- Su Good Sweets - http://www.sugoodsweets.com/blog -

Menu for Hope V: Win La Maison Du Chocolat’s Shimmering Snowflake Coffret

Menu for Hope V [1]Ladies and gentlemen, start your bids. You can win some awesome prizes through the fifth annual Menu for Hope [2] charity campaign. The premise is simple: for each $10 you donate [3], you’ll get one virtual raffle ticket toward the food-related prize of your choice. Last year, food bloggers from across the world raised more than $90,000 towards the UN World Food Programme [4]‘s school lunch program in Lesotho, Africa.

This year, La Maison du Chocolat [5] has graciously donated a shimmering snowflake coffret [6], filled with more than half a pound of chestnut, orange confit stick, dark ganache with banana, milk ganache with rosé Champagne, milk praliné feuilleté with hazelnuts and almonds, almond paste with citrus zest, and dark plain ganache confections. New York is the only place in the U.S. where you can buy these chocolates in person, but if you bid on prize UE11, you can get them at your door (provided you live in the U.S.). These are among the best chocolates in the world, and trust me, I’ve eaten a lot of other brands [7].

La Maison du Chocolat

If you don’t win, you can always make La Maison du Chocolat’s truffles [8] at home, although it’ll never be as divine as the original. The company’s founder, Robert Linxe, sources his cream from an exclusive farm in France, and he married into the Valrhona [9] family, so he works with a custom chocolate blend.

Also, my co-workers at Gourmet [10] are giving away a copy of each month’s Cookbook Club [11] selection for 2009. Every month, the magazine selects an extraordinary cookbook and features recipes, videos, and exclusive menus online. Past selections [12] include The Art and Soul of Baking [13], A Platter of Figs and Other Recipes [14], and Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone [15]. Sure, you can follow along online, but it’s even better if you get all the books sent to you for an entire year. Bid on prize UE16 if interested.

Here’s how to “play:”