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Mast Brothers

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Are you a foodie snob? Then bend over and grab em. Here comes a chocolate rectum-reamer.

If you've been in an extra-snobby coffeeshop, restaurant or boutique food shop in the last few years, you have probably seen Mast Brothers chocolate bars for sale. For example, Trader Joe's sells them. Few brandnames have more cucksucking joy with hipster douches than Mast chocolate. Mast usually sells their beautifully wrapped two-ounce bars for an extortionate $8-$10 apiece. File:Mastbros.jpg

   
 
Walk down North 3rd St in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and any clichéd idea you once had about local hipsters will suddenly burst with life. Thrift shops, independent boutiques, local eateries, and a sketchbook library populate the one-way street down to the waterfront, where you’ll find poets composing short works in their recycled notebooks and photographers taking artsy portraits of their rescued mutts.....At the corner of 3rd and Berry St sits the very epitome of this hipster culture: a local chocolate factory created by two tall red-bearded, flannel-wearing brothers. Yes, the Mast Brothers and their business are the spitting image of all that Williamsburg stands for. And so indeed, those of us tempted to avoid cliché might ponder the value of Mast Brothers Chocolate so prominently built on 3rd. Why is this shop any different? Why should I pay upwards of $7.00 for a chocolate bar made by a bunch of hippies who are too alternative to buy a wrapping machine but rather fold local artist designed papers over each chocolate by hand?
 

 
 

—-blogger complains about hipster phoniness in 2013, Mast included

Since 2007 they've been pulling this shit. And their competitors have mumbled about how awful the actual chocolate really is and how sneaky-secretive the bearded dickbrothers are, especially to other food industry people. Yet the Mast just kept growing and growing. They got considerable help since 2011 from the clueless writers at the Jew York Times.

Well here's the big 2015 exposé showing that the Mast brothers are actually lying Brooklyn hipster con-men. LOL.

File:Mastbrosfactory.jpg Since the birth in 2007 of Mast Brothers Chocolate, foodies have wondered how two guys with limited space could manage to produce such a wide range of chocolate varieties, with none of the textural flaws found in "small batch" hipster chocolate. The ugly truth is that until 2010, they purchased mid-grade French chocolate, melted it down into bars with their own logo, then conspired with other hipster frauds such as Rag & Bones and "Chocolate Skateboards" to design the wrappers that makes their chocolatey fraud so appealing to hipsters.

By 2010, they had convinced enough suckers that their chocolate was worth the ten bucks, and had expanded their manufacturing ability such that they were able to make genuine "bean to bar" chocolate. The problem with that is that their own product was described by foodies as "inedible". They have issued a press release defending their product and business model, and admitted everything.

   
 
“There is a certain kind of jealousy,” Bernardini told Quartz over email, “but more of an anger.” “But (chocolate makers) should also be angry with the media as it is the fault and responsibility of the media that Mast Brothers became so famous (with a mediocre and sometimes also bad quality). Only because they wore clothes like Amish people with long beards.”


 


 
 

—-Oops pwnt!

   
 
The best part about a chocolate bar is unwrapping it, and in this the Mast Brothers are geniuses: The thick, artisanal paper, printed by a single lonely cowboy living with three blind nuns, is well worth the $10 price tag. It’s what lies underneath that’s in question.


 


 
 

—-From the New Republic

   
 
But “Scott,” an unknown blogger who recently published a series of exposés on their practices, and Quartz, which followed up with a survey of chocolate-industry insiders, both report that the Mast brothers actually began their company by selling commercially produced, French chocolate, which was melted down, re-wrapped in pretty paper, and sold for $10 a bar. (They also marketed themselves as the first chocolatier in America and the first chocolatier to make small-batch chocolate, claims that Quartz shot down.) As their company grew and, according to Quartz, they actually attempted to become single-source chocolatiers, however, their peers in the chocolate industry began noticing that the quality of their fancy chocolate had dropped precipitously. Aubrey Lindley of Cacao in Portland, Oregon, initially noted that Mast Brothers chocolate “had an overly refined, smooth texture that is a trademark of industrial chocolate. No small equipment was achieving a texture like that. It also tasted like industrial chocolate: balanced, flavorless, dark roast, and vanilla.” But by 2010, when they switched to single-source, “most of the chocolate [became] simply inedible, by my standards,” said Lindley.


 


 
 

—-Vanity Fair

   
 
Scott and Quartz — which independently verified many of the blog’s claims — say that the company refused to answer specific questions related to the company’s production and sourcing process. Neither Scott nor Quartz claim that the Mast Brothers have never made bean to bar chocolate. In fact, the blog chalks up a major decline in the taste of Mast Brothers offerings, from smooth and “blandly competent” to "coarse" and "muddy", to the switch from remelting to the more difficult process of handcrafting their own chocolate.


 


 
 

—-"A scandal is erupting in the world of hipster chocolate"

   
 
Likewise, in trying to find cacao sources in Trinidad, he had run into dead ends. Cacao production in the country was low—the workers drawn away from cacao plantations to more lucrative oil field work—and nearly all of that was under contract to major French and Italian makers. Impressed and curious, he asked, “Where were you able to get cacao in Trinidad?” Rick Mast replied, “Oh, these three we make,” pointing to the flavored bars of unspecified cacao origin, “and the other three are Valrhona,” referring to the single-origin bars and dark milk chocolate...... Rick and Michael Mast were the Milli Vanilli of chocolate. They costumed themselves with quaint clothing and showy beards. (In the fall of 2008, Michael Mast even dyed his hair and beard red to better match his brother in photographs.) They talked the talk of authenticity and “reconnecting” the public to lost foodways. By May of 2008, they publicly proclaimed themselves the “Leaders of the Chocolate Revolution.” They won over celebrity chefs, then piggybacked on their credibility. Packaging trumped product. They crafted their public image magnificently. To this day, you can’t read an article about the Masts that doesn’t effuse about the beards and the paper. (When they calculate optimal media-ripeness, count on the beards to be shaven, generating more Mast mania!) Though an appealing façade, the early Mast Brothers was a Potemkin chocolate factory, churning out remolded, repackaged industrial couverture. With lies that foundational, a cloud of doubt descends on every claim. After the sweeping deception that the Masts made the chocolate that they sold under their family name, even the confessions of using Valrhona must be independently verified. While we can confirm that they remelted some Valrhona, that doesn’t mean they didn’t also use Belcolade (with which Rick Mast became familiar in the weeks he spent “apprenticing” in Jacque Torres’s shop), Callebaut, or other then-common and affordable couvertures. Who really made the chocolate that Dan and David Barber tasted when the brothers visited Blue Hill at Stone Barns in early 2008? Were the many retailers who carried Mast Brothers bars complicit in the charade or were they as clueless as their customers?


 


 
 

—-The rant by the original blogger; same guy who took down "Noka Chocolates" in 2006

Gallery

THE BEST CHOCOLATE ON EARTH!! About missing Pics
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See Also

External Links

Mast Brothers
is part of a series on
Food and Drink

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Mast Brothers
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