Busy making a Model B
Marisa O’Neil
Forget the bikini. It’s Easter.
Somewhere along the way, the Christian holiday became associated
with jellybeans and chocolate bunnies. And chocolatier Bodega, which
has its flagship store at South Coast Plaza and its factory in Costa
Mesa, has some of the richest, darkest, most decadent bunnies in
town.
It’s almost too decadent for some, at least temporarily.
“Lots of people gave up chocolate for Lent,” said employee Darla
Sink as she tempted passers-by with free samples in front of the
store. “But they say: ‘We’ll be back.’”
And after a national magazine compared the pleasures of Bodega
chocolate to the pleasures of the flesh, co-owner Jene Paz said, one
sales rep told her it was too hot for his Bible Belt territory.
“I said ‘you’re kidding me, it’s chocolate,’” Paz said.
Bodega, which means “a place to meet” or “corner store” in
different Spanish dialects, started as a family business, producing,
selling and shipping handmade chocolate in a 690-square-foot space in
Dana Point.
Paz and sister Martucci Angiano use recipes from their
Spanish-born grandmother.
Now, they have the South Coast Plaza store, a new one at the Grove
in Los Angeles and a 7,000-square-foot factory in Costa Mesa that is
their main base of operations. Their chocolate has been praised by
culinary publications, enjoyed by celebrities and even served at the
U.S. Embassy in Belgium.
But they still make all their chocolate by hand, in batches no
larger than 75 pounds -- even in their busy season, when they produce
300,000 pounds in the last three months of the year. Most
chocolate-makers, Paz said, make batches by the thousands of pounds.
“We’re one of the last of the old-fashioned chocolate makers,” she
said.
The Bodega factory makes its truffles, chocolate, toffee and cakes
using simple machinery and workers who add details by hand. They even
have a machine with a conveyor belt on it, just like the one that
confounded Lucy and Ethel on the infamous chocolate factory episode
of “I Love Lucy.”
“This is the exact machine, with a few upgrades, as Lucy,” Paz
said.
A few days before Easter, workers were still making the Bodega
bunnies that will be in stores today.
One by one, a worker carefully placed the bunny-shaped pieces of
rich, fudge chocolate on a small conveyor belt. They waded through a
shallow pool of melted dark chocolate and passed through a curtain of
more chocolate, fully enrobing the bunnies.
After traveling in style through an air-conditioned tunnel, the
bunnies continued on the belt. Another worker picked up each of the
bunnies and got them ready for packaging.
Fortunately for her, it ran a lot slower than Lucy’s.
The next day, more bunnies -- and chocolates filled with kosher
marshmallows from Israel -- awaited customers in the store.
“I love the dark stuff,” regular customer Leana Dominge said as
she picked a truffle sample off Sink’s plate. “I’m getting some
Easter stuff for my mom.”
Bodega gives out samples to let their chocolate speak for itself,
said manager Tom Riggle. More often than not, he said, people end up
buying some.
“People love its texture -- the fact that when they take it in
their mouth it dissolves and explodes [with flavor],” he said. “It’s
great stuff.”
They added coffee drinks, including a caramel latte that uses
their dulce de leche sauce, to the menu and have added a new retail
line. The Habana products, Paz said, are the same as the Bodega line
but are available in upscale supermarkets and club stores.
The Bodega line is priced between that of See’s and Godiva
chocolates.
On the other end of the spectrum, they also sell gift chocolates
in personalized packages for weddings, showers and corporate events.
They donate a portion of large, company orders to the charity of
their choice.
Getting the chocolate into the hands of as many people as
possible, Paz said, is the best way for them to get new customers.
“We use nothing but the finest, nothing but the best,” Angiano
said. “This, they will remember.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil@latimes.com.
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