The history of chocolate dates back over 5,000 years, when the cacao tree was first domesticated in present-day southeast Ecuador. Soon introduced to Mesoamerica, it gained cultural significance as an elite drink among different cultures, including the Mayans and Aztecs. Cacao was extremely important: considered a gift from the gods, it was used as a currency as well as medicinally and ceremonially. Chocolate was often associated with the heart, and was believed to be psychedelic. It is unclear when chocolate was first drunk, and there is evidence of Mesoamerican groups drinking an alcoholic drink made by fermenting the pulp around cacao seeds.

The morning chocolate by Pietro Longhi; Venice, 1775–1780

Spanish conquistadors encountered chocolate in 1519, and brought it to Spain as a medicine. From Spain, it gained popularity among the European elite over the following three centuries, and was debated for its medicinal and religious merits, and understood as an aphrodisiac. In the 19th century, technological innovations completely changed chocolate, from a drink for the elite, to a solid, milky block increasingly eaten by the public. That century saw the rise of Swiss and British chocolate makers, and production was industrialized.

Since World War I, chocolate has undergone further developments, creating couverture and white chocolate, while ingredients such as cheaper fats and lecithin were added. Chocolate production increased dramatically, and new markets in Asia and Africa have opened up. Attitudes towards the quality of chocolate, and the ethics of its production have shifted, as awareness of child labor has risen. As of 2018, the global trade of chocolate was worth more than $100 billion USD, and production was concentrated among a small set of cocoa processors and chocolate makers.

Etymology

edit

Chocolate is a Spanish loanword, first recorded in English in 1604,[1] and in Spanish in 1579.[2] However, the word's origins beyond this are contentious.[3] While it is popularly believed that chocolate derives from the Nahuatl word chocolatl, early texts documenting the Nahuatl word for chocolate drink use a different term, cacahuatl, meaning "cacao water". Several alternatives have therefore been proposed. In one, chocolate is derived from the hypothetical Nahuatl word xocoatl, meaning "bitter drink". This is considered unlikely as there is no clear reason why the 'sh' sound represented by 'x' would change to 'ch', or why an 'l' would be added.[4] Another theory suggests that chocolate comes from chocolatl, meaning 'hot water' in a Mayan language. However, there is no evidence of the form 'chocol' being used to mean hot.[4]

Despite the uncertainty about its Nahuatl origin, there is some agreement that chocolate likely derives from the Nawat word chikola:tl.[5] However, whether chikola:tl means 'cacao-beater' (referring to whisking cocoa to create foam), is contested, as the meaning of chico is unknown.[6][7] According to anthropologist Kathryn Sampeck, chocolate originally referred to one cacao beverage among many, which included annatto and was made in what is today Guatemala. According to Sampeck, it became the generic word for cacao beverages c. 1580, when the Izalcos from that area were the most notable producers of cacao.[8]

Early pre-Columbian

edit

Origin in South America

edit

The cacao tree is native to the Amazon rainforest.[9] Evidence of cacao domestication exists as early as c. 3300 BC in the Amazon in southeast Ecuador by the Mayo-Chinchipe culture, before it was introduced to Mesoamerica.[10][11] This emerged from research into residue in ceramics, which revealed starch grains specific to the cacao tree, residue of theobromine (a compound found in high levels in cacao), and fragments of ancient DNA with sequences unique to the cacao tree.[12][13] The domesticated cacao tree was then spread along the Pacific coast of South America.[14] It is unclear when a drink that could be considered chocolate was first consumed, as opposed to other cacao beverages, given that there is evidence the Olmecs fermented the sweet pulp surrounding the seeds into an alcoholic beverage.[15][16]

Mesoamerica

edit

Cultivation, consumption, and cultural use of cacao were extensive in Mesoamerica.[17] Inhabitants of ancient Mesoamerica created varietals of cacao that grew abundant, high-quality fruit.[18] The earliest evidence of cacao drink consumption in the region dates to the Early Formative Period (1900–900 BC). On the Pacific coast of Chiapas, Mexico, the Mokayan people consumed cacao drinks by 1900 BC. Archaeological evidence from the Gulf Coast of Veracruz, Mexico, demonstrates cacao preparation by pre-Olmec peoples by 1750 BC.[19] Traces of cacao have been found in bowls and jars dated between 1800 and 1000 BC in the city of Puerto Escondido, Mexico. The decorations on these high-quality ceramics suggest that cocoa was a centrepiece to social gatherings among people of high social status.[20]

Although there is evidence that the Olmec consumed cacao as a beverage, little evidence remains on how it was processed. Some evidence suggests cacao consumption in the Olmec regions of San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán. Large vases found suggest that the Olmec used cacao for mass gathering events such as sacrificial rituals.[21]

