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The Origins of Chocolate
Chocolate stirs up
the emotions like no other food. Since it's discovery, we have used
it to express our feelings, soothe our bodies and minds and
celebrate a wide array of social occasions. The origins of this
wonderful substance can be traced back over four thousand years, to
the ancient civilisations of South America.
"Aztec Indian
legend believed that cacao seeds originated in Paradise and would
bless anyone who ate them with spiritual wisdom, energy and
enhanced sexual powers.
Both Mayan and
Aztec priests offered cacao seeds to the gods and served chocolate
drinks during sacred ceremonies, and Aztec warriors ate cacao seeds
to fortify themselves in battle."
"Unbelievably, the
beans were overlooked in favour of the other discoveries Columbus
had to offer!"
"English sailors
sometimes captured Spanish galleons carrying gold and cocoa.
Ignorant to their value, they would throw the cocoa beans overboard
after tasting their bitter flavour!"
Early Discoveries
The word chocolate
comes from the Mayan word 'xocoatl' (pronounced 'shock-ohwattel'),
and the word 'cocoa' from the Aztec word 'cacahuatl' (pronounced
'ka-ka-wattel'). The cacao bean is believed to have been used
around the Mexican Gulf Coast as early as 1500 BC, but it was the
Mayan Indians in the rainforests of Central America who created the
earliest-known cocoa plantations, using the beans as
currency.
The Aztecs
discovered that roasting and grinding cocoa seeds made a nourishing
paste that could be dissolved in water. They added spices and
chilli and called this drink 'chocolatl' meaning 'bitter water'.
Only the highest levels of Aztec society could partake of this
sacred beverage and chocolate continued to be a privilege of the
elite until the early 1700's.
Spanish Discoveries
Chocolate remained
a secret from Europe until 1502, when Christopher Columbus
discovered a form of the drink in Nicaragua, and took some cocoa
beans back to the court of King Ferdinand in Spain.
And so, the
potential of the cocoa bean remained hidden. Then in 1519, the
Spanish conqueror Hernando Cortez visited the court of Emperor
Montezuma in Mexico and was presented with a golden goblet of
'chocolatl'. Realizing he had stumbled across something amazing,
Cortez took some cocoa beans back to Spain, where Spanish monks
perfected a technique to roast and grind them (they also replaced
chilli with cane sugar to improve the taste!). The chocolate drink
soon became the rage of the Spanish court, marking the beginning of
chocolate's conquest of Europe.
A Valuable Secret
The Spanish guarded
the secret of chocolatl from their European neighbours for almost
100 years, during which time they planted cocoa in their overseas
colonies, setting the scene for what was to become a major world
commodity.
Health Benefits of Chocolate
"In the fifteenth
century chocolate was prescribed as a medicine to boost the
weakened body, and by the late sixteenth century Parisians were
using chocolate to treat an astonishing range of maladies,
including indigestion, nervous conditions and venereal
disease!"
The use of
chocolate for medicinal purposes stretches back to the fourth
century, when it was used as
a wound dressing. "Allegedly Emperor
Montezuma always drank a full goblet of chocolate prior to entering
his harem!"
"In the fifteenth
century chocolate was prescribed as a medicine to boost the
weakened body, and by the late sixteenth century Parisians were
using chocolate to treat an astonishing range of maladies,
including indigestion, nervous conditions and venereal
disease!"
The 17th century
diarist, Samuel Pepys, was a firm believer in the energising
properties of chocolate, and took it to relieve hangovers, while
Napoleon carried it with him in battle, eating it when he needed an
energy boost.
The 20th and 21st
centuries have seen continued debate about the health and
well-being benefits of chocolate, including:-
Claims that eating
chocolate can help you live longer - it contains powerful
antioxidant phenols, which can lower the risk of heart
disease
Claims that eating
chocolate can help lower blood pressure - it contains flavonols,
which help prevent oxidation of the blood cells
Claims that eating
chocolate is healthy - the cocoa butter used to make it is broken
down by the liver and behaves in the body like a mono-unsaturated
fat (such as olive oil)
Claims that
chocolate has aphrodisiac properties - the Aztecs forbade women to
eat it for this very reason. This legend still persists today, with
ongoing speculation that chocolate reproduces the feelings of being
in love, possibly through the presence of the stimulant PEA
(phenylethylamine), which boosts energy levels and increases
serotonin in the brain, triggering sensations of pleasure. The more
widely acknowledged belief is that chocolate makes people feel good
because of the sensual pleasure it delivers - which explains much
more succinctly our enduring love for this wonderful
substance.
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