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Fairtrade Foundation launches ‘secret’ hot chocolate salon

1st Mar 2019 - 06:00
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In celebration of Fairtrade Fortnight (25 Feb – 3 March) the Fairtrade Foundation has unveiled the world’s first secret hot chocolate salon’ hidden inside an East London newsagent.

Within the magazine racks and behind the snacks, chocolate lovers will be invited to press a secret button that will see the shop floor rotate 180 degrees and transport them to a West-African themed speakeasy-style cafe.

 

Julia Nicoara, from the Fairtrade Foundation, said: “We’re excited to launch the immersive Rosine’s Hot Chocolate Salon, an experience that allows chocolate lovers interact with the very people who make their favourite delight possible.

 

“This is not just any pop up; visitors are engaged in the lives of the cocoa farmers behind a bar of chocolate and every time you buy a Fairtrade certified product you are making a real difference.”

 

Created to support Fairtrade’s ‘She Deserves’ campaign, Rosine’s Hot Chocolate Salon is named after a real cocoa farmer from Côte d’Ivoire - and aims to tell the true story behind chocolate bars and why cocoa farmers, like Rosine, deserve a fair living income.

 

Threehot chocolates will be on the menu - created by celebrity chefs, Melissa Hemsley, Tess Ward and Tom Hunt.

 

Each creation is named after a real cocoa farmer from West Africa and will be priced at £1.86 - the cost of a day’s living income for a cocoa farmer. Guests of the salon will also be treated to authentic West African jazz music, surprise appearances from celebrity ambassadors and the chance to hear the compelling stories behind the cocoa farmers.

 

Fairtrade Fortnight’s She Deserves campaign aims to establish a living income for women cocoa growers in West Africa. Fairtrade standards ensure that women have a voice in the community, are represented in decision-making and benefit from the increased value of Fairtrade sales.

 

All money raised by the salon will help fund programmes such as the Women’s School of Leadership in Côte d’Ivoire. The project aims to empower women cocoa farmers in West Africa to become business owners, members of farming groups and leaders in their communities.

 

Read more about Fairtrade Fortnight here

Written by
Melissa Moody