World Chocolate Day: A Not-So-Brief And Bitter History Of This Sweet Treat

As you unwrap your next bar of chocolate, or sink in your teeth into a chocolate confection, remember, to consume chocolate is to gulp down its entire bittersweet chequered history

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As you unwrap your next bar of chocolate, or sink in your teeth into a chocolate confection, remember, to consume chocolate is to gulp down its entire bittersweet chequered history

Thanks to the power of advertising, today chocolate is the undisputed symbol of comfort, sensuality, gratification and love. Established as an essential part of several modern-day rituals, this guilty pleasure is immensely loved across world. On World Chocolate Day, let’s take a look at this treat’s history—which, at places, can prove to be a little hard to swallow.

1. Chocolate is made from the fruit of the cacao trees which are native to Central and South America. These fruits contain around 40 cacao beans, which are then dried and roasted to produce chocolate. Wondering why we haven’t mentioned cocoa beans? The Spanish word for chcahuatl, which is what the Aztecs called these beans, is cacao. It is believed that English traders, who took the beans to Europe, misspelled the word, giving us the term cocoa.

2. Though it is unclear what circumstances led to the discovery of the bean and its delicious magic, it has been established that chocolate existed in Mesoamerica from around 1400 B.C. Ancient Olmec pots and vessel sdating back to that period have been found with traces of theobromine (a stimulant compound found in both chocolate and tea). Until the 16th century, chocolate only existed in that region, and in a form quite unlike what we see today—the beans were ground and mixed with cornmeal and chilli, to prepare a bitter, frothy drink. Sweetened chocolate came into existence only when Europeans invaded the Americas.

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