We just
celebrated Valentine's Day, the day the chocolate industry happily counts its
profits along with florists and jewelers. Certainly other items also come
to mind such as cards, but chocolate reigns supreme for many Valentine gift givers and
recipients.
The
history of chocolate goes back over two thousand years. Cocoa has long been associated with passion,
romance, and love. It's a concept that
goes back to the Aztecs with archaeological records indicating that the Mayans
were consuming cocoa as long ago as 600 B.C., possibly even earlier than that.
The
Aztecs believed it was a source of spiritual wisdom, energy, and sexual
power. It was widely served at wedding
ceremonies. The ancient civilizations of
Central and South America did not know chocolate as we do today. They consumed cocoa as a drink, its naturally
bitter taste possibly altered by adding chili peppers to the water and cocoa.
When the
Spanish explorers first brought cocoa home with them in 1585, they experimented
by mixing it with sugar and vanilla to make a sweeter tasting drink. The result was a type of hot chocolate
popular among the upper classes who were the only ones who could afford
it. Cocoa was also added to baked goods
to give them added flavor. By the first
half of the eighteenth century cocoa production had increased and the price
fallen so that it became affordable to the general population of Europe and
also the European colonies in the New World.
By the
nineteenth century things were moving along nicely for those involved in the
manufacture of chocolate. In 1828,
Conrad van Houton of Holland invented a process to make a refined cocoa powder
which increased the output of the usable powder from a given crop of cocoa
beans which further lowered the price.
The
first chocolate candies as we know them today were invented in the 1860s by
Cadbury, a British candy maker, who was also the first to sell them in a
heart-shaped box for Valentine's Day.
Another
big advance came in 1878 when a Swiss chocolate seller, Daniel Peter, invented
a process for making candy out of milk chocolate—a process picked up by
Nestle. In 1913 Jules Sechaud, a Swiss
chocolate maker, created the first chocolate candy with cream and other
fillings and the modern soft centered chocolate candies were born.
And thus
chocolate candies joined the ranks of flowers and jewelry in the courtship
ritual.
Chocolate,
including chocolate candy, is liked by most people, but women tend to have a
somewhat greater affinity for it than men.
Chocolate is more than food. It
not only fills your stomach, it also makes you feel good. Many people believe that chocolate is an
aphrodisiac. While it is true that
chocolate does contain organic substances which have a physical feel good affect on the body, the
amounts are not that great.
Critics
claim the benefits of eating chocolate are small compared to the sugar and fat
contained in a chocolate bar. However,
the best chocolate—dark chocolate with high cocoa butter content rather than
milk chocolate—has no added fat with a high percentage of cocoa solids and
correspondingly less sugar. Chocolate
will never be considered a health food based on its nutritional value, but it
is still good for you. It's good for
your heart, relieves stress, and makes you feel good. What more could you want?
Chocolate
has long been associated with passion, romance, and love. This association goes all the way back to the
Aztecs. Valentine's Day is a celebration
of romance. Chocolate is both an
everyday pleasure and a token of love.
Valentine's Day and chocolate make a perfect match. Chocolate is given as a token of love and is
equally viable as a peace offering when a man has done something to anger his
love.
Chocolate—the
all purpose taste treat that's good any time of the year.
2 comments:
Yep! Chocolate is good anytime of the year - or the day, for that matter. And I must disagree - I think chocolate should be considered as a food group! Part protein, part carb, part fat - yum! Did you know that in Europe, calories on chocolate bars are listed as "energy units?" I rest my case.
Ashantay: Hmmm...since the source of chocolate grows on trees, does that make it a fruit? Or maybe since it is derived from plants, it might be a vegetable. Either way, both fruit and vegetables are good for you!! I like the concept of energy units.
Thanks for your comment.
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