The Mind of TCHO

Discover Your Chocolate!|My Account|Login

 

Person, Place or Thing (Utah)

How happy I was to get off the plane and find myself somewhere warm (it’s about 63 degrees in SF right now). It was 1 A.M. and I was in Salt Lake City, Utah. I was in town for the Chandler family reunion (my grandmother’s side) and I hadn’t been to any of the reunions for about 10 years. This year it was going to be held in the small town of Huntsville, about an hour and a half north of SLC and over the Wasatch Range.



This is about one quarter of my family on my Mom’s side (the Garbett’s). My Mom, Beau, to my right.


My cousin David, me, and my Aunt Ann.

The competiton was stiff in the “ sweet- things-in-a-pan “ category. My Aunt Jan clearly had a winning recipe for something chocolatey AND peanut buttery:

Peanut Butter Fingers


Makes one large cookie sheet

Preheat oven to 350 degrees

Cookie
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup brown sugar, packed
2/3 cup peanut butter
2 cups rolled oats
2 cups flour
2 eggs
1 cup sugar
1 tea. salt
1 tea. baking soda

Cream butter, peanut butter and sugars together. Add eggs, salt, baking soda, and beat until fluffy. Mix in flour and oats.  Spread over large greased cookie sheet (I use the butter wrapper to grease the cookie sheet).

Bake in 350 degree oven for 15 min. until golden brown.

Frosting
chocolate chips (or TCHO chocolate)
3 TB. butter
1 tea vanilla
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 cup powdered sugar
1/4 cup milk/or less to spreading consistency

Immediately after removing the cookie from the oven, sprinkle chocolate chips (or chopped up TCHO chocolate) on top to your liking.

Cream together butter, vanilla, and peanut butter. Add powdered sugar and enough milk for easy spreading consistency.Then spread frosting on top of the warm chocolate chips to marble.

Let cool before cutting into squares.


My cousin Sam enjoying his mom’s tasty treat.


My Uncle Bryson (I’m linking to him just to embarrass him) and Aunt Ann.


Pineview Resevoir



It was really great to meet relatives I’d never met before. Collin Chandler’s family in Ogden, UT, fed us delicious things from the grill and their garden.


  • By Emi Takahara
  • on 2008-07-30
  •  
 

Eat Dessert First


While in New York for the Fancy Food Show (more on that soon), I met up with some friends at Pastry Art and Design Magazine. Waiting to head out for lunch, I flipped through their latest issue - a feature article caught my attention…it talked of a new phenomenon trolling the streets of New York: Dessert Trucks. A new, updated take on an old favorite: the ice cream truck.  Instead of Good Humor, these new fangled “sweetmobiles” were said to offer up gourmet desserts the likes of crème brûlée, goat cheese cheesecake and coconut tapioca. I had to learn, and taste, more.

Later that night, in the name of research, I struck out in search of one of these mysterious vehicles that promised to relieve my aching sweet tooth. At St. Mark’s place, I found one - the Dessert Truck. There it was… parked and ready to serve up a little something sweet. 11PM, standing on a New York City corner, serenaded by the din of traffic, illuminated by streetlights and traffic signals, I indulged in a small dish of warm chocolate bread pudding. Heaven.

The very next week - back home in theBay Area - I saw this headline in the New York Times: “Save Room for the Truck.” Now the secret is really out. Hopefully it means dessert trucks (maybe even TCHO chocolate trucks…?!) are coming soon to a street corner near you.


  • By Rob Kopf
  • on 2008-07-29
  •  
 

Person, Place or Thing (Chicago)

This is for Miriam. She’s tall, occasionally from Marin, and crazy for an interesting drink.

While Samantha and I were staying in Chicago, we were introduced to the “Blue Moon” cocktail by my friends Jo and John. Delicious...and goes perfect with a rooftop garden.


Samantha and the Blue Moon.


Blue Moon Cocktail

(makes one cocktail)
2 oz gin
1/2 oz fresh lemon juice (strained)
1/2 oz Creme de Violette
ice

Combine all ingredients in a cocktail shaker. Shake and strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with a twist of lemon and some blueberries.


On Jo and John’s rooftop.


How we spent the rest of our time in Chicago.


  • By Emi Takahara
  • on 2008-07-29
  •  
 

Bees


I worry about bees. If you haven’t heard about it, Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) is happening all over. Bees are just leaving their hives. There are plenty of guesses as to the bees’ motivation, but no one really knows why it’s happening so much lately.

There are almost no feral hives left.

