade association World Wide Chocolate (article here), many people “have no idea how difficult cocoa ‘the commodity’ is to grow, procure, process and ultimately apply to different applications and create all of those wonderful chocolate products we’ve come to love.” This article uses two West African countries and their difficulties as examples — the challenges to poor third-world farmers are much more profound than one would guess, and rising prices don’t generally mean that the impoverished farm workers receive more for their labor. As an article in yesterday’s Guardian explains: “Nine in 10 west African growers are smallholders, while the confectionery market is dominated by huge players: Oxfam notes that Lindt, Mondelēz, and Nestlé raked in nearly $4bn in profits from chocolate sales last year, while Hershey’s confectionery profits totalled $2bn.” (link)
But the problems of growers and injustices to workers are just one area of many. More detail about the many difficulties of farmers and processors in Africa appeared in an article in Reuters in March titled “African cocoa plants run out of beans as global chocolate crisis deepens” (link). It’s complicated, involving pre-set prices from farmers who are experiencing very poor harvests. Opportunistic dealers step in and disrupt the expected supplies to the local processing plants:
“In normal times, the market is heavily regulated - traders and processors purchase beans from local dealers up to a year in advance at pre-agreed prices. Local regulators then set lower farmgate prices that farmers can charge for beans. However, in times of shortage like this year, the system breaks down - local dealers often pay farmers a premium to the farmgate price to secure beans. The dealers then sell the beans on the spot market at higher prices instead of delivering them at pre-agreed prices. As global traders rush to purchase those beans at any price to meet their obligations with the chocolate firms, local processors are often left short of beans.”
Chocolate candy production requires more than just cocoa. The Wells Fargo Investment service (article here) summarizes the situation: “To some extent, chocolate’s escalating cost can be understood by looking at the overall rise in product manufacturing costs, with the Producer Price Index (PPI) for Food Manufacturing increasing 28% since January 2020. This rising inflationary environment has increased the cost of labor, processing, manufacturing, packaging, and transportation. Higher raw material costs for two of chocolate’s crucial ingredients - sugar and cocoa - are also included in this overall cost increase.”
In an article in this month’s Atlantic, titled “Chocolate Might Never Be the Same,” author Yasmin Tayag wrote:
“By one estimate, retail prices for chocolate rose by 10 percent just last year. And now this is the third year in a row of poor cocoa harvests in West Africa, where most of the world’s cocoa is grown. Late last month, amid fears of a worsening shortage, cocoa prices soared past $10,000 per metric ton, up from about $4000 in January. To shoulder the costs, chocolate companies are gearing up to further hike the price of their treats in the coming months. Prices might not fall back down from there. Chocolate as we know it may never be the same.”
This week’s Guardian article cites even more increase in prices: “Soaring prices for cocoa beans recently hit a record $12,000 a tonne: roughly four times last year’s price. Many think they will go higher.” Issues of sustainability and fairness to workers are not easy to address. For an extremely detailed study of these issues related to global chocolate production and processing, see the recent report from Oxfam (link).
Chocolate candy seems to me to embody a whole range of cultural and economic concerns for our time. Exploitation of third-world agricultural and processing workers, including child labor abuses and even slave labor are of great concern. Chocolate plantations, which must be in the tropics, are especially affected by climate change. All chocolate is a highly processed food and an economic commodity handled by huge corporations. Consumers of luxury goods such as high-end chocolate candy provide a giant contrast with the extreme poverty of the producers.
So many issues! As I thought about this, it occurred to me that the expression “first-world problems” is a good description for people who are inconvenienced by high candy prices — in contrast to impoverished and exploited third-world farmers and their children who are paid a pittance for the produce for which they labor.
I’ve written about this before, including a post earlier this week. For my post on chocolate cultivation issues see “Cocoa: Who cultivates it? Who processes it? Where does it come from?” and “Chocolate: Food of the Gods.” For more history see “Sacred Gifts, Profane Pleasures.”
In 2021, this bag of Hershey Nuggets cost $8.98. It now costs typically $12.58 (though a terrific sale price has been in effect). I’ve been buying this and other chocolates quite often. |
Blog post and photos © 2024 mae sander.
