You need
Kawkawa berries (as many as you can gather)
Dark fair trade chocolate (as much as you think you'll need to coat the berries)
To make
Very gently rinse the berries. You'll probably also want to pull out their long, thin cores. If you pinch them at the top of the berry and pull upwards, they slide up out of the berry quite easily.
Melt the chocolate in the top of a double boiler. (Or improvise with a bowl over a pot of boiling water.)
When the chocolate is fully melted, turn off the heat.
Gently roll each kawakawa berry individually in the chocolate. You can be quite extravagant with the chocolate if you like - the strong, unique taste of the berries can handle it.
After rolling each one, place it on wax paper to set.
To serve
I reckon these would be nice as an accompaniment to coffee. (Just one or two per person).
I also think they'd work well as a garnish on cheesecake - or on kawakawa icecream.
Or you could ad a few to a plate of chocolate dipped strawberries.
More about Kawakawa berries
I've been excited to find that they ripen to some extent off the bush. Don't pick the completely green ones - they won't ripen well. But if they're starting to blush orange, they'll complete their ripening quite easily sitting on your shelf or table or windowsill.
I'm not sure exactly how long they keep for, but last week I picked some half-ripe ones on a Monday afternoon, kept them on a shady shelf, and they were still good (and completely ripe) by late Thursday night.
I have an entry about kawakawa at Wild Picnic.