Askinosie Chocolate is a small batch, bean-to-bar chocolate manufacturer based in Springfield, Missouri.
Industry | Bean to Bar Chocolate |
---|---|
Founded | May 2007 |
Founder | Shawn Askinosie |
Products | Single Origin Chocolate |
Website | askinosie |
History
editShawn Askinosie, founder and chocolate maker at Askinosie Chocolate, spent nearly 20 years as a criminal defense attorney before he started making chocolate. In 2007 he sold his first chocolate bar and Askinosie Chocolate began.[1]
Corporate affairs
editAskinosie practices direct trade, which insures lasting relationships with the cocoa farmer co-ops and encourages the highest possible quality. Profit sharing, above fair trade pricing and open accounting have been fixtures of the business since its inception. [2] This is largely accredited to Jack Stack's 2002 book A Stake in the Outcome which proposes "a company with a strong culture of ownership" in order to foster participation and increase personnel efficiency.[3]
Products
editAskinosie Chocolate bars are made from 100% traceable, single-origin cocoa beans from four regions: San Jose Del Tambo, Ecuador: Zamora, Ecuador; Davao, Philippines; and Mababu, Tanzania.[4] Though specializing in dark chocolate bars, their product line includes dark milk chocolate, white chocolate made from scratch, all natural cocoa powder, roasted cocoa nibs and chocolate hazelnut spread. Their new CollaBARation line has various craft, artisan food manufacturers’ products in their dark chocolate bars.
Sustainable Nutrition Programs
editDuring one of Shawn’s bean sourcing trips in Davao, Philippines, he learned of a nutrition problem at the village’s Malagos Elementary School, where many of the students suffer from malnutrition. In an effort to meet this need, Askinosie Chocolate began a sustainable nutrition program by selling Tableya, a traditional Filipino hot chocolate beverage made of roasted cocoa beans that are milled into tablets. The PTA of Malagos Elementary produced Tableya and shipped them to Springfield, MO in the same container the cocoa beans were shipped. 100% of the sales from Tableya went to provide meals for the students at Malagos. Each package provides 232 meals, which will be purchased from disaster relief organization, Convoy of Hope, and prepared by the school’s PTA.[5]
See also
editNotes and references
edit- ^ Berneking, Ettie. "How Shawn Askinosie Is Making Springfield's Askinosie Chocolate a National Player". Feast Magazine. Feast. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- ^ Adams, Susan. "Second Acts: Why Shawn Askinosie Dumped His Law Practice To Make Chocolate". Forbes Magazine. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- ^ The Great Game Team. "A Stake in the Outcome: How a Chocolatier Brought his Cocoa Farmers into the Game". The Great Game of Business. The Great Game.com.
- ^ Stone, Brad (March 27, 2009). "Forging a Hot Link to the Farmer Who Grows the Food.". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-08-11.
- ^ Turnage, Neal (June 6, 2009).Of the Philippines and Cocoa Beans Four Seasons Magazine. Retrieved 2009-11-2.
External links
edit- Askinosie Chocolate Homepage.
- Silva, Jill Wendholt (February 12, 2008). Kansas City Star. "Passing the bar: Former criminal defense lawyer turns artisan chocolate maker" Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2009-8-11.