I ANN ARBOR MEMORIAL DAY SALE 20%-40% OFF SHORTS • TOPS • JEANS SWIMSUITS • JACKETS FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY ONLY Layaways and previous sales excluded BOYS and GIRLS WEAR ...because your children are special! ERIE new release the "swing"at pre-pub Lincoln Center 101/2 at Greenfield 968-8808 CALMAN SHEMI PETER MAX JIANG HE NENG *ERTE LEBADANG ROTH MAN VASARELY MONTESIMOS SEREUX SCHNEUR DANIELLE PELEG ART GALLERY 5755 West Maple Rd., Suite 105 1 Block W. of Orchard Lake at Tower Street West Bloomfield Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-4 or by app► 626-5810 Avo Great Names 0 Samsonite & Marmel But One Great Sale FITS LIKE A GLOVE. SAVE 30% ON ALL SAMSONITE PATIO FURNITURE SuggestPd list for 48" table and four chairs $932.00 Now only $652.00 SIDE TABLE CHAISE Recy--$294.011 $203.70 Recy..1.142,00. $99.40 55" TABLE Reg:-$382,00 $267.00 ACTION LOUNGE CHAIR LOUNGE CHAIR DINING CHAIR Reg:- 85.0 $136.50 Reg- 7-5461Z0 g112.70 Ruty --$229,00. $160.30 UMBRELLA Reg. $342.00 $239.40 SOLID WHITE & YELLOW, EARTHTONE & PASTEL STRIPES Replacement Cushions Available MARMEL GIFTS & TOYS 28857 Orchard Lk. Rd. • Farmington Hills (Bet. 12 & 13 Mile Rds.) • 553-3250 cn FRIDAY MA'L27. 1988 Seduction By Chocolate Judy Weinblatt concocts confections that comfort and soothe SUSAN LUDMER-GLIEBE Special to The Jewish News 0 scar Wilde said that the best way to get rid of temptation was to yield to it. That's what peo- ple have been doing ever since some anonymous lucky soul first tasted chocolate cen- turies ago. Through the ages, chocolate has aroused all kinds of disparate passions. Cortez called it "the Divine Drink" and brought it from the new world to the old. Casanova thought it aided him in his numerous seductions. Astronauts take it into space as a pick-me-up and a great way to pass the time. Judy Weinblatt, Ann Arbor cho- colatier, explains its world- wide attraction in a few sim- ple words. "It's comforting," she says with maternal understanding. "It's soothing." Ever since she can remember, Weinblatt has been interested in food and her fondness for sweet things in particular has remained undiminished. "When I was younger I had dreams of Baby Ruths and M&Ms," she recalls. Dreams have become reali- ty for Weinblatt. After several years in Florida working in restaurant kitchens and as a masseuse on cruise ships ply- ing the Caribbean, Weinblatt returned home to attend the University of Michigan. One day she read an article about chocolate in Cuisine magazine. Not long after- wards Weinblatt realized that she was hooked. "I decided that chocolate was my call- ing." Since 1979 she's been chief dipper, decorator, creator and all round chocolate artiste for her firm, Minerva Street Cho- colate, Inc. Now, in the basement of her Burns Park home, which does bear a resemblance to Willie Wonka's factory, the 34-year- old Weinblatt is surrounded by the tools of the candy- maker's trade — stainless steel pans, stove, counters, bowls, chocolate warming machines, vats, boxes of chocolate, cookies and pretzels. There are hammers to break the 50 pound chocolate chunks. Minerva Street is synonymous with truffles. Dark chocolate truffles with rum centers decorated with Judy Weinblatt at work: If her truffles don't shine they end up on the reject plate. milk chocolate lacing. White chocolate truffles covering mocha centers. Pistachio truf- fles over vanilla bean centers rolled in crushed nuts, a magnificent concoction of con- trasting flavors. Truffles of Belgian milk chocolate over hazelnut crunch surrounded by dark chocolate piping. Even for those who are not easily seduced by chocolate, it can be love at first sight for these delicacies because they look so good. That's pur- poseful on Weinblatt's part, "They're pretty," she admits. And, as she explains, she wants them to look as good as they taste and taste as good as they look. When people take a bite of her chocolate truffles she wants them to say, "That was worth it." Evidently enough people have been doing that for Minerva to slowly but surely expand into the so-called gourmet luxury chocolate market which accounts for some $50 million a year in sales in the United States. "They are really great chocolates and they match up with any other in the coun- try," says Ari Weinzweig, co- owner of Zingerman's Delica- tessen, which not too long ago started carrying Minerva Street goodies. "Judy has a great love for chocolate and she uses only top quality in- gredients. She still makes them herself and this shows itself in the quality of the pro- duct which is first rate," Weinzweig says. But don't take his word for it. Food critics have been sing- ing praises for Weinblatt's products for a long time. Her candy has been featured in Connoisseur, Redbook, Food and Wine and Chocolatier. The Washington Post and Chicago Tribune have offered their own tributes. All that free advertising has allowed her mail order business to boom. She even has a celebrity customer. "I