Mayan

edit
 
Image from a Maya ceramic depicting a container of frothed chocolate

Early evidence for chocolate consumption is found among the Mayans, in 600 BC.[22] Chocolate was used in official ceremonies and religious rituals, at feasts, weddings and festivals, as funerary offerings and for medicinal purposes.[23][24] Both cocoa beans and the vessels and instruments used for preparing and serving chocolate were given as important gifts and tributes.[23] It is unknown how, or if, commoners consumed chocolate.[25] Consumption was restricted to adult men, as the stimulating effects were considered unsuitable for women and children.[22] Cocoa beans were also used as a currency by at least 400 BC.[24][26] Cocoa's social and religious significance motivated rich hobbyist gardeners to cultivate it in Yucatán, despite the challenging growing conditions. Nevertheless, the majority of cocoa consumed was imported, primarily from Chontalpa, Tabasco.[24]

To make chocolate, cacao beans were fermented, dried and roasted. The Maya then removed the husks and pounded the nibs with manos (stones) on a metate (stone surface) built over a fire, turning them into a paste.[27] This paste was hardened into solid chunks, which were broken up and mixed with water and other ingredients. When heated, a fat called cocoa butter rose to the surface and was skimmed off.[27] The basic process of fermenting, roasting and milling with metates continued unchanged until the 19th century.[28][29]

Cacao paste was flavored with additives such as earflower and vanilla.[30] Before serving, chocolate was agitated in a small container with a whisk called molinillo, then poured from a height between vessels to create a highly sought after brown foam.[25][31] This process also emulsified some cocoa butter that had been added back in.[28] To assess the quality of the drink, Mayans observed the darkness of the foam, the colour of the bubbles and the aroma, as well as the origin of beans and the flavour.[32] Chocolate was only one of several drinks made at this time out of cacao, including a drink containing maize and sapote seeds called tzune and a gruel called saca. There is uncertainty about how fresh cacao and its pulp were used in drinks.[30]

The Mayans produced writings about cacao that associated chocolate with the gods, identifying Ek Chuah as the patron god of cacao.[33][34] There is controversy among historians whether the mythological figure Hunahpu was believed to have invented cacao processing.[35] Through various eras, cacao was considered a gift from the gods.[36] In the late Mayan and during the Aztec periods, there was a strong symbolic connection between cacao and blood.[25]

After the collapse of the Mayan Empire, control over cocoa-producing regions became a source of conflict between the Toltec and rival tribes.[37] Chocolate was consumed as far north as the southern US by the elite of the Ancestral Puebloans. During the 9th to 12th centuries, cocoa was imported as part of a cacao-turquoise exchange within a Toltec-run trade network.[38] The Maya peoples introduced chocolate to the Aztecs.[22]

Aztec

edit
 
An Aztec woman generating foam by pouring chocolate from one vessel to another in the Codex Tudela

Chocolate was one of the two most important drinks to the Aztecs. It was held in particular esteem as the other important drink, octli, was alcoholic, and drunkenness was stigmatized. Chocolate was regarded as a luxurious and sensual product to be celebrated, but at the same time consumption was considered at odds with an imagined austere idealised past, being overly decadent and weakening drinkers.[39][40] It was incorrectly believed to be hallucinogenic. The Aztecs believed cacao was a gift from the god Quetzalcōātl.[41] The bean was used as a symbol for the human heart removed in human sacrifice, possibly as they were both thought to be repositories of precious liquids—blood and chocolate.[40] The association with blood was reinforced by adding annatto, a food coloring, to turn the drink red.[41]

The Aztecs used chocolate in tributes to rulers and offerings to the gods. Chocolate was drunk exclusively by the Aztec elites, including the royal house, lords, nobility, and long-distance traders known as the pochteca.[42] At banquets, chocolate was served as a digestif at the end.[43] Soldiers in battle were the only exception to this exclusivity, as chocolate was considered a stimulant.[42] Chocolate was included in their rations, eaten as pellets or wafers formed from ground cocoa.[43] While mole poblano, a sauce that contains chocolate, is commonly associated with the Aztecs, it originated in territory that was never occupied by them, and the sauce was only invented after the Spanish invasion.[44] It was served to human sacrifice victims before their execution.[41] Chocolate was also served to the sick, to treat ailments including coughs, stomach issues and fever.[45] While chocolate was not consumed in the same way as the elite among commoners, it was widely available across Mesoamerica at the time of the conquest.[46]

