European buyers say cocoa producers in Peru could successfully follow in the footsteps of the country's coffee growers, who have turned the Andean country into the world's largest exporter of organic coffee beans. It is already the world's second-largest producer of organic cocoa, yet so far Peru's exports have lagged behind leading countries such as the Ivory Coast, Indonesia and Brazil.
Peru wants to do for its cocoa what Colombia did for coffee with its globally-recognised image of Juan Valez. Peru can't compete on quantity but hopes to compete in specialty markets with a distinctive brand of its own. "Like wine in France, beer in Germany and tequila in Mexico, Peru should be known for its cocoa," said Astrid Gutsche, a pastry chef and spouse of Gaston Acurio, one of the country's top chefs, with restaurants from California to Argentina.
In Peru, growers hope to carve out a niche with high-quality dark chocolate candy bars, chocolate sushi and elaborate sculptures crafted out of the sweet stuff to put in shop windows. "In terms of modelling, cocoa is virgin territory," said Marines Justiniano, a pastry chef who led an eight-person crew to build a replica of Machu Picchu, the ancient Inca city, out of 250 lbs of Peruvian cocoa. With just 30,000 cocoa-growing families, Peru's output is dwarfed by West Africa, which produces two-thirds of global supply.
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