Ladies, I just wanted to give you an education before our chocolate party here is a brief history.....Also on the spriritual note Everything you do in word or deed to it in [sweetness} to the Lord. May God Bless you today. I am praying for you this morning!
At a Glance: The History of Chocolate…The tasty secret of the cacao (kah KOW) tree was discovered 2,000 years ago in the tropical rainforests of the Americas. The pods of this tree contain seeds that can be processed into chocolate. The story of how chocolate grew from a local Mesoamerican beverage into a global sweet encompasses many cultures and continents.
The first people known to have made chocolate were the ancient cultures of Mexico and Central America. These people, including the Maya and Aztec, mixed ground cacao seeds with various seasonings to make a spicy, frothy drink.
Later, the Spanish conquistadors brought the seeds back home to Spain, where new recipes were created. Eventually, and the drink’s popularity spread throughout Europe. Since then, new technologies and innovations have changed the texture and taste of chocolate, but it still remains one of the world’s favorite flavors.
Chocolate’s Roots in Ancient Mesoamerica
We tend to think of chocolate as a sweet candy created during modern times. But actually, chocolate dates back to the ancient peoples of Mesoamerica who drank chocolate as a bitter beverage.
For these people, chocolate wasn’t just a favorite food—it also played an important role in their religious and social lives.
The ancient Maya grew cacao and made it into a beverage.
The first people clearly known to have discovered the secret of cacao were the Classic Period Maya (250-900 C.E. [A.D.]). The Maya and their ancestors in Mesoamerica took the tree from the rainforest and grew it in their own backyards, where they harvested, fermented, roasted, and ground the seeds into a paste.
When mixed with water, chile peppers, cornmeal, and other ingredients, this paste made a frothy, spicy chocolate drink.
The Aztecs adopted cacao.
By 1400, the Aztec empire dominated a sizeable segment of Mesoamerica. The Aztecs traded with Maya and other peoples for cacao and often required that citizens and conquered peoples pay their tribute in cacao seeds—a form of Aztec money.
Like the earlier Maya, the Aztecs also consumed their bitter chocolate drink seasoned with spices—sugar was an agricultural product unavailable to the ancient Mesoamericans.
Drinking chocolate was an important part of Maya and Aztec life.
Many people in Classic Period Maya society could drink chocolate at least on occasion, although it was a particularly favored beverage for royalty. But in Aztec society, primarily rulers, priests, decorated soldiers, and honored merchants could partake of this sacred brew.
Chocolate also played a special role in both Maya and Aztec royal and religious events. Priests presented cacao seeds as offerings to the gods and served chocolate drinks during sacred ceremonies.
Until the 1500s, no one in Europe knew anything at all about the delicious drink that would later become a huge hit worldwide. Spain’s search for a route to riches led its explorers to the Americas and introduced them to chocolate’s delicious flavor.
Eventually, the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs made it possible to import chocolate back home, where it quickly became a court favorite. And within 100 years, the love of chocolate spread throughout the rest of Europe.
For hundreds of years, the chocolate-making process remained relatively unaltered. But by the mid 1700s, the blossoming Industrial Revolution saw the emergence of innovations that changed the future of chocolate.
A steady stream of new inventions and advertising helped set the stage for solid chocolate candy to become the globally favored sweet it is today
Thursday, February 11, 2010
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Just another fact: the food of the Gods, given to the Mayans from the God Quixicotle (sp), who disappeared into the ocean but not before promising to return that is why the Aztecs thought when Cortez appeared that he was a God and gave him all their chocolate. This all happened just before he wiped out the people. Ladies if you are bringing something that requires a recipe please bring a copy so we can share it. Also, my groomer Karen is really having a tough time and I told her our women's group would pray for her. Please lift her up and the problems she is encountering. Thank you Becky
ReplyDeleteI just saw a show about chocolate on the History channel last night! It's amazing how God makes these plants that don't look like or in a normal way of thinking you would ever get the same end product from it. When they broke open that cacoa pod you would never have thought it was anything like chocolate!! Thanks Amanda! You do a great job -- and Becky, we'll all be praying for your friend. Debbie Vaughn
ReplyDeleteAmazing!!! I had no idea that chocolate had been around so long. But I could not even imagine chocolate and chile pepper together.
ReplyDeleteI am looking forward to lots of tasty treats on the 23rd. Aren't we all thankful that God chose to give us such a wonderful plant as the cacao tree. Please pray for Whitney. Darrin had to take her to the ER last night. She was trying to pass a kidney stone and she is still having some problems and not feeling well.
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry will pray for her. Bless her heart i hear that is terribly painful. Becky
ReplyDeleteThankful some people had the foresight to invent something as beautiful as chocolate! LOVE IT! So excited for tomorrow night!
ReplyDeleteIt's almost time! Chocolate time that is. Baked fudge in the oven making house smell heavenly. Cindy Marrero
ReplyDeleteI must be the lazy one of the bunch...All you are wonderful bakers and you can count on me to go to the store for mine. Darlene
ReplyDeleteI was so impressed that none of us brought the same chocolate item. I think we could have a great fund-raiser. If we would have charged a fee to sample all of those yummy chocolate dishes, we could make a ton of money!!!
ReplyDelete