Cacao was imported into central Aztec territory because frost stopped cacao trees from growing there. Most of the beans came from Soconusco, a region the Aztecs had conquered specifically for its cacao.[47] The Aztecs required the conquered inhabitants pay tribute in cacao.[48] At the time of the Spanish conquest, 1.5 million trees were tended in Soconusco. Cacao was transported across Aztec territory by the pochteca, carrying 24,000 beans weighing 50–60 pounds (23–27 kg) on their backs.[41]

Although chocolate was primarily served as a drink, it was sometimes eaten.[39] It was served both hot and cold. An inferior gruel was made by adding maize.[49][50] While the highest-quality chocolate was pure, additions were often made, requiring the removal and then replacement of the foam. The most popular addition throughout Mesoamerica was dried and ground chilli, though ingredients such as honey, dried and ground vanilla or flowers, and annatto were added.[51] While Aztec chocolate drinks are commonly understood to contain cinnamon, the spice was only introduced to Mesoamerica by the Spanish conquest.[52] While some Spanish observers claimed that certain chocolate recipes were considered aphrodisiacs, these reports are not considered reliable.[51] Women were responsible for processing cacao into a beverage.[41]

The Spanish conquistadors recorded the currency value of the cocoa beans, noting in 1545 that thirty beans could buy a small rabbit, one bean could buy a large tomato, and a hundred beans could purchase a turkey hen.[53] Royal stores were claimed to hold massive amounts of cocoa beans.[54] Cocoa beans were often counterfeited, with substitutes including dough made of amaranth, wax or broken avocado pits.[53]

Introduction to Europe

edit
 
A Man Milling Cacao into Chocolate with a Metate and a Mano, c. 1680-1780 by an unknown Spanish artist

European encounters

edit

On the fourth voyage of Columbus, on 15 August 1502, the expedition came upon a Mayan trading canoe near an island in the Gulf of Honduras. A member of the Columbus expedition, while documenting the items on the canoe, noted the apparent value of cocoa beans based on the canoe crew's reaction when beans were dropped.[55] However, they did not know what they were, nor that they could be used to make a drink. Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés may have been the first European to encounter chocolate when he observed it in the court of Moctezuma II in 1520.[56][57]

By 1524, the Spanish had established control over central Mexico, and expanded cacao production while increasing tribute requirements[58] in "frenzied" efforts to profit from cacao.[59] Cacao was produced using forced labor under the encomienda labor system. During the 16th century native Americans experienced a massive population decline and production decreased.[60] In response, more cacao was produced on the Guayaquil coast of Ecuador, as well as in Venezuela, although of a lower quality and using slaves from Africa. This cacao was argued to be inferior as it was not the same variety as the Criollo type grown in Mesoamerica: this was the Forastero, which was native to South America and while it yielded more fruit and was more disease resistant, it tasted more dry and bitter.[a][62][63] As Guayaquil cacao flooded the Mexican market in the early 1600s, dropping prices, Guatemalan officials among others worked to ban Guayaquil cacao from the ports of Guatemalan ports and those of New Spain. Despite bans on importing this cacao around 1630, Guayaquil cacao continued to be exported by smugglers.[64] The Spanish introduced cacao to the Caribbean around 1525, where it spread from Trinidad to Jamaica.[65]

Chocolate was an acquired taste for the Spanish living in the Americas, and they found the foam to be particularly objectionable.[50][58] A traveler, Girolamo Benzoni, came to Guatemala, where he was welcomed by the Indigenous people with a chocolate drink. He reportedly stated that the drink was only fit for pigs.[66] The Spaniards had to learn to like it with exposure over the years.[66] The primarily male Spanish population was systematically exposed to chocolate through the Aztec women they married or took as concubines. As Spanish women immigrated and the Spanish elite ceased marrying local women, Aztec women remained in households as domestic servants.[58][67] Spaniards, casta and Afro-Guatemalan women who couldn't afford domestic servants likely learnt to make chocolate from their neighbors.[68] To adapt chocolate to Spanish tastes, it was served warm, often sweetened, and flavored with familiar spices. The foam was created by just beating the liquid with a molinillo (a wooden whisk) rather than by also pouring it from a height.[67][69] This habit of serving chocolate spiced to mimic the Mesoamerican flavorings had declined by the 18th century.[70] Women almost always prepared chocolate, and only in extreme cases did a man prepare it.[b][72] During the early colonial period, missionaries sold solid sweet chocolates as delicacies, produced by nuns. These chocolates were very profitable.[73]

Spread

edit
 
Fantastic 17th-century depiction of a Turk, Chinese and Aztec drinking coffee, tea and chocolate. Coffee and tea were introduced to Europe around the same time as chocolate.[74]

