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travel / travel magazine / march 2008

TasteTrip
Choc around the clock (page 3)

“It’s just like playing in mud,” says veteran Hazel Way, “except it tastes better.”



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BONBON APPÉTIT
Getting there St. Stephen is a two-hour drive south of Fredericton and about 1½ hours west of Saint John. It lies across the St. Croix River from Calais, Maine, and has a co-operative relationship with its American neighbour, sharing fire services and working together on community projects, including an annual cross-border parade held during Chocolate Fest.

Staying there Find a list of St. Stephen inns and B&Bs at www.town.ststephen.nb.ca. The resort town of St. Andrews, a half-hour drive southeast, on Passamaquoddy Bay, also offers a number of options, including the luxurious Fairmont Algonquin. www.fairmont.com/algonquin

Playing there St. Stephen’s Chocolate Fest takes place the first full week of August, the only time the Ganong factory opens for tours. For more information, visit www.chocolate-fest.ca. The Chocolate Museum, located in the original Ganong plant, is open from March to November. See chocolatemuseum.ca for details. To work off that sugar high, visit the St. Andrews wharf to find tour guides and whale watching outfitters operating on the Bay of Fundy.

The fudge room, as it was called, on the second floor of the old factory, smells like chocolate, and I notice there’s still some on the floor. Sugar has surely permeated the floorboards, and the scent will linger long after the building has been converted into apartments or office space. For now, it has been strung with pink garlands for tonight’s Choctail Hour, a lavish send-off to a sweet week. The event has been sold out for ages, and St. Stephen’s finest mingle with friends from away. It’s a chance to sip a Mudslide, a decadent mix of chocolate milk and vodka, and savour a shared history. I clink glasses with Lynn Kelley as she comes down from her chocolate- induced sugar rush.

In the 1930s, this room would have been lined with dozens of wooden tables, fudge laid out in a thick slab on top and left to harden. Wood, it turns out, is the ideal surface for fudge-making, while nougat needs the coolness of a marble top and caramel is best made on steel tables. I soak in the lingering scent, a sugary sweetness that once wafted across the entire downtown core calling workers to their shifts.

Servers circle the room carrying silver trays piled high with chocolate. “Would you like one?” they ask.

How can I refuse?


Patricia D’Souza is a senior editor with Canadian Geographic Travel. Photographer André Gallant lives in Saint John, N.B.

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