| 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.
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Food
of the Gods
During his conquest of Mexico, Cortez found
the Aztec Indians using cocoa beans in the
preparation of the royal drink of the realm,
"chocolatl", meaning warm liquid.
In 1519, Emperor Montezuma, who reportedly
drank 50 or more portions daily, served chocolatl
to his Spanish guests in great golden goblets,
treating it like a food for the gods.
For
all its regal importance, however, Montezuma's
chocolatl was very bitter, and the Spaniards
did not find it to their taste. To make the
concoction more agreeable to Europeans, Cortez
and his countrymen conceived of the idea of
sweetening it with cane sugar.
While
they took chocolatl back to Spain, the idea
found favor and the drink underwent several
more changes with newly discovered spices,
such as cinnamon and vanilla. Ultimately,
someone decided the drink would taste better
if served hot.
The
new drink won friends, especially among the
Spanish aristocracy. Spain wisely proceeded
to plant cocoa in its overseas colonies, which
gave birth to a very profitable business.
Remarkably enough, the Spanish succeeded in
keeping the art of the cocoa industry a secret
from the rest of Europe for nearly a hundred
years.
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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.
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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.
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Growing
the Cocoa Bean
Cocoa beans are the product of the cacao tree.
The origin of the cacao tree is in dispute.
Some say it originated in the Amazon basin
of Brazil, others place it in the Orinoco
Valley of Venezuela, while still others contend
that it is native to Central America.
Wherever
its first home, we know the cacoa tree is
strictly a tropical plant thriving only in
hot, rainy climates. Thus, its cultivation
is confined to the lands not more than 20
degrees north of south of the equator.
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The
Need For Shelter
The cacao tree is very delicate and sensitive.
It needs protection from the wind and requires
a fair amount of shade under most conditions.
This is true especially in its first two to
four years of growth.
A
newly planted cacao seedling is often sheltered
by a different type of tree. It is normal
to plant food crops for shade such as banana,
plantain, coconuts or cocoyams. Rubber trees
and forest trees are also used for shade.
Once established, however, cacao trees can
grow in full sun light, provided there are
fertile soil conditions and intensive husbandry.
Cacao plantations (trees under cultivation),
and estates, usually in valleys or coastal
plains, must have evenly distributed rainfall
and rich, well drained soil.
As
a general rule, cacao trees get their start
in a nursery bed where seeds from high yielding
trees are planted in fiber baskets or plastic
bags. The seedlings grow so fast that in a
few months they are ready for transplanting,
container and all.
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The
First Fruit
With pruning and careful cultivation, the
trees of most strains will begin bearing fruit
in the fifth year. With extreme care, some
strains can be induced to yield good crops
in the third and fourth years.
Everything
about the tree is just as colorful as its
history. An evergreen, the cacao tree has
large glossy leaves that are red when young
and green when mature. Overlays of clinging
moss and colorful lichens are often found
on the bark of the trunk, and in some areas
beautiful small orchids grow on its branches.
The tree sprouts thousands of tiny waxy pink
or white five-petaled blossoms that cluster
together on the trunk and older branches.
But, only three to 10 percent will go on to
mature into full fruit.
The
fruit, which will eventually be converted
into the world's chocolate and cocoa, has
green or sometimes maroon colored pods on
the trunk of the tree and its main branches.
Shaped somewhat like an elongated melon tapered
at both ends, these pods often ripen into
a golden color or sometimes take on a scarlet
hue with multicolored flecks.
At
its maturity, the cultivated tree measures
from 15 to 25 feet tall, though the tree in
its wild state may reach 60 feet or more.
The
potential age of a tree is open to speculation.
There are individual trees known to be over
200 years of age, but no one has determined
the real life span of the species. However,
in 25 years the economic usefulness of a tree
may be considered at an end, and it often
becomes desirable to replant with younger
trees.
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Varieties
of Cacao
While the cacao tree bears fruit (or pods)
all year round, harvesting is generally seasonal.
The pods come in a variety of types since
cacao trees cross-pollinate freely. These
types can be reduced to three classifications:
Criollo, the prince of cacaos, is a soft thin-skinned
pod, with a light color and a unique, pleasant
aroma. Forastero, a more plentiful type, is
easier to cultivate and has a thick-walled
pod and a pungent aroma. Trinitario, which
is believed to be a natural cross from strains
of the other two types, has a great variety
of characteristics but generally possesses
good, aromatic flavor; and these trees are
particularly suitable for cultivation.
In
the Western Hemisphere, strange as it may
seem, plantations composed of just one species
of cocoa beans are uncommon. Even single trees
with all the characteristics of a specific
type are rare. Uniformity exists only where
cacao plantations have been developed from
the rooted branch cuttings of single mother
trees.
In
recent years, cacao growers have turned increasingly
to hybridization as a means of improving the
quality of the bean and making it more disease
resistant. Scientists using state-of-the-art
biotechnology techniques are also trying to
improve the quality of cacao and its resistance
to disease.
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Handling
the Harvest
The job of picking ripe cacao pods is