The exact date when chocolate was brought to Spain is unknown, and there is no evidence Cortés was responsible for its introduction.[73] Its earliest documented introduction to the Spanish court occurred in 1544 by Qʼeqchiʼ Mayan nobles brought to Spain by Dominican friars,[56] but it was not until 1585 that the first official shipment of cacao to Europe was recorded.[73] Through the 16th century, the Spanish were interested in the medicinal qualities of Mesoamerican plants.[75] Writers such as Bernal Díaz and Francisco Hernández, the royal physician to Philip II of Spain, claimed that chocolate was an aphrodisiac,[42] and Hernández reported to Spain a range of conditions he believed chocolate and its additives could treat.[75] As a result, Spain during this period viewed chocolate primarily as a medicinal substance.[73] It wasn't until 1624 that the first recorded publication about chocolate appeared for consumption, titled Un Discurso del Chocolate by Santiago de Valverde Turices in Seville. By the mid 16th century, chocolate was being manufactured and sold in large quantities. By the17th century, Madrid had stored around 700,000 pounds of cacao.[66]

From Spain, chocolate spread to other European nations: to Portugal, to Italy in the 17th century, and then outwards. Tracing the spread of chocolate in Europe is complicated by the religious wars and shifting allegiances of the time, but it is understood that it was driven by cosmopolitanism and missionaries.[70][76] During the 17th century, drinking chocolate became very popular among the elite of Europe, and was believed to be an aphrodisiac.[74][60] It was expensive due to the high transportation costs and import duties.[77] From the late-16th century until the early 18th century, there was controversy whether chocolate was both a food and a drink, or just a drink; this distinction was important for determining if consumption violated ecclesiastical fasts.[78] Most cacao imported to Europe in the 17th–18th centuries came from Venezuela.[63]

When chocolate was introduced to France is therefore difficult to pinpoint, but evidence suggests it was first introduced as medicine.[79] The silver chocolate-pot, used to stir and beat chocolate, was thereafter invented by the French.[79] By the 1670s, drinking chocolate was widespread among French aristocratic women, despite debate over whether chocolate was medically good or bad, and it would only be settled as beneficial by 1684. Concerns about the health effects can be seen expressed in a 1671 letter by noblewoman Marie de Rabutin-Chantal:[79]

"The Marquise de Coëtlogon took so much chocolate during her pregnancy last year that she produced a small boy as black as the devil, who died."

Chocolate arrived in England from France around 1657,[80] around the same time as tea and coffee, and encountered an initial backlash from those with medical concerns.[74][81] Cocoa was supplied by Jamaican plantations, taken from the Spaniards in 1655.[74] While chocolate had begun being flavored with new, highly-perfumed ingredients such as jasmine and ambergris in Italy in the 17th century,[82] in England chocolate was a commercial product and production was simpler and less careful.[74] Chocolate was served in coffee houses to whoever could pay,[83] and by the end of the 17th century it was compulsory to include it in British Navy rations.[84] From England, chocolate spread to the North American colonies by the late-17th century.[74] Chocolate was well established among the elite of late-17th-century Philippines, brought over by the conquering Spanish.[85]

Food of the elite

edit
 
A Lady Pouring Chocolate by Jean-Étienne Liotard (1744)

In the 18th century, chocolate was considered southern European, aristocratic and Catholic. This was in contrast to the bourgeois coffee and proletarian alcohol. While the technique of producing chocolate was still very similar to that of native Americans, chocolate was also consumed as bars, pastilles, in ices, desserts, main courses and pasta.[86] Medical opinion of this time held that chocolate was medically beneficial if not consumed in excess.[87]

In Spain, Jesuits were prominent in importing and drinking chocolate until Charles III expelled them in 1767. The upper and middle class consumed chocolate for breakfast and after dinner, after drinking a glass of cold water. Guilds of chocolate grinders were formed across cities.[88] In Italy chocolate preparation varied. Following a historic use of conveying poisons, Pope Benedict XIV was rumored to have been killed by poison put in his chocolate, after he suppressed the Jesuits.[89] Chocolate was commonly used in savory recipes in Italy during the 18th century, particularly in northern Italy.[44] In France, chocolate was mainly used in desserts and confectionery.[90] The French began heating working areas of the table-mill to assist extraction in 1732.[91] Chocolaterie Lombart was founded in 1760, and is claimed to have been the first chocolate company in France.[92]

Developments to the technique of producing chocolate began in the 18th century. In 1729, a patent was granted to British apothecary Walter Churchman for a water engine that powered cocoa milling, purchased by Joseph Storrs Fry II of J. S. Fry & Sons in 1789.[93][94] In the American colonies, water-powered milling began in 1765. In 1776 in France, a hydraulic mill was invented, which spread to other European countries.[95]

