In a modest apartment near a Caracas
slum, nutrition professor Nancy Silva and four aids spread rich, dark
Venezuelan cocoa on a stone counter to make chocolate bars to be sold in local
shops that cater to the crisis-hit country’s dwindling elite. Like some 20 recently launched Venezuelan
businesses, Silva uses the country’s aromatic cocoa to make gourmet bars of the
kind that can fetch more than $10 each in upscale shops in Paris or Tokyo. The
oil-rich but recession-devastated nation’s Byzantine bureaucracy makes
large-scale exports nearly impossible for small businesses. More… Thursday, January 11, 2018
Gourmet chocolate becomes economic lifeline in Venezuela crisis
In a modest apartment near a Caracas
slum, nutrition professor Nancy Silva and four aids spread rich, dark
Venezuelan cocoa on a stone counter to make chocolate bars to be sold in local
shops that cater to the crisis-hit country’s dwindling elite. Like some 20 recently launched Venezuelan
businesses, Silva uses the country’s aromatic cocoa to make gourmet bars of the
kind that can fetch more than $10 each in upscale shops in Paris or Tokyo. The
oil-rich but recession-devastated nation’s Byzantine bureaucracy makes
large-scale exports nearly impossible for small businesses. More…
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