As long as there IS chocolate, I do not care which came first. Life is good.
Ancient beer pots point to origins of chocolate
22:00 12 November 2007
NewScientist.com News Service
by Jeff Hecht
Chocolate was first produced by the ancients as a by-product of beer, suggests a new archaeological study. And evidence from drinking vessels left by the Mesoamericans who developed chocolate suggests that the source of chocolate, cacao, was first used 500 years earlier than thought.
Mesoamericans – who flourished in central America before it was colonised by the Spanish – developed chocolate as a by-product of fermenting cacao fruit to make a beer-like drink called chicha still brewed by South American tribal people.
Earlier long-necked pots would have been used for beer making. Chemical evidence in a pot such as this is seen as proof that beer brewing involved fermenting cacao (Illustration: PNAS/National Academy of Sciences)
The Mesoamericans before Columbus’s time, developed a taste for the chocolate, but their cousins down in South America stuck with the beer, says Cornell University archaeologist John Henderson, who led the new study. Earlier long-necked pots would have been used for beer making. Chemical evidence in a pot such as this is seen as proof that beer brewing involved fermenting cacao (Illustration: PNAS/National Academy of Sciences)
Unsweetened chocolate drinks became a central element of Mesoamerican cultures including the Aztecs, from whom Europeans learned of chocolate in the 16th century.
Archaeologists have found pottery made to serve the frothed chocolate drink preferred by the pre-Columbians in earlier sites, and have found traces of chocolate in pots dating back to 600 BC. But the origins of the drink had been unclear.
Pots with shorter, wider necks were used for making the frothed chocolate drink after 900 BC (Image: PNAS/National Academy of Sciences)
Chemical clues
Chocolate's unique flavour develops only when the watery pulp of raw cacao fruit and seeds are fermented together, colouring the seeds purple. Grinding the seeds yields the chocolate.
"It struck us that it wasn't obvious how to do this," says study co-author Rosemary Joyce at the University of California at Berkeley. The involvement of fermentation led her and Henderson to speculate that cacao beer might have been the originating process
Only now has hard evidence come to light in the form of pot sherds dating from 200 BC to before 1100 BC that they found in the ruins of an ancient village called Puerto Escondido in the Ulúa Valley in Honduras.
Harnessing a technique developed by Patrick McGovern at the University of Pennsylvania, they were able to extract chocolate residues from the pores in the pottery. Tests found theobromine – a chemical signature of cacao – in 11 of 13 fragments, including one that Joyce estimates dates from 1100 to 1200 BC.
'Smoking gun'
That pushed evidence for cacao drinking back 500 years. That pot, and others older than about 900 BC, also lacked any traces of the chilli pepper Mesoamericans used to spice up their chocolate. Pots designed for making a frothed chocolate first appeared after this date, the researchers report.
The oldest fragment was the long neck of a bottle that could have held beer, but could not have been used to make the frothed chocolate beverage that became popular later. Joyce called that "the smoking gun" showing that beer had come first.
She suggests that the key step in switching to chocolate came when ancient brewers ground up the cacao seeds remaining after fermentation and added them to thicken the beer – giving it a chocolate taste.
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? The world may never know...but as a lover of beer and chocolate...often together...thank goodness someone discovered them!
ReplyDeleteAll I can do here is agree with Marianne. Love 'em both!
ReplyDeleteHaha, as soon as I saw the title of the post in my mailbox, I thought, it's John-and sure enough it was. :) Well thank heavens the Mesoamericans figured it out and the Swiss added cocoa butter.
ReplyDeleteWow! Fascinating isn't it. I'm fascinated by the dates also as I have not heard much history of this area back in that time. I always imagined the population to me more around the Mediterranean during that period.
ReplyDeleteWell, I guess beer came first if you can believe Wikipedia:
ReplyDelete"Beer is one of the worlds' oldest beverages, possibly dating back to 6th millennium BCE, and is recorded in the written history of Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. The earliest known chemical evidence of beer dates to circa 3500–3100 BCE"
But bless them both, together or separate!
BEEER!!!!!
ReplyDeleteyour chocolate looks really great. Sorry I haven't been around but I haven't posted a pp since we moved to multiply. I was reading Frannie's blog and she mentioned you and I just thought I would stop by and see your page!!! Hope you are having a great night!
ReplyDeleteI am going to say both...LOL
ReplyDeleteI'd say beer was first but this is all very interesting. A chocolate stout..who woulda thunk it.
ReplyDelete... No John, it was coffee. Coffee was first. ;b
ReplyDeleteHm... chocolate beer... those folk were intelligent. I can't stand beer, but chocolate, I can most definitely handle!
ReplyDeleteLOL ~ so many things to enjoy and be thankful for!!!!!
ReplyDeleteYou find the most interesting facts to share with us!
ReplyDeleteThanks!!
I'm not a big fan of beer but I'll take some chocolate!!!!
ReplyDeleteLOL! I can't stop laughing here. Thank you, and the song, so you. Love it. I still like swiss white the best. May chocolate reign forever, just for you John Oh ... interesting read
ReplyDelete