24 Feb 2008 12:33:15 | Christine Breen
Did you know chocolate was originated in Central America? That
it used to be a treat only to the rich? Chocolate has a
fascinating history!
The Olmecs occupied a small area south of Veracruz and were the
first cultivators of the cacao pod. The Mayans were next, just
south of present day Mexico, to elevate chocolate to status of
the Gods. They named the cacao tree Cacahuaquchtl (tree) as they
were concerned no other tree was worth naming. They believed the
tree belonged to the gods and that the pods growing from the
tree were an offering from the gods to man. They Mayans were the
originators of a bitter brew made from cacao beans. It was a
luxury drink enjoyed by kings and noblemen. Thankfully we can
all enjoy chocolate now!
Christopher Columbus, in 1502, reached the island of Guanaja off
the coast of Honduras. As legend goes he was greeted by natives
that gave him a sackful of cacao beans in exchange for some of
his own merchandise. When Cortes arrived seventeen years later
the cacao beans were being used as food and a form of currency.
It was reported that a slave could be bought for one hundred
cacao beans. At the time, two hundred small cacao beans were
worth one Spanish real.
The Spanish helped develop cacao plantations in Mexico, Ecuador,
Venezuela, Peru, Jamaica and Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican
Republic). Cacao production has since spread all over the world
but the cacao from these original regions still produce the most
highly prized variety of cacao bean. The first ever chocolate
processing plant was set up in Spain in 1580. From then on the
popularity of chocolate gradually spread to the other European
countries.
The Dutch transplanted the tree to their East Indian states in
the early seventeenth century and from there it spread to the
Philippines, New Guinea, Samoa and Indonesia with a large degree
of success made possible by the exploitation of hundreds of
thousands of African slaves. In the early nineteenth century the
Portuguese transplanted Brazilian cacao saplings to the island
of Sao Tome off the African coast and later to West Africa. By
the end of the nineteenth century the Germans had settled it in
Cameroon and British in Sri Lanka. Plantations have since spread
to Southeast Asia and Malaysia is now one of the world's leading
producers.
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