But we have one in my backyard. What is now my dad’s office (nicknamed “The Cottage”) used to be a garage. There’s a steep, winding path that connects it to my house. Leaning over almost the whole backyard (and possibly tall enough to hit my room were it ever to topple) is a Monterey Cypress tree. And in the tree is a hive.

It appeared about ten years ago, when my brother and I were in elementary school. The bees never really hung out around our house, and didn’t bother us.

The first time I felt true compassion for the bees was when our neighbor across the street from the Cottage asked us to get rid of them. We asked her why. “Because someone might be allergic,” she told us. We asked her if she was. She said no. We kept the bees.

When I started hearing more about CCD recently, I felt warm affection for our bees rising in me again. (Like the opposite of bile. Honey?) This affection is not entirely free of self-interest. Honeybees are not native to North America, so no native plants rely on pollination for food-production.  However, many of the food crops we eat today are non-native, and would be devastated if the bees all disappeared.

No more almonds, peaches, soybeans, cucumbers, apples, or pears (to name a few). If we think food prices are high now, imagine if we had to import most produce from other continents.

But our bees give me hope. A lot of us are counting on the ever-rising popularity of environmentally friendly practices to save us from the myriad looming disasters we’re facing. I hope that people will stop planting one crop (looking at you, almonds), so that bees stop starving ten months out of the year. I hope people are motivated enough to do something out of their everyday routines. I hope people start planting bee-friendly plants to attract them.

In fact, maybe that’s why the bees came to our yard. My mom has always loved roses, and we have a ton of them in our front yard. And the bees seem to love the ivy that covers our house. And I know lots of people are scared of bees, but if you’ve actually looked at a bee up close, they are incredibly cute. But maybe that’s just me. Or my bees.

I worry that in some Douglas Adams-y move, the bees will all just take off someday, buzzing a “So long, and thanks for all the pollen,” before heading back to the moon. But hopefully, my bees will stay behind, not just because I am a particular fan of non-native fruits, but also because I care about them. And if my worrying about bees will help secure their survival and/or existence on this planet, I’m just going to keep on worrying. Care to join me?


(Pictures by my dad, Stephen Linden)


  • By Daisy Linden
  • on 2008-07-25
  •  
 

Open-source phone system rocks: asterisk, freePBX, and PBXinaFlash


phones.


we all need them. they are the way communicate apart from IM, email, etc, and the other techology gadgets we employ. In the early days of this company, everyone used their cell phones. “Do we really need a phone system?” some users asked. But isn’t it nice, instead of walking downstairs from your desk, getting distracted by a thousand shiny things (ooooh chocolate!), to just dial someone’s extension and ask them the question you needed to ask? All in the name of productivity my friends.


Now I am not a big fan of voicemail. I pretty much hate it. Somehow, though, when it comes in to my email inbox as a .wav file, it’s just that much less annoying, and I actually listen to it.



So I knew we needed phones, and I made sure I had money in the IT budget for them. I got quotes for $30k, 100k, and 15k, respectively for moderately-featured Avaya, Cisco, and way-stripped-down Avaya systems.  And this is for 20 handsets, mind you! Ummmm, no. Then Louis reminded me, “can’t you just turn a regular PC into a PBX and be done with it?” Oh yeah...Asterisk! So I got on the trusty interwebs and started researching open-source PBX alternatives.



What I found was PBX in a Flash, a product of Nerd Vittles. This is a brilliant solution in terms of a downloadable image that installs on any intel-based computer. Burn to CD, pop it in, reboot, and in 45 mins, voila! instant linux-based open-source PBX will all the functionality you could possibly want in systems that cost mega-buxxxx. I found the installation to be seamless and the instructions on the site to be very thorough and helpful. I bought a $700 Digium PRI card, plugged my Verizon line into it, made some configuration changes and there we have it. Some of the many features include: Visual Voicemail (a la iphone), Conference Bridges, the aforementioned voicemail to email inbox, fax capabilities, follow-me, digital receptionist (IVR), and what is called VmX, or a mini-IVR in your voicemail, where you can give callers options to, say, leave a message, find me on my cellphone or transfer back to an operator.



When I was first setting up the system (with a Pentium 3 933 MHz Dell box I had lying around in my garage), I spent some $$ for FreePBX setup support (www.freepbx.org), and found myself on the phone with Philippe Lindeheimer, the lead developer for the FreePBX project. And, well it just so happened, that that very day he was speaking at the DigiumWorld conference in San Jose. So I went down there and met him, and was impressed with the amount of information this guy knows! Anyway, he also steered me to Aastra phones as the best phones to go with Asterisk systems. I actually tried them out at Digium World and was impressed. Since the phones read XML, you can create an unlimited number of applications for the phones, and they can be had on the net for $200 each. Quite a far cry from the other quotes I was getting for systems that didn’t do half as many functions!



