Quality

Double-down chocolate

There’s a small local gelato joint thats a bit of a hit around these parts.

They make a dessert that starts with a decadent fudgey-cakey-gooey-caramely-goodness named after a (similarly-named) politician, who gets more mixed reviews from locals.

I selected a scoop of “superman chocolate” gelato to drop on top of the (heated) gooey-ness, which was promptly drizzled with a shot of chocolate.

Oh yes, and a wee swirl of whipped cream on top.

Delicious.

Chocolatey-delicious.

I doubled-down (tripled even) on the chocalatelyness, and must admit I was concerned I’d overdone it, and was about to be overwhelmed by chocolate and sweetness.

I’m pleased to say, this never happened. Each mouthful was joyous, and I suspect, it is because each of the elements were independently delicious. I wasn’t left feeling overdone, in fact I considered a second round, but didn’t (I’m getting wiser in my old age).

Without saying chocolatey anymore, here’s what (I think) I’ve learnt:

  • If something is truly good, really truly good, more is better. The flavour of chocolate is this kind of good.

  • The same is not better. Get more of the essence of the goodness, but get it in a new way. Chocolate can be ice-cream, or brownie.

  • Don’t fall for the cheap stuff.

Get good tools for your good people

After you've got the right people, make sure you give them the right tools.

It's worth paying for them.

While we might bootstrap/number-8-wire the project together, high quality projects require high-quality people working with high-quality tools.

And high-quality costs money.

Doing good requires us to get better. Getting better requires us to practice. And practicing requires tools.

So get good people, develop a good design, and with the right tools, build the right project.