(16 July 1855 – 20 February 1909)
Lindt is a Swiss chocolate brand that has been manufacturing delicious treats for more than 150 years now. If you have ever tasted Lindt Dark Chocolate or their chocolate Lindor truffles, you will eventually remember their distinctly unique flavors. It is just impossible not to love them. Their quality and taste helped them stay on the market for this long in such an extremely competitive environment.
Before selling his business, Rodolphe Lindt already had a name for himself as a top-class chocolate maker. In 1879 he had stumbled upon the key to refine chocolate almost by accident. He had given himself the mission of turning chocolate into something easier to eat, as at that time it was quite hard and chewy and not like the chocolate we can find in almost any shop today.
Lindt spent several unsuccessful days and nights trying and failing to make his chocolate more palatable, but it was not until he left his machines running overnight that he discovered the conching process. In the morning, instead of finding a pile of ruined waste, Lindt found that the chocolate smelt wonderful and melted in the mouth, releasing rich flavours.
Lindt learned from his near-blunder and soon after invented what is now known as a ‘long conche’, a machine to mix and distribute cocoa butter within the chocolate. The long conche he worked with took over a day to produce a tonne of chocolate. When he sold his factory in Zurich, he also sold his conching secrets.
In 1905, Lindt passed away and Lindt & Sprüngli AG continued on an upwards trajectory, aided by the conching process. By 1915, it was exporting three-quarters of its chocolate to twenty countries around the world.
Soon after the Second World War, Lindt & Sprüngli’s chocolate was in high demand. In the following decades the company expanded and bought over several national business in the UK, Germany, France and the USA, bringing Lindt chocolates to the world.
Today, Lindt & Sprüngli have around 370 chocolate shops, cafes and business dotted all over the globe. Their position as one of the finest chocolate producers in the world is well assured, all thanks to the man who first discovered how to make the sweet stuff melt in our mouths.