Recently Nerd Vittles has posted blog entries declaring Aastra phones “The World’s Best Asterisk Phone.”


Anyway, I couldn’t recommend this system more highly, and Philippe has proven to be a really great resource.




  • By Cash Shurley
  • on 2008-07-24
  •  
 

The Starting Line

It’s no secret - I am a rower and in many ways, it is my life.  I have a t-shirt that says “I can’t, I row” and it’s true.  I row in big boats—fours and eights—and often use my rowing experiences to help me in other parts of my life.

TEAM: There is no star on a rowing crew, no franchise player, no single person that makes the boat go fast or wins the race. In fact, the best boats are where everyone blends in and rows as one. The crew is responsible for the victory.

RHYTHM: It’s what drives a rower—the rhythm of the stroke, the rhythm of the water, the rhythm of your breathing, the rhythmic movement of your crew. Get in a rhythm—let it take you places.

RISK: Sometimes you have to take it, look over the edge, break out of the box, stretch yourself. Sometimes you fail but always your team is there to catch you, pick you up, help you understand the lesson you learned. Sometimes you succeed and again, your team is there to praise, applaud and remind you of the next hurdle.

We are currently in the midst of our sprint racing season, racing each other for seats in the best boats and racing other crews for positions on the medal stand. It’s the time of the year for high anxiety, excitement and that rush of adrenaline.

I have that same feeling about where we are with TCHO. So much happens behind the scenes in preparation for sitting on the starting line. Every day, we get closer and the anxiety builds. I could get anxious about being anxious. I could believe that everything is falling apart. I could stress about things not being finished, critical decisions being changed, and materials not being delivered. But, I believe that anxiety is really excitement disguised. I am incredibly excited to be at the starting line, the crew has done the work and now it’s time to race.

  • By Mag Donaldson
  • on 2008-07-23
  •  
 

Sequencing cacao

Science Daily reports on a technology partnership to sequence the cacao genome. With candy giant Mars supplying the money, the Subtropical Horticultural Research Station (Miami) of the USDA doing the research, and IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center using its Blue Gene supercomputer to do the number crunching, the results are destined for the public domain for any and everyone to freely use.

IBM’s
Blue Gene

The obvious goal of the research is to help create cacao plants that are resistant to the devastating diseases that cost an estimated $700 million dollars of damage annually and regularly devastate growing regions. Brazil, for example, is only now recovering from a Witch’s Broom infection which struck in the 1980s.

Around the TCHO offices, we’ve been speculating on other potential benefits, including designing plants that can grow in more stable political regions outside the tropics, or that bear fruit that doesn’t need fermenting, that have hyper-doses of polyphenols, or are caffeine-free, or that taste of the first kiss you ever enjoyed.

(Thanks and a tip of our hat to the ever insightful Kevin Kelly.)


  • By Louis Rossetto
  • on 2008-07-22
  •  
 

Tour de France


I’ve been enjoying the Tour de France this year more than I expected to.  Monday’s stage in the Pyrenees had all the classic reasons why I love watching the Tour: the brutal and heart-wrenchingly beautiful geography, the live chess game of the peloton, the camaraderie, the combativeness, the surprise heroes.  And most of all the pain-defying athleticism that is almost impossible to wrap your head around.

A lot has been written about the terrific performances by Team Columbia and Team Garmin-Chipotle so far and the fact that both teams are at the forefront of anti-doping with massive internal testing programs.  These teams had the foresight to make investments early on to ensure their riders are clean and be able to prove it.  What’s great is that they’re proving that transparency and doing the right thing is also a sound strategy.  They’ve been able to get sponsors, reduce their risks as organizations and are now showing the world how much more exciting it is to watch clean riders winning stages in the Tour.

To me, the Tour this year is a parallel with what being a sustainable business is all about - being smart about systematic investments in transparency and doing the right thing also happens to reduce your risks, attract capital, make you leaner and make you more competitive.  Any other strategy seems just about as boring and outdated as doping.  I’ll be watching Garmin-Chipotle and Columbia for the next couple weeks, and keeping my fingers crossed.


  • By Ann Cleaveland
  • on 2008-07-21
  •  
 1 2 3 >