Modern era

edit
edit
1880 drinking chocolate advertisement
Pre-1911 advertisement for Fry's chocolate

In 1828, Coenraad Johannes van Houten received a patent for the manufacturing process for making Dutch cocoa. The process removed cocoa butter from chocolate liquor, the result of milling, by enough to create a cake that could be pulverized into a powder. This would later permit large-scale, cheap chocolate production, in powdered and solid forms, opening up mass consumption.[96][c] At the time however, there was no market for cocoa butter, and it took until the 1860s to be widely used.[98] Chocolate was often adulterated, including by firms such as Cadbury, which resulted in the creation of food standards laws.[99][100] With improvements in production, a worker in 1890 could produce fifty times more chocolate paste than the same worker could before the Industrial Revolution.[101]

Quakers were active in chocolate entrepreneurship in the Industrial Revolution, setting up J. S. Fry & Sons, Cadbury and Rowntree's. They were teetotalers, and believed chocolate was a good alternative for alcohol.[102] In 1847, Fry's invented a method of mixing cocoa butter with cocoa powder and sugar to invent a non-brittle and dry eating chocolate,[94] commonly considered the first chocolate bar.[99] A corresponding increase in cocoa butter prices made this, for a time, a food of the elite. Competition between Cadbury and Fry's in the 19th century created the chocolate box and the chocolate Easter egg.[94][99] Quaker firms built model villages, such as Bournville, to promote worker morality and living conditions.[94] This paternalistic concern was shared by other, irreligious chocolate manufacturers.[103]

In 1819, the first chocolate factory in Switzerland was opened by François-Louis Cailler. The factory featured the first mélangeur (chocolate mixing machine), and produced chocolate more bitter than is now common.[104][105] In the 1860s, Van Houten's Cocoa alkalized cocoa powder, which improved taste and darkened appearance.[106][107] Modern milk chocolate was invented in 1875 when Swiss chocolate manufacturer Daniel Peter combined the recently invented powdered milk with chocolate, and achieved public acceptance after 1900.[104][108] While milk had previously been added to chocolate, it was expensive and difficult to keep fresh.[109] In 1879, the conching process was invented by the Swiss chocolatier Rodolphe Lindt, which heats and agitates liquid chocolate for days to change flavour and increase smoothness. Before conching was invented, chocolate had been gritty.[104] Conching was maintained by Lindt as a trade secret for more than 20 years.[110] Able to integrate more smoothly with batters and doughs, conched chocolate made chocolate a more common ingredient in baking.[111]

In the early 19th century, the Portuguese began commercial cacao growing in West Africa after their colonies in South America gained independence.[112][113] Introducing the crop to São Tomé from Brazil in 1824,[114] widespread cultivation soon spread across Africa. In bringing cacao to Africa from Brazil, the Portuguese also recreated the slave plantation system.[112] When Portugal made slavery illegal in 1869 after large international pressure, production was maintained by creating a captive workforce through "legal trickery".[115] São Tomé and Príncipe became the largest producer in 1905.[116] While cacao had historically been grown on a mix of estates and smallholdings, by 1914 the latter was becoming dominant.[117]

The price of chocolate began to drop dramatically in the 1890s and 1900s as production of chocolate shifted from the Americas to Asia and Africa.[92] From 1880 to 1914, the mass market for chocolate experienced huge growth:[107] between 1896 and 1909, chocolate consumption in the United States increased 414%,[81] and similarly quadrupled between 1880 and 1902 in England.[99] Eating chocolate overtook drinking chocolate in market share in the early 1900s,[118] but this growth was largely restricted to Western nations.[107]

After receiving the attention of journalists and activists,[119] Cadbury began inquiring into labor practices in the Portuguese cacao industry in the first decade of the 20th century. A 1908 report by Cadbury agent Joseph Burtt described the system as "de facto slavery".[120] In 1909, Fry's, Cadbury and Rowntree's boycotted plantations in Portuguese territories which generally improved working conditions, although not entirely.[94][119] Cadbury moved sourcing to the British colony of the Gold Coast, today Ghana, which became the largest producer of cacao in 1911.[116] It remained the largest producer until it was overtaken by the Ivory Coast in 1977.[121][122] The growth in the West African cocoa industry was driven by a combination of colonial pressures and a European market.[123]

Post-WWI

edit
 
World production of cocoa beans (1900–2016), by region, in tonnes.

