Chocolate: A Delicious History
The history of chocolate is an interesting one. It's hard for us
to imagine a world without chocolate, but most of the world
didn't know it existed until Columbus went to the Americas and
brought the cacao bean back with him to Spain. However, it
wasn't until the Conquistadors conquered Mexico that the
Spaniards began to see the real possibilities of cacao.
The Aztecs and Mayans worshipped the cacao bean and believed it
to be a food of the Gods. The Aztecs used as both nourishment
and currency. A slave could be bought with 100 cacao beans.
(Whenever somebody tells you that money doesn't grow on trees,
you can say, "Well, actually, it did for the Aztecs!") The
Aztecs also believed that consuming the fruit of the cacao tree
imparted wisdom and they made a special drink with it called
xocolatl ("bitter water"), of which the Aztec emperor Montezuma
is said to have consumed more than fifty goblets per day. Given
the stimulant properties of raw cacao, this probably gave him
extra energy for visits to his harem.
Fernando Cortez and his men thought the xocolatl drink was too
bitter, so they had the bright idea of adding cane sugar to it
and drinking it hot, thus creating the first hot cocoa.
The Spanish tried to keep their new discovery a secret from the
rest of Europe and managed to do so for about 100 years. Their
secret was not discovered until 1606:
"With the decline of Spain as a power, the secret of cacao
leaked out at last, and the Spanish Crown's monopoly of the
chocolate trade came to an end. In a few years the knowledge of
it had spread through France, Italy, Germany, and England."
(from "The History of Chocolate and Cocoa" published by The
Nestle Company)
In 1847 the first solid chocolate bar was created by Fry & Sons
in Bristol, England. They mixed cocoa powder, cocoa butter
extracted from the roasted cacao beans, and sugar. The first
milk chocolate bar was created in 1875 in Switzerland by Daniel
Peters. Fast forward to the present day and we have chocolate
bars, chocolate sauce, chocolate chip cookies, chocolate Easter
eggs, chocolate-dipped strawberries, chocolate-covered ants,
chocolate fondue, chocolate truffles, and just about anything
else imaginable.
Finally, the first chocolate factory in the United States was
founded in 1765 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Something tells me
it wasn't as colorful and exciting as Willie Wonka's factory!