setill.com setill.com
Home :> About Us :> Add Url :> Privacy :> Terms of Service :> Add Your Article
Search:   
 

Jamicia's Blue Mountain

The history of Jamicia's Blue Mountain Coffee. The most exquisite and expensive coffee in the world. ... - Sierra Martin
 

Take a Mop to Your Meats!

Mops, sometimes referred to as sops or bastes, are liquids that are applied to meats during the slow ... - Joe Johnson
 

Espresso Drinks - The Classic Category

Espresso is more than just a term describing a coffee brewing method. The word "Espresso" has grown ... - Michael Russell
 
 

Reduce Free Radicals: Antioxidants and Olive Oil

Nutrition used to be something like: "eat fresh food and stay away from potato chips" ...now we are ... - James Zeller
 

Grilling Hamburgers and Sittin' on an Old Ice Cream Freezer

Enjoy the memories of grilling hamburgers, backyard cookouts and ice cream suppers. You will put a s ... - Steve Melton
 

The Phenomenom of Cinnamon

Myths and legends about cinnamon, cinnamon as a medicinal spice, how to cook with cinnamon and cinna ... - Bruce Burnett
 

Beer, Wine and Your Bones

Beer and wine lovers ? check this out! Research has shown that beer, which contains silicon, may als ... - Michele Webb
 

Wine Storage - Hints And Tips

Few wine lovers are lucky enough to possess perfect purpose built, cavernous, subterranean cellars. ... - David Roberts
 
 

  Home » Cooking & Drinking » Chocolate& Coco
   
 

Chocolate History - Part I

   

Author: Michael Russell

In this first of a multi part series we're going to explore the wonderful history of one of mankind's greatest obsessions, chocolate.

Chocolate first appeared on the scene about 4,000 years ago when the ancient Aztec and Mayan cultures discovered the cacao plant. The plant itself is said to have originated in the Amazon or Orinoco basin.

Around 600 AD, which is the earliest "modern" recorded account of chocolate growing, the Mayans made their way to the northern regions of South America. It is there that they set up the first known cocoa plantations in the Yucatan. However, it is suggested that the Mayans knew about cocoa many centuries earlier and used it as a form of payment for goods and services.

The Mayans and Aztecs took beans from what is known as the cacao tree and from them made a drink they called xocoatl. Aztec Indian legend says that cacao seeds were brought to them from paradise and that the wisdom, power and knowledge that they gained was from eating the fruit of the cacao tree. Obviously, this has never been proven.

The actual legend says that the god Quetzalcoatl made his way to Earth on a beam from the Morning Star carrying a cacao tree from paradise and gave it to the people there as an offering. Supposedly he taught them how to roast and grind the seeds into a paste that could be dissolved in water. The Aztecs then added some spices to this mixture and called the drink chocolatl, which translated means bitter water. It was believed that this drink, when consumed, would give a person universal wisdom and knowledge.

The word we know as chocolate is said to have been derived from the Mayan xocoatl. Cocoa is said to come from the Aztec word cacahuatl. The Mexican-Indian word chocolate comes from combining choco, which means foam and atl, which means water. Early forms of chocolate were only in beverage form. In early Mesoamerican marriages, part of the marriage ceremony was to share a mug of frothy chocolate.

In 1923 Arthur W. Knapp wrote a book called "The Cocoa and Chocolate Industry" where he points out that if we are to believe in Mexican mythology, chocolate was consumed by the gods in paradise and the cocoa seed was given to man as a special blessing by the god of the air.

Ancient Mexicans believed that the goddess of food and the goddess of water were the guardian goddesses of cocoa. Each year the ancient Mexicans would perform human sacrifices to these gods, giving their sacrifice cocoa at his or her last meal.

It is interesting to note that in many accounts of the early days of chocolate, that the cocoa bean or cacoa tree were treated as divine rights from the gods and for the most part the chocolate made from these was consumed mostly as part of religious rituals and not used as a part of everyday life.

In our next article in this series we'll look at more modern account of chocolate history.

Author Bio:

Michael Russell

Michael Russell has been involved in online business since early 2001, and whilst spending countless hours each month running his business still finds time for various hobbies and interests.

You can also reach this article by using: chocolate chip cookies, chocolate cake, chocolate chips, chocolate truffles, white chocolate
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Dairy
 
Reduce Free Radicals: Antioxidants and Olive Oil
 
Heating Vegetable Oil to Frying Temps Forms Toxic Compound
 
Safe Food Storage - Refrigeration
 
English Coffee
 
The Types of Gourmet Coffee
 
Mother's Day Gift Baskets
 
A Guide to Buying Australian Wine
 
Organization Helps Change The World With Coffee
 
The Coffee Culture in the USA
 
 
 
Multiple links exchange
 

Sports & Adventure

Computers & Networking

Home & Garden

Academics & Learning

Business & Services

Teens & Children

Self Healing

Automobiles

Events & News

Health & Therapy

Jobs & Careers

Technology & Science

Policies & Law

Hotels & Travel

Property & Estate

Healthcare & Medicine

Banking & Finance

Online Shopping

Music & Entertainment

Creative Arts

Online & Board Games

People & Society

Cooking & Drinking

Fashion & Relationships


 
   Home :> Privacy :> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2008 www.setill.com