Couverture chocolate was invented by Belgian chocolatier Octaaf Callebaut in 1925.[124] Tempering, the process of cooling and heating chocolate to form a crisp break and glossy appearance,[125][126] was developed by 1931.[127] In 1936, Nestlé first sold white chocolate.[128] Lecithin began to be added after WWII to improve consistency and texture.[129] In 1956, chocolate containing cocoa butter substitutes was launched in Britain. These substitutes, which are cheaper fats with similar properties to cocoa butter, only replace some of the chocolate's cocoa butter.[130] From the 1970s there were arguments over how much cocoa butter could be replaced with these cheaper fats and still be called chocolate, and in 1997, EU regulations ruled this could only be a maximum 5% of chocolate's fat, which was followed by Australia and New Zealand. The US did not allow any substitutions.[131] Through the 20th century, plantations were damaged by disease and climate. Scientists attempted to stop this, by breeding hardier hybrid varieties and cloning the best stock. However, the chocolate these beans produced was sometimes bitter, and concentrating production in less varieties caused problems when they were impacted by disease.[132] The supply chain became more efficient with motor vehicles and uptake of shipping containers.[133] In the 1980s, Indonesia increased production.[123] From the late 1980s to 2019, cocoa bean production doubled. In this time, governance over production moved from states to market-led initiatives.[134]

 
Inspecting cocoa beans in the Gold Coast, in modern day Ghana in 1957.

After Cadbury bought Fry's in 1918, their competition became Swiss chocolatiers and the American firms Mars and The Hershey Company.[135] Godiva introduced Belgian-style chocolate to America in 1966, bringing about large demand for premium chocolate.[136] Dark chocolate had experienced a "popular resurgent interest" by 2009 from public attention around health claims concerning its polyphenolic antioxidants,[137] and raw and organic chocolates were observed to have risen in popularity as of 2018.[138] Single origin chocolates were first created in 1984, starting the bean-to-bar, or craft chocolate movement.[139][140] Origin is loosely defined, and can refer to countries or specific plantations. Valrhona introduced single-origin, vintage-dated chocolate in 1998 from Trinidadian plantation.[139] Awareness of labor conditions of cacao growers has spurred demand for fair trade chocolate.[138] Slave labor among African cacao growers gained public attention after the release of the documentary Slavery: A Global Investigation in 2000. In 2005, a non-binding, voluntary industry agreement called the Harkin–Engel Protocol was created to address child and forced labor.[141] The media's reporting on this issue is often sensationalistic, and as of 2018 the topic had not been systematically studied. Issues with child labor are not restricted to Africa.[142]

Markets in China and India emerged in the late 20th century, with chocolate centrally a gift.[143] In both markets, this rise was driven by an increases in investment and household income.[144][145] In the 2000s, consumption grew in Africa; in Nigeria for example, the market grew 775% between 2006 and 2013.[146]

Today

edit
 
An Ivory Coast worker transporting bags of cocoa beans in 2017

Drinks are still made from cacao seeds across Mesoamerica.[147] In many rural areas of Central America and Mexico, disks of sweetened chocolate are sold at local markets.[148]

As of 2010, the bean-to-bar movement was unregulated and producer's claims of provenance and quality criticized.[149] Cacao growers and initial processors aim to meet minimum standards. The genetic purity of variants has been contested, as they crosspollinate with other variants. From this ambiguity, growers exaggerate types.[150] In 2013 there were at least 37 bean-to-bar producers in the United States, from one in 1997. Most did not source from West Africa, despite its dominance in cacao production.[151]

The cacao industry is under threat by the emergence of diseases; as of 2017 up to 38% of cacao harvested annually was lost to disease.[152][153] As of 2023, the industry's sustainability was threatened by the need for deforesting for more land, poor soil management, persistent poverty and forced labor among cacao farmers, and climate change.[154][155][156] As of 2018, there was "little evidence" that initiatives to reduce child labor had been effective.[157] In 2022, Ghana and the Ivory Coast supplied 57% of the world's cocoa.[158]

In 2023, cocoa processors Olam, Cargill and Barry Callebaut controlled 40% of trade between countries.[134][d] As of 2018, chocolate-makers Mars, Mondelez (owner of Cadbury), Ferrero, Nestlé and Hershey, known as the 'Big Five', comprised almost two thirds of the global chocolate market.[160] The international trade in chocolate was worth $108 billion USD in 2018, and the largest market and consumption per capita remained in the West.[153][159]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ These traditional divisions of beans into mainly Criollo, Forastero and Trinitario have little genetic basis.[61]
  2. ^ Such was the rarity that during the Inquisition in one case a man claimed the fact he prepared the morning chocolate rather than his wife as proof that she was a sorcerer-witch.[71]
  3. ^ Van Houten was not the first to invent this machine; a machine doing the same thing was depicted in Nicolas de Blégny's 1687 treatise on chocolate, coffee and tea.[97]
  4. ^ Leissle (2018) says these three companies ground nearly two thirds of all cocoa beans in 2016.[159]

