Chocolate Lovers Guide
Chocolate, or the cocoa bean to be more exact was used by the
Aztecs as early as the year 400 but it was Columbus who first
introduced it to the new world when he brought it back to Spain.
Chocolate as a drink was quite popular in Europe in the mid
1600's, but chocolate as a solid wasn't introduced until 1847.
Thirty years later, milk was added to create milk chocolate and
candy bars have been enjoyed world wide ever since!
Making Chocolate
It is actually quite simple to make chocolate, but each maker
has his own secret recipes. First off, the cocoa beans are
roasted and ground up. Next you add sugar and the other
ingredients (milk if you are making milk chocolate). Each maker
will have a different list of ingredients. The ingredients are
blended together through a method called conching which uses a
special machine. Finally, the chocolate is tempered -heated up
and then cooled again for the final result.
Chocolate Nutrition
Good quality chocolate is actually rather nutritious! It
contains vitamins and minerals including calcium and magnesium.
It also contains anti-oxidants that help to prevent cancer and
heart disease. These benefits are found mostly in dark chocolate
and only in high quality chocolates that use 60% or more cocoa
solids. Cheap chocolate is mostly fat and sugar and has little
nutritional value. Storing Chocolate
You should store chocolate in a cool, dry place. It does absorb
flavors so make sure you wrap it tight. You can freeze it for up
to 6 months. Chocolate stays good for up to a year.
Health Benefits Of Chocolate
Good high quality chocolates contain vitamins, minerals and
antioxidants that can help your health. Now I'm not talking
about the cheap candy bar stuff - but high quality gourmet
chocolate with 60% or more cocoa solids. This chocolate contains
contains calcium, iron, potassium and the vitamins A, B1, C, D
and E. Along with vitamins, high quality chocolate contains
the highest amounts of magnesium among natural foods. Magnesium
deficiency has been linked to diabetes, joint problems,
hypertension and PMS. One of the additional health benefits of
chocolate is that it has been found to contain catechins - some
of the same antioxidants found in green tea. The catechins
attack free radicals which damage cells and are thought to lead
to cancer and heart disease. So eating chocolate, may help to
prevent heart disease and cancer!
Chocolate Trivia
- Chocolate is made from beans, the Nib is the heart of the bean
or what remains after they are roasted and shelled. Ground nibs
are called liquor they are unsweetened and liquid when warm but
solid when cooled. The fat of the bean is Cocoa butter and when
pressed out, the powdery stuff left is cocoa powder.
- That white stuff you see sometimes on milk chocolate is called
fat bloom, it doesn't affect the taste and you can still eat
chocolate that has it!
- Chocolate was considered an aphrodisiac by the Aztecs
- White chocolate isn't really chocolate at all since it
contains no chocolate liquor! It still tastes pretty good,
though doesn't it?