KOHO Continues to Elevate Chocolate to Exquisite New Levels

(Partner Content) Those perfect little hand-painted domes of chocolate bliss are now available at its flagship Waikiki store, along with Neiman Marcus and the new DFS Waikiki. Coming soon: A Chocolate Boutique with an atelier and café concept.

 

KOHO Chocolates 2023

Photo: Courtesy of KOHO

 

When Theresa Tuxhorn started as Hawaiian Host’s global marketing director in 2019, she had a flash of an idea to launch something fun and unexpected. That flourished into KOHO Chocolates, a line of locally produced, confections that won over chocophiles with its  luscious flavors and bright pops of color.

 

“While traveling through Europe, I would see all these really pretty colorful bonbons and thought that it would be great to play on Hawaiian flavors and ingredients to create a kind of luxury collection,” says Tuxhorn, now KOHO’s managing director. “In the beginning, it was really just an idea, and an opportunity in the market. There are a lot of premium cookies in the Hawai‘i market but there weren’t any premium confections. No one was doing these.”

 

Working quickly (and during a global pandemic, no less), a team was assembled and KOHO came to life. In 2020, during the height of Covid lockdowns, the brand soft launched a small, online collection of stunning gem-like bonbons—perfect little hand-painted domes of chocolate confections. Online sales took off, and so did plans to grow KOHO into its own brand. First, a pop-up shop at Ala Moana Center. Then, plans to go bigger and bigger.

 

The success of the first pop-up convinced the team they were onto something: Locals loved the concept, and KOHO started generating serious buzz. In the few years since the high-end confections were created, KOHO is well on its way to becoming an exquisite success.

 

It was important for KOHO to be loyal to its Island roots. As such, the cacao for KOHO’s milk and dark chocolate confections are  locally grown and sourced from the North Shore on O‘ahu. The artisanal collection is made on O‘ahu including its signature bon bons which are hand-painted in their signature modernist style: colorful chocolate canvases, painted with flecks of shimmer and shine. Bite-sized bliss in flavors like liliko‘i caramel, sea salt caramel, Kona coffee and macadamia praline. In addition to its delicate bonbons, KOHO also makes chocolate “tablets”, thin and snappy bars of chocolate with its classic motif.

 

KOHO opened its first brick-and-mortar shop this year in the Outrigger Waikīkī, and recently partnered with Neiman Marcus and DFS (in Waikīkī and the Honolulu airport) to sell KOHO chocolates at their stores. What’s coming next for the brand: A Chocolate Boutique with an atelier and café concept that will also serve as KOHO’s new production facility. Customers will be able to watch the chocolatiers creating and painting the confections right on site. The flagship shop and confectionery is scheduled to open in Honolulu in late 2024.

 

“The word koho in Hawaiian means to choose, and we really take it to mean that we’re the connoisseurs of Hawai‘i, carefully selecting the best ingredients to put forward to the customer,” Tuxhorn says.

 

KOHO Chocolates, Outrigger Waikīkī Beach Resort, 2335 Kalākaua Ave., (808) 966-8119, kohochocolates.com, @kohochocolates, open 10 a.m.-9 p.m. daily.