References

edit
  1. ^ "chocolate". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/OED/4410701122. Retrieved 16 July 2024. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Swanton, de Ávila & van Doesburg (2010), p. 435.
  3. ^ Swanton (2024), p. 23.
  4. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Crossing the Language Barrier.
  5. ^ Kaufman & Justeson (2007), p. 193.
  6. ^ Kaufman & Justeson (2007), p. 218.
  7. ^ Dakin & Wichmann (2000), p. 63.
  8. ^ Sampeck & Thayn (2017), pp. 78–79.
  9. ^ Lanaud et al. 2024, p. 1
  10. ^ Lanaud et al. 2024, p. 2
  11. ^ Lanaud et al. 2024, p. 8
  12. ^ Zarrillo et al. 2018, p. 1879
  13. ^ Lanaud et al. 2024, p. 2
  14. ^ Lanaud et al. 2024, p. 7
  15. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), The Tree of the Food of the Gods.
  16. ^ Collins (2022), pp. 301–302.
  17. ^ MacLeod (2000), p. 636.
  18. ^ Sampeck & Thayn (2017), p. 74.
  19. ^ Powis et al. 2007
  20. ^ Edgar (2010), pp. 22–23.
  21. ^ Powis et al. 2011
  22. ^ a b c Collins (2022), pp. 298–300.
  23. ^ a b Presilla (2001), pp. 12, 16, 22.
  24. ^ a b c Coe & Coe (2013), The Maya on the Eve of the Conquest.
  25. ^ a b c Coe & Coe (2013), Lords of the Forest: The Classic Maya.
  26. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 34.
  27. ^ a b Lopez (2002), p. 20.
  28. ^ a b Lopez (2002), p. 23.
  29. ^ Presilla (2001), p. 18.
  30. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Cacao Preparation among the Late Maya.
  31. ^ Sampeck & Thayn (2017), p. 77.
  32. ^ Reents-Budet (2006), pp. 215–217.
  33. ^ Thompson (1956), pp. 545–552.
  34. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Twilight of the Classic Maya.
  35. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), From Izapan Civilization to the Classic Maya.
  36. ^ Vail (2008), p. 10.
  37. ^ Poelmans & Swinnen (2016), p. 13.
  38. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), The Toltecs and Beyond.
  39. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Attraction and Repulsion: The Case of Octli and Chocolate.
  40. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Cacao in Symbol and Ritual.
  41. ^ a b c d e Collins (2022), pp. 160–162.
  42. ^ a b c Aguilar-Moreno (2006), p. 274.
  43. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), The Drink of the Elite.
  44. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Chocolate in Cuisine.
  45. ^ Grivetti (2008b), p. 68.
  46. ^ Martin & Sampeck (2015), pp. 39–40.
  47. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), The Aztec "Chocolate Tree": Cacahuacuauhuitl.
  48. ^ Norton (2004), p. 14.
  49. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), How the Aztecs Made Chocolate.
  50. ^ a b Collins (2022), p. 285–288.
  51. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Flavorings, Spices, and Other Additions.
  52. ^ Ganem (2020), p. 3.
  53. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), "Happie Money".
  54. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), The Royal Coffers.
  55. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), First Encounter: Guanaja, 1502.
  56. ^ a b Dillinger et al. 2000, p. 2058S-2059S
  57. ^ Grivetti (2008a), p. 100.
  58. ^ a b c Norton (2004), p. 15.
  59. ^ Sampeck (2015), p. 18.
  60. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), New Spain and Central America.
  61. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 163.
  62. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Guayaquil.
  63. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Venezuela.
  64. ^ Pezzarossi (2017), p. 152.
  65. ^ Momsen & Richardson (2008a), p. 482.
  66. ^ a b c Norton (2004), pp. 14–17.
  67. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Crossing the Taste Barrier.
  68. ^ Few (2005), p. 677.
  69. ^ Poelmans & Swinnen (2016), p. 14.
  70. ^ a b Norton (2004), p. 16.
  71. ^ Few (2005), pp. 678.
  72. ^ Few (2005), pp. 678–679.
  73. ^ a b c d Coe & Coe (2013), Cacao in Spain: "Chocolate Brought to Perfection".
  74. ^ a b c d e f Coe & Coe (2013), Chocolate and the English.
  75. ^ a b Coe & Coe (2013), Crossing the Medical Barrier.
  76. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Chocolate in Italy: "A More Exquisite Gentility".
  77. ^ Gay (2008), p. 285.