Shared with Sherry’s In My Kitchen.
20 comments:
not only chocolates but decreasing of food production is everywhere include in the UK recently...unfortunately.
Thank you for sharing interesting posting.
I love your dragon bowl and those cut little bowls too. You certainly are well in April. And thanks for more about chocolate. Let's hope it doesn't disappear and get so expensive most people can't afford it since it is a bit of decadence in life if you like it. hugs-Erika
Your dragon bowl and mise en place bowls are beautiful. Thank you for the article on chocolate. I had no idea. Happy T Day
I will pay what I need to in order to have chocolate. How fortunate I am to be able to say that!
I love that dragon bowl (and your mini bowls) - and the information about chocolate production is thought provoking indeed. https://brookfordkitchendiaries.wordpress.com/2024/05/01/the-kitchen-diary-april/
oh that dragon bowl is gorgeous. and i love the measuring cups too. Chocolate is an amazing thing! I have wondered who ever thought of doing all the processes that end up as chocolate. I mean it's not something that would just happen by accident like soap etc... Yes it may become an extreme luxury soon. thanks for joining in this month.
So many lovely dishes (content and containers!).
Thanks for all your input on chocolate. "chocolate can grow only in a narrow area within 20 degrees of the Equator.": I actually didn't even know that. I'll be reading your other chocolate related posts. I personally eat very little, but still I am interested
Lovely dragon bowl. Would go well in my kitchen!
I knew the situation was bad for both the impoverished farmers and the climate, but I was appalled by the price gouging and the amount of profits the chocolate companies made last year. When we buy those bars of chocolate, we don't think about how labor intensive the process is in order to get the chocolate to us and how little funds the farmers actually make in the process. Thanks for this wonderful and informative entry you gave us, dear Mae.
Hello Mae,
I love your cute bowls, the food all looks delicious.
I have been noticing the price of chocolate going up, I still buy some.
Take care, enjoy your day!
I have friends from Equador, who's family have a cacao plantation. So I am aware of the situation. For us chocolate addicts, I think we would still continue to buy our favorite chocolate, but children's snack bars would be priced out of their price range.
Your dragon bowl is lovely and your food always looks really yummy.
Happy T-Day,
Lisca
You make some lovely food! The price for chocolate, and many other things has soared in the past couple of months. Valerie
Ooh! I value chocolate more than coffee.
Thank you for highlighting the cocoa growers issues, and the onward motion to the cost of chocolate in stores. I wish people would be more aware of how things are grown, and who gets paid what. And then use that to influence their buying. Your dragon bowl is really pretty :)
That dragon bowl is fabulous. All of your food looks like a chef prepared it. I love the read on the chocolate too. Thank you.
Thanks for writing about the cocoa farmers, I found it a very interesting read! In your kitchen, I just adore those blue dragon bowls. We are on the hunt for some new bowls soon (I've been putting it off for close to a year since I moved to Paris). Have a great month!
dreams of sourdough at http://ayearindarwin.blogspot.com
Note: The composite photo shows four different views of my one dragon bowl, holding different foods. But I’m becoming convinced that I should buy one or two more of them! I bought it at the local Art Museum Shop.
mae
Yum: stir fry!
Your new crockery is gorgeous - I think it would be wise to buy more dragon bowls. And love the food photos too - the chilli looks lovely in that blue bowl.
As always I come away from your blog with a lot of food for thought. I love chocolate and am so sad to read about all the challenges and inequity with production. It would be interesting to know how much difference the fair trade chocolate makes to the cocoa farmers. I am also wondering if there is a future for lab grown cocoa beans if climate change continues to make it harder to grow them.
A very informative essay on the problems facing the chocolate industry. In Australia we are very aware of it, and my daughter is currently sending 6 blocks of Cadbury chocolate, to a close friend in the United States to cheer her up, because she loves Cadbury but can't buy it where she lives. Lovely dragon bowl too. Best, Pauline
@Happy Retirees Kitchen
Thank you Mae, I had no idea. Your food looks delightful but I am in love with all your beautiful bowls, especially the dragon one.
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