
This artisan chocolate-maker in Windsor spends four days making one 'bonbon'
CBC
Artisan chocolate-maker Stephen Beaumont describes the "bonbons" he makes as "little pieces of edible art."
From a triple-layered Saskatoon berry cheesecake to British Columbia's Nanaimo bar, Beaumont has created a selection of fine chocolates that pay tribute to some regions across Canada. Locally, he's part of a small community creating made-in-Windsor chocolate.
And this season alone, he's cranked out roughly 2,500 small treats, one of which takes four days to create.
Initially, Beaumont was only making 32 chocolates at a time, mostly sharing them with family and friends.
But the labour has been worth it for the growth his business Chok. has seen in the last year.
"I started making them for fun," Beaumont said.
"During the pandemic, it became something I enjoyed doing and people seemed to enjoy eating them and actually buying them in the end."
Chok. doesn't have a bricks and mortar location, but it runs out of the kitchen at The Cheese Bar in Tecumseh.
WATCH: Beaumont talks about the chocolate-making process
Working in the hospitality business across the world, Beaumont told CBC News that he's always been around food, specifically chocolate and pastries.
In early 2020, Beaumont enrolled in a three-day intensive chocolate making program under Michigan chocolatier Luis Amado.
Despite being the only one who signed on to take the program, it still went ahead.
"Normally I have to have a minimum of five students in my class, in his case there was two cancellations so I spent three days one-on-one with him and we became good friends," Amado told CBC News.
"There was chemistry between him and I because you know we're both immigrants."