  78. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Crossing the Ecclesiastical Barrier.
  79. ^ a b c Coe & Coe (2013), Chocolate in France.
  80. ^ Sampeck (2019), p. 107.
  81. ^ a b Momsen & Richardson (2008b), p. 494.
  82. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), pp. 143–144.
  83. ^ Macpherson (2008), p. 322.
  84. ^ Collins (2022), pp. 88–89.
  85. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Beyond Europe.
  86. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Chapter 7.
  87. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), The Medical Experts Testify.
  88. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Spain.
  89. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Italy.
  90. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), France Before the Deluge.
  91. ^ Wilson & Hurst (2015), p. 219.
  92. ^ a b Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 48.
  93. ^ Snyder, Olsen & Brindle (2008), p. 612.
  94. ^ a b c d e Coe & Coe (2013), Quaker Capitalists.
  95. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), Chocolate at the Dawn of the Industrial Revolution.
  96. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), A Break with the Past: Van Houten's Inventions.
  97. ^ Mintz (1996), p. 110.
  98. ^ Clarence-Smith (2000), pp. 50–52.
  99. ^ a b c d Gordon (2008b), p. 590.
  100. ^ Coe & Coe (2013), The Fight for Pure Chocolate.
  101. ^ Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 56.
  102. ^ Poelmans & Swinnen (2016), p. 2016.
  103. ^ Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 57.
  104. ^ a b c Coe & Coe (2013), Switzerland: Land of Cows and Chocolate.
  105. ^ Snyder, Olsen & Brindle (2008), p. 613.
  106. ^ Snyder, Olsen & Brindle (2008), p. 615.
  107. ^ a b c Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 19.
  108. ^ Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 55.
  109. ^ Gordon (2008a), p. 578.
  110. ^ Snyder, Olsen & Brindle (2008), p. 617.
  111. ^ Presilla (2001), p. 29.
  112. ^ a b Walker (2008), p. 549.
  113. ^ Leissle (2013), p. 22.
  114. ^ Gordon (2008a), p. 577.
  115. ^ Walker (2008), p. 551.
  116. ^ a b Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 6.
  117. ^ Clarence-Smith (2000), p. 135.
  118. ^ Snyder, Olsen & Brindle (2008), p. 619.
  119. ^ a b Leissle (2018), p. 41.
  120. ^ Walker (2008), p. 553.
  121. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 6.
  122. ^ Fowler & Coutel (2017), p. 45.
  123. ^ a b Leissle (2018), pp. 41–43.
  124. ^ Garrone, Pieters & Swinnen (2016), p. 91.
  125. ^ Beckett (2019), p. 95.
  126. ^ Beckett (2019), p. 81.
  127. ^ Snyder, Olsen & Brindle (2008), p. 620.
  128. ^ Beckett (2019), p. 10.
  129. ^ Moss & Badenoch (2009), p. 63.
  130. ^ Talbot (2017), p. 162.
  131. ^ Leissle (2018), pp. 54–55.
  132. ^ Presilla (2001), pp. 38–39.
  133. ^ Leissle, Kristy (15 April 2021). "The cocoa system is not broken". docofchoc.com. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  134. ^ a b Parra-Paitan et al. 2023, p. 2
  135. ^ Gordon (2008b), p. 591.
  136. ^ Albright (1997), p. 138.
  137. ^ McShea, Leissle & Smith (2009), p. 1104.
  138. ^ a b Leissle (2018), p. 9.
  139. ^ a b Nesto (2010), p. 134.
  140. ^ Leissle (2017), p. 39.
  141. ^ Leissle (2013), p. 28.
  142. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 18.
  143. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 10.
  144. ^ Li & Di (2016), p. 384.
  145. ^ Janssen & Riera (2016), p. 419.
  146. ^ Leissle (2018), pp. 10–11.
  147. ^ McNeil (2006), p. 346.
  148. ^ Sampeck & Schwartzkopf (2017), p. 3.
  149. ^ Nesto (2010), pp. 131–132.
  150. ^ Nesto (2010), p. 133.
  151. ^ Leissle (2013), p. 23.
  152. ^ Marelli et al. 2019, p. 1340
  153. ^ a b Marelli et al. 2019, p. 1331
  154. ^ Parra-Paitan et al. 2023, p. 1
  155. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 12.
  156. ^ Fromm (2016), p. 72.
  157. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 133.
  158. ^ "Cocoa bean production in 2022, Crops/Regions/World list/Production Quantity/Year (pick lists)". FAOSTAT. 2024. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  159. ^ a b Leissle (2018), p. 8.
  160. ^ Leissle (2018), p. 73.

Sources

edit

Books

edit

Journal and magazine articles

edit
  NODES
Done 1
eth 10
orte 8
see 7
Story 36