The Great Wall never looked so tasty: a team of Chinese
confectioners have built a 10 meter (33 ft) long replica of the structure
entirely out of chocolate in a bid to entice Chinese to eat more of the sweet
stuff.
The
chocolate wall is made from solid dark chocolate bricks stuck together with
white chocolate and is one of the attractions at the World Chocolate Wonderland
exhibition and trade show which will open to the public later this
month.
Chocolatier Wang Qilu said his version of the ancient wall was a feat of engineering in itself, with a carefully constructed crumbling section at one end to resemble the real thing. He also had to make sure his materials did not melt.
"You have higher and lower levels and you have to
fit each brick into place, one by one, to build it up, it's difficult," he
said.
Up to 80 tonnes of chocolate were used in making
the displays, which include a mini-army of 560 chocolate replicas of the famous
Terracotta Warriors standing to attention on a layer of chocolate
flakes.
The show's general manager, Tina Zheng, said she
hoped the displays would give chocolate a boost in the Chinese market and its
billion-plus consumers.
"Chocolate has not been around in China that
long, it doesn't have that several-thousand-year history that it does in the
West which has made chocolate as common as milk or fruit," she said.
Local and foreign chocolate manufacturers will
take part in the show, she added.
Hangzhou Jiaoyu Science and Technology Co.LTD.
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