The History of Chocolate is a Record with Centuries of
Appreciation
The history of chocolate doesn't mention the delicious
confectionery's source until the ancient Mayan and Aztec
cultures came upon and recognized the value of the cacao plant.
Chocolate makers used the products of the plant for currency and
units of calculation. The first cocoa plantations were said to
have been in northern South America where the Mayans migrated in
about 600 AD.
Christopher Columbus reportedly brought the valuable beans back
to King Ferdinand after his fourth visit to the New World. These
beans and their value were overlooked at the time in the shadow
of numerous other treasures Columbus had found.
The first notable recognition of chocolate was when Spanish
explorer Hernando Cortez attended the court of Emperor Montezuma
of Mexico. Cortez brought the treasured chocolate back to the
royal court of King Charles the Fifth. The King had Monks that
were hidden away in Spanish monasteries process the cocoa beans
and was able to keep chocolate a secret for almost a century.
This created a profitable industry for Spain who then proceeded
to plant cocoa trees in its overseas colonies.
Finally, an Italian traveler by the name of Antonio Carletti
came upon the valuable chocolate and introduced it to other
parts of Europe. The first chocolate house was reported to have
been opened in 1657 in London by a Frenchman. Chocolate was
considered to be a beverage strictly for the upper class and was
priced accordingly.
Chocolate didn't make its way to the United States until 1765
when it was introduced by Irish chocolate-maker John Hanan who
imported cocoa beans from the West Indies into Massachusetts,
and refined them with the help of an American Dr. James Baker.
Together they set up America's first chocolate mill and by 1780
were making the now famous Baker's