Ecuador Holidays the foodie traveller
Stay on the Ecuador farm that produces the world’s most expensive chocolate
Sleep like a log … treehouse at Finca Sarita, a remote farm in Ecuador. Photograph: Ada Kase
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f you think the controversial Mast Brothers chocolate is pricey at £19 for a 200g bar, then you haven’t come across To’ak chocolate. Touted as the world’s most expensive chocolate, one 50g bar of To’ak comes packaged in an elm wood box, in which you’ll find a pair of wooden tongs – so that you
can taste the delicacy without tainting it with oil from your fingers – and a 116-page booklet explaining the origin and pedigree of the beans. It costs $260 and is claimed to be a luxury on a par with a fine wine or whisky – an experience to be savoured and shared. If that’s not exclusive enough, there’s the Vintage 2014 range (only 100 bars are produced) for $315 or $345. To’ak, which roughly translates as terroir in ancient dialects of Ecuador, comes from Finca Sarita, a remote farm in Ecuador where you can also experience the flavours of the rainforest – by staying there for just US$15 a night, including breakfast, dinner and, if you’re lucky, a bite of the exclusive chocolate. The cacao tree is just one of dozens of species growing on the organic permaculture farm where Servio Pachard Vera lives with his four children, just a short drive outside the city of Calceta in Manabí province, around 50km from the Pacific coast. When my partner
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