Tag Archive for 'Mast Brothers Chocolate'

Industrial Revolution, in Brooklyn!

Hey!

There was a great article in Time Out NY last week about 2 companies that are focusing on producing their products as close to home, as possible.

One, we’ve mentioned before on SF, is Mast Brothers Chocolate. They are a great, small chocolate company, started by 2 brothers in Brooklyn that has gone from making 300 bars a week in their Williamsburg apartment to making 1,000 bars a week in their new Greenpoint factory.

“We could have opened somewhere cheaper,” Rick says, “but that would be doing what everybody else has been doing. We want to be connecting to the community.”

If you live in NY, they are opening what they refer to as a “chocolaterie and laboratory” in October in Greenpoint. It is the only bean to chocolate bar making factory in NYC. Check it out.

The other company mentioned is one in Red Hook. Mark Snyder is opening Snyders Winery in Red Hook which will be made using only grapes from Long Island. They will crush, ferment, and age the grapes on-site. Red Hook is an amazing industrial neighborhood that has slowly become the home to larger chain stores like Ikea and Fairway. It is great that it can retain some of it’s history.

Thanks to TimeOut for the great article and enthusiasm for local industries. Hopefully, other companies will be inspired to produce their products locally.

Support local manufacturing!

Niki

Mast Brothers Chocolate

Rick and Michael Mast are two lovely NY hipster-types who happen to produce really scrummy chocolate from their factory in Brooklyn. Believe me when I say, it’s really good chocolate. Take a look:


I know pictures can only go so far in conveying a sense of deliciousness, but I’ve had a taste, and I want more.


Here’s their website: Mast Brothers Chocolate

And their Myspace profile.

So, if you happen to find yourself in Brooklyn, treat your sweet self to a few bars of delicious Mast Brothers chocolate.

Scrum-tums.

Love to all,

Team SF

p.s. And just for fun, here’s Willy Wonka in 5 seconds.