Etymologists can trace the origin of the word
"chocolate" back to the ancient Aztec word "xocoatl". This word referred to a bitter drink which
was brewed from raw cacao beans
harvested in the area. The Latin name given to the cacao tree, Theobroma cacao,
means "food of the gods" and it certainly was treated as such.
1400 BC
The history of chocolate begins in Mesoamerica which is what
the area of Mexico and Central America at the time was referred to as. In 2007,
anthropologists announced the discovery of cacao residue on pottery excavated
in Honduras that could date back from 1400 BCE (before common era) or even 1700
BCE. The sweet pulp of the cacao fruit was apparently fermented into an
alcoholic beverage of the time. Not really chocolate but what it does is
establishes that the trees were present and known of.
The problem with cocoa is that the flesh of the fruit is
sweet and delicious and the cacao seeds are poisonous to humans as well as
being bitter with no flavour. What would possibly have to happen is a mass
consumption of the cacao fruit took place, the seeds were all dumped in a big
pile and fermented. Someone noticed the smell and checked the beans and noticed
the membrane was gone and they smelled different and perhaps some animal ate
them or something. Somehow the link between fermenting the seeds and changing
flavours happened and suddenly the beans became palatable to consume in a
drink.
In order to be able to get to the chocolate we have today,
we have to traverse eons but first we have to get to a point where people are
indeed using or eating cacao. In the publication Antiquity Vol 81 Issue 314
December 2007 we find reference to the possibility of ‘cacao’ being used or at
least stored. The Mokaya archaeological site of Paso de la Amada on the Pacific
Coast of Chiapas, Mexico, and the Olmec archaeological site of El Manatí on the
Gulf Coast of Veracruz, Mexico, have each yielded one ceramic vessel that
contain residues from the preparation of cacao beverages during the Early
Formative (1900-900 BC) period. That analysis looks specifically for markers
which could be present if something was simply stored in a vessel and of course
it could have been part of the funerary rites that this wonderful fruit was
left as an offering. Their analysis,
they assert, showed that chocolate (Theobroma cacao) was consumed by the Mokaya
as early as 1900 BC and by pre-Olmec peoples as early as 1750 BC, pushing back
the chemical evidence of cacao use by some 700 years.
This is no proof of the consumption of chocolate, cacao or
anything more than the fact it was around and important enough to be stored in
a pot. There is, of course, other evidence around the consumption of cacao as a
drink which the researchers are using to extend the theory that chocolate was
consumed as a beverage at this time. Importantly, what the research does not
point out is whether the other elements commonly included were present such as
honey residue or spice residue. The lack of mention could be due to limitations
in the word count of the article or because it wasn’t tested for. There is also
the chance the residue contained only the cacao they were looking for.
While a romantic notion that chocolate has been enjoyed for
millennia, it is difficult to justify that assertion simply based on the
findings. While the tree itself was around, making it a natural inhabitant of
the environment, the manipulation of the cacao seeds through the fermentation
process, drying, roasting, conching and tempering to bring us our current
chocolate is very much further down the line.
While we know chocolate dates back to the Aztecs, could
chocolate be even older? What we know as chocolate is extremely modern but the
tree has been used for millennia. How did chocolate come to be? Here we look at
the earliest evidence to trace the history of chocolate…
Great article, as I've always thought of chocolate as being rather natural I didn't take into account the processing of the bean and therefore actual chocolate as we know it being much later. Thank you
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