Chocolate
Through the Years
The story of chocolate, as far back as we know it, begins
with the discovery of America.
Until 1492, the Old World knew nothing at all about the delicious and stimulating
flavor that was to become the favorite of millions.
The Court of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella got its
first look at the principal ingredient of chocolate when Columbus returned
in triumph from America and laid before the Spanish throne a treasure trove
of many strange and wonderful things. Among these were a few dark brown
beans that looked like almonds and seemed most unpromising. There were
cocoa beans, today's source of all our chocolate and cocoa.
The King and Queen never dreamed how important cocoa
beans could be, and it remained for Hernando Cortez, the great Spanish
explorer, to grasp the commercial possibilities of the New World offerings.
Chocolate
Spreads to Europe
Spanish monks, who had been consigned to process the cocoa
beans, finally let the secret out. It did not take long before chocolate
was acclaimed throughout Europe as a delicious, health-giving
food. For a while it reigned as the drink at the fashionable
Court of France. Chocolate drinking spread across the Channel to Great
Britain, and in 1657 the first of many famous English Chocolate Houses
appeared.
The hand methods of manufacture used by small shops gave
way in time to the mass production of chocolate. The transition was hastened
by the advent of a perfected steam engine which mechanized the cocoa grinding
process. By 1730, chocolate had dropped in price from three dollars or
more per pound to within the financial reach of all. The invention of the
cocoa press in 1828 reduced the prices even further and helped to improve
the the quality of the beverage by squeezing out part of the cocoa butter,
the fat that occurs naturally in cocoa beans. From then on, drinking chocolate
had more of the smooth consistency and the pleasing flavor it has today.
The 19th Century marked two more revolutionary developments
in the history of chocolate. In 1847, an English company introduced solid
"eating chocolate" through the development
of fondant chocolate, a smooth and velvety variety that has almost completely
replaced the old coarse grained chocolate which formerly dominated the
world market. The second development occurred in 1876 in Vevey, Switzerland,
when Daniel Peter devised a way of adding milk to the chocolate, creating
the product we enjoy today known as milk chocolate.
Chocolate
Comes To America
In the United States of America, the production of chocolate
proceeded at a faster pace than anywhere else in the world. It was in the
pre-revolutionary New England -- 1765, to be exact -- that the first chocolate
factory was established.
Chocolate has gained so much importance since that time,
that any interruption in its supply would be keenly felt.
During World War II, the U.S. government recognized chocolate's
role in the nourishment and group spirit of the Allied Armed Forces, so
much so that it allocated valuable shipping space for the importation of
cocoa beans. Many soldiers were thankful for the pocket chocolate bars
which gave them the strength to carry on until more food rations could
be obtained. Today, the U.S. ARmy D-rations include three 4-ounce chocolate
bars. Chocolate has even been taken into space as part of the diet of U.S.
astronauts.