This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.
Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping Spend £45 or more for free delivery
Food of Gods cacao nibs in a glass jar filled with roasted cacao nibs sourced from a single farm in Ghana
Glass jar of cacao nibs with loose cacao pieces scattered

Ashanti Cacao Nibs

110g

£12.60 Regular price
  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Maestro
  • Mastercard
  • PayPal
  • Shop Pay
  • Union Pay
  • Visa
It is chunky, buttery and intensely chocolatey with a deep bitterness that lingers and a richness that comes from up to 55% natural cacao butter content. These nibs are not roasted. Not processed. What you taste is raw cacao in its most honest form ~ all the complexity of the bean, nothing stripped away, nothing added.
Eat them straight from the jar, fold them into granola, add to smoothie bowls, yogurt, bakes and salads. They will taste unlike any cacao nibs you've had before.

Plantains, sugarcane, cassava, rare hard wood species & lush bamboo grove

The cocoa trees bears fruit throughout the year, therefore, harvests are done as and when there are enough matured fruits on the tree. Thanks to a natural water bed that flows underneath the estate!

OWORUM, GHANA

Ripe cacao pods growing on a cacao tree at a partner farm in Ghana

A Century Of Stewardship

For over a century, our farm partner's land has been cultivated across generations. On the banks of the Suhurum River, cocoa trees are nourished naturally throughout the seasons without the need for irrigation. No pumps, no systems, just a river that has always been there, and a family that has always known how to work with it.

Cacao trees growing beneath a biodiverse forest canopy in Ghana. Alligator Pepper shown in photo

Beneath the Forest Canopy

Cocoa trees thrive here as part of a diverse agroforestry system, growing as an under-storey forest tree alongside mangoes, plantains, cassava, sugarcane, alligator pepper and beneath a canopy of coconut palms & indigenous hardwood species such as Odum and Ofram.

Leaf mulch, organic matter and worms enriching soil beneath cacao trees

A Soil That Breathes

The earth here is nourished entirely naturally ~ poultry manure, composted cow dung, decomposed cacao & coconut husks and fallen leaf litter. Cacao husks are returned to the land after every harvest, left to break down slowly over the course of a year. Cow dung is composted for at least three months before it ever touches the soil.

Fermented cacao beans drying in the sun on raised drying beds

Heap Fermentation

Flavour is shaped long before the beans are roasted. Freshly harvested cacao beans are traditionally heap-fermented under banana or plantain leaves for several days before being slowly sun-dried. This patient process develops the cacao's rich complexity & depth. The dried beans are gently crushed into nibs, dehusked and sorted by hand.

Explore Our Recipes

Desserts

Double Cacao Fondant With Raw Cacao Nibs Tuile

READ MORE
Double Cacao Fondant With Raw Cacao Nibs Tuile
Desserts

Home Baked Granola With True Cinnamon & Vanilla

READ MORE
Home Baked Granola With True Cinnamon & Vanilla
Desserts

Date & Cranberry Cake With Warm Spices

READ MORE
Date & Cranberry Cake With Warm Spices

You May Also Need

Cart

Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping Spend £45 more for free shipping, only in the UK
No more products available for purchase