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Chocolate Facts and Trivia - The History of Chocolates

Floral arrangements and flower bouquets delivered from the Internet Greetings Chocolate Lovers! Welcome to cupidflowershop.com's History of Chocolate, trivia and interesting facts page.

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Everything you Never Needed to Know About Chocolate!

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Interesting Chocolate Facts and Trivia

The word chocolate comes from the Aztec word, "cacahuatl".

The Aztecs and Mayans used the cacao bean as a unit of currency.

The Aztecs drank chocolate in a bitter drink which also contained chillies, cornmeal and hallucinogenic mushrooms. Imagine that!

In 1879, in Switzerland, Rodolphe Lindt developed "conching", a way of kneading chocolate during manufacture, which gives it a smooth consistency.

The botanical name for the cacao bean is Theobroma, which is Greek for "food of the gods".

The cacao bean was first brought to Europe by the Spanish conquistadors in 1528. Traders probably spelt the name incorrectly, hence "cocoa" instead of "cacao".

In seventeenth-century Europe, chocolate became popular as a sweet drink made with sugar and vanilla.

Henri Nestle was the first to create milk chocolate by adding condensed milk to the mixture when making chocolate bars.

Cacao trees produce pods, each of which contains 20 to 50 cacao beans.

Cacao beans are fermented, dried, roasted and ground before being used to produce chocolate.

White chocolate is made from cocoa butter, which is the fat extract from crushed roasted cacao beans. White chocolate contains no caffeine.

Cocoa butter makes the ultimate sensuous, yummy massage cream.

There are different varieties of cacao beans with different flavours, much the same as there are different varieties of grapes which produce different wines.

Chocolate liquor - extracted from crushed, roasted beans - is solid at room temperature but melts at 92 degrees Fahrenheit, round about tongue temperature and hence the melt-in-the-mouth pleasure effect.

Chocolate contains hundreds of chemicals including the stimulant phenylethylamine, which creates a "feel-good factor".

Chocolatiers have their own technical terms, for example, "praline" which means a mixture made from a paste of chocolate and crushed hazelnuts; or "ganache", which is a mixture of chocolate and cream with a smooth texture. The ganache chocolate was born when a French 19th-century apprentice knocked some cream into a tub of chocolate. His boss called him, "un ganache" - an imbecile!

In the eighteenth century, chocolate was regarded as an aphrodisiac (it still is!). The celebrated Italian libertine, Giacomo Casanova, took chocolate before bedding his conquests.

It's healthy? Chocolate is good for you? Recent research from Argentina suggests a chocolate-rich diet reduces damage to blood fats caused by free radicals.

In another study, volunteers who consumed 37g of chocolate a day showed increases in plasma prostacyclin levels, and reduction in leukotriene levels.

Concentration aid? Chocolate helps you concentrate... It contains a caffeine-like stimulant called theobromine and chocolate can boost low blood-sugar levels. Also chocolate is a good source of chromium, which helps to control blood sugar.

Gold bars? It boosts the economy... Last year Britons spent £3 billion on half a million tons of chocolate.

It's educational? Chocolate has literary leanings...Confectionary-inspired reading includes Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel and Chocolat by Joanne Harris.

Eggstravagant! Chocolate eggs are cheaper than Fabergè... The most expensive Easter egg wasn't made of chocolate. It was designed by Peter Carl Fabergè in the 1800s.



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Serious Chocolate History - Get your Degree in Chocolatology!

Christopher Columbus is believed to be the first European to discover chocolate. When Columbus returned to Spain in 1502 from his fourth voyage to the New World, he introduced many treasures to the court of King Ferdinand. Among them were cocoa beans, almond-shaped seeds from the cacao tree that are the source of all the chocolate and cocoa products we enjoy today. A few decades later, during his conquest of Mexico, the Spanish explorer, Hernando Cortez, found Aztec Indians using cocoa beans to prepare a drink called "chocolatl", meaning "warm liquid". The Aztec Emperor Montezuma, who reportedly drank 50 or more portions daily, served guests this royal drink in ceremonial golden goblets, treating it like a nectar for the gods.

In fact, the cacao tree's botanical name, Theobroma cacao, pays homage to its mythical origins. Translated from the Greek, "theobroma" means "food of the gods". The Aztecs held that prophets had brought cocoa beans to their lands. Thus, the beans were a valued commodity, not only for use as a kingly drink but also as a medium of exchange. Four cocoa beans was the price of a turkey, for example.

Cortez, who described chocolatl as "the divine drink ... which builds up resistance and fights fatigue", and his countrymen, conceived the idea of sweetening the bitter drink with cane sugar. The recipe for the sweetened frothy beverage underwent several more changes in Spain, where newly discovered spices such as cinnamon and vanilla were added as flavorings.

Spain wisely began to plant cacao trees in its overseas possessions, but consigned the processing of cocoa beans to monasteries under a veil of secrecy. They kept the recipe to themselves for nearly 100 years, but the secret was finally leaked to the rest of Europe. As first, chocolate was restricted to the nobility. In fact, the Spanish Princess Maria Theresa presented cocoa beans as an engagement gift to Louis XIV, and soon chocolate was the rage of the fashionable Court of France. The famous historic figures Casanova and Madame DuBarry both believed that chocolate was conducive to romance. So popular did chocolate become that in 1657 the first of many English "chocolate houses" was established, to serve the drink to the general public.

Chocolate drinking arrived in the American colonies in 1765, when the first chocolate factory opened in New England. Even Thomas Jefferson extolled chocolate's virtues, describing "...the superiority of chocolate for both health and nourishment".

Mass production of chocolate began when the steam engine, invented by James Watt in 1770, mechanized the cocoa bean grinding process, thereby replacing the time-consuming hand method of manufacture. The invention of the cocoa press in 1828 by C.J. Van Houten did much to improve the quality of the beverage by squeezing out part of the cocoa butter, the fat that occurs naturally in cocoa beans. In the middle of the 19th century, two significant developments revolutionized the chocolate industry. In 1847, an English company introduced solid "eating" chocolate. Now the public could enjoy chocolate eaten out of the hand as well as in the form of a drink. Three decades later, at Vevey, Switzerland, Daniel Peter found that milk could be added to chocolate to make a new product, appropriately named milk chocolate.

Since that time, chocolate has been manufactured in solid bar form and to enrobe confections, as well as an ingredient in baked goods, ice cream, and flavored milk. The value of chocolate as a portable food for both energy and morale has long been recognized. From the Civil War on, chocolate has been carried into the field by soldiers.

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