This delightful tale of one of the world's favorite foods draws on
botany, archaeology, and culinary history to present a complete and
accurate history of chocolate.
It begins some 4,000 years ago in the jungles of Mexico and Central
America with the chocolate tree, Theobroma Cacao, and the complex
processes necessary to transform its bitter seeds into what is now known
as chocolate. This was centuries before chocolate was consumed in
generally unsweetened liquid form and used as currency by the Maya and
the Aztecs after them. The Spanish conquest of Central America
introduced chocolate to Europe, where it first became the drink of kings
and aristocrats and then was popularized in coffeehouses.
Industrialization in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries made
chocolate available to all, and now, in our own time, it has become once
again a luxury item.
The third edition includes new photographs and revisions throughout that
reflect the latest scholarship. A new final chapter on a Guatemalan
chocolate producer, located within the Pacific coastal area where
chocolate was first invented, brings the volume up-to-date.