
UPDATE (10/03/09): This store has closed. I guess that answers that.
On Sunday I was strolling the Castro district in San Francisco. It had been awhile since I've been in the neighborhood, so I checked out some of the new things such as this chocolate candy store named, appropriately, Chocolate on Castro.
Squeezed between The Body Shop and Harvey's Hamburgers, this is like a haven for chocolate lovers. It sells a variety of chocolates, some homemade, some brand names like Charles Chocolate and Scharffen Berger. What caught me was the store's shabby chic decor. Here's a mini tour of this four-month-old store:





My take on this store is that it's a novelty chocolate candy store, but not all the chocolate have the appearance of premium chocolates like Rechiutti at the Ferry Building, for example. (Of course, you're also not paying the crazy Rechiutti prices either.) The chocolates (with the exception of known brands like Charles Chocolates) had this real homemade look. Also, the service was pleasant but a bit curt. They didn't seem to want to strike up a conversation as much as getting your order and moving on. Not something that will bode well in a neighborhood location.
Anywho, not sure how successful this will be in this neighborhood. The whole look and feel of the store seemed to scream La Jolla mall than the Castro. Why do I have a feeling that most people in this neighborhood would rather pour chocolate on a lover instead of eating it? ;-)
Chocolate on Castro, 504 Castro St. at 18th Street, San Francisco.
BTW, found this great blog about the comings and goings of businesses in the Castro. It's a shame that there is such a high turnover in this neighborhood. It's odd because gay men have a lot of descretionary income but they apparently spend it everywhere BUT the Castro. Go figure. Anywho, this blog is a fun read.
mmmm, yummy! next time i am in the city i will definitely have to stop in.
ReplyDeleteBTW, notsoccer mom made your pork and peaches for me the other day. it was awesome!
Anonymous dude, the title of the blog was just playing some fun because the store is in a gay neighborhood, the Castro. I wasn't asking to create a debate, it was for fun, geesh.
ReplyDeleteAnd I do like chocolate. I just don't loooove chocolate. And it's my blog, so I can blog about whatever I want.
Chef Ben, I can tell you meant this post to be light-hearted and funny, but it actually has some moments of being sort of offensive to me, one of your gay (well, lesbian, really) readers. It feels like you've made your jokes on the back of too many gay stereotypes.
ReplyDeleteWhy, for example, would you think that just because someone is gay that they'd be any kinkier than a straight person? That would seem to be what you are suggesting when you say that you have a feeling that "most people in this neighborhood would rather pour chocolate on a lover instead of eating it."
Anyway, I usually enjoy your posts, and believe I understand the spirit with which you posted this, but I think you missed the mark.
-jill
My friend, all *real* men love chocolate. Yeah, baby!
ReplyDeleteJill, dude.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry if you felt offended by this post, but when I look over it, there are only two gay references. One is in the title and repeated again in the text, and the other was the ending, which you mentioned. The rest is my same old description of location and the products.
You may feel it missed the mark and you may have felt offended. But as a gay man, I have to say there are other things on the Internet that are far more offensive to the gay community than what I may have written in this light-hearted way.
Hahahaha, of COURSE there are other things that are more offensive! I certainly didn't make my comment intending to imply otherwise. In fact, I made an effort to say that the post made me uncomfortable without getting carried away and making any sort of sweeping statements.
ReplyDeleteYou seem like a very thoughtful person. I actually thought you might like to know that your post made one of your regular readers uncomfortable. I'm disappointed that you are dismissive of my comment. A lot of hurt in the world comes from the gap between what was intended and what actually occurs. I was suggesting that what you intended was not received that way.
Is this the end of the world? No. Will I stop reading Chef Ben. No!
--Jill
Jill, Tammy, I appreciate your comments. And my replies were never intended to be dismissive but to point out that I wasn't trying to be offensive and that I didn't think it was a big deal. But like everything in life, this is a learning process.
ReplyDeleteNot every posting on this blog will be a perfect souffle. Some things may be half baked. That's the reality of the blogosphere.
Given, that, however, I did remove the first item I posted in the "comments" section of this post because a term I thought was funny (that was made, BTW, by someone else on Yelp) may seem offensive to others. So I deleted it.
Of course, Tammy referenced it in her post. So I had to delete her comment because it defeats the purpose of me deleting the initial posting that was offensive if it just gets repeated anyway. Oh, my, where was I? I need a Tylenol. Oh yes, I deleted Tammy's reference to the offensive comment, but I'm a big believer of open discussion, so I don't want to appear like a censor. So here's Tammy's original posted comment with the said reference excluded: (Maybe we all should go get some chocolates now! ;-)
Posted by Anonymous:
Anonymous said...
Props to Jill. As a straight woman, I too found today's posting to be a bit offensive and off the topic of what you normally post. While your intention wasn't to offend, comments above like "XXXx xxxXXX" is just gross and seems out of place for a dialogue about food. But the great part about blogging is this type of back-and-forth dialogue. -- Tammy
P.S. As a chocolate lover, I plan to drop in and visit Chocolate on Castro the next time I'm in the area. :-)
A chocolate shop that is designed like a place I want to live. Must. Go. Visit.
ReplyDelete