Chocolate Masters Hangout #1: Dandelion Chocolate
Oh, chocolate! How you make everything better. Everything chocolate is just so interesting to miss.
No Chocolate Masters conversation would be complete without tasting a great chocolate. Interested much? Watch the entire video!
Crushing and winnowing cacao for chocolate making in Chiapas, Mexico
Chocolate is always interesting. It makes life better! That’s why a lot of us are curious about how it’s done. Are you one of them? Watch this video as it shows crushing and winnowing of chocolate, which is the actual removing of the papery shell of the cacao bean.
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Making Fabulous Favors Using Chocolate
Chocolate is a favorite to many, children and adults alike. I know a lot of people can back me up on this. It’s just something that knows how to work its magic anytime, anywhere.
In this video, Christina Crawford shows you how to make great wedding invitations, favors, save the date cards and thank you notes.
Categories: chocolate videos Tags: CHOCOLATE, Christina Crawford, date, Fabulous, favorite, Favors, knows, making, Using
Chocolate and Ancient Medicine
The Aztecs had this thinking that chocolate gave immense strength to their warriors. Ancient doctors used to prescribe it to treat or even cure ailments. In the past, people went for chocolatebecause of its medicinal qualities rather than its yummy taste.
“Chocolate nourishes and preserves health entire, yet causes a pleasant and natural sleep and rest,” wrote Dr. William Hughes, an English physician in 1672. “Drunk twice a day, a man may very well subsist therewith, not taking anything else at all.”
For centuries, chocolate was consumed as a drink, not as a solid bar like we have it now. To the Mayans, Aztecs and Early-Europeans, this frothy drink made out of the cacao bean was a gift from nature. Those who loved chocolate were impressed by chocolate due to its mild stimulant properties. Tt made them feel awake and alert.
“Cacao flowers were ingredients in perfumed baths, and thought to cure fatigue in government officials and others who held public office,” says the Badianus Codex, published in 1552. The Florentine Codex, published in 1590, called for a mixture of cacao beans, maize and herbs to ease fever and panting, and to treat the faint of heart.
In Aztec society, chocolate was intended for priests and the rich. However, soldiers also used to have it for the strength it supposedly gives. In 1529, when the Spanish explorer Hernan Cortes arrived in the court of Aztec ruler Montezuma, he and his fellowmen were astounded by this drink chocolate, which the Aztecs dubbed as “xocoatl” for bitter water. Cortes wrote to King Carlos I of Spain that he had discovered a “drink that builds up resistance and fights fatigue.”
Categories: chocolate articles Tags: ancient chocolate, ancient medicine, aztecs, CHOCOLATE, medicinal chocolate, published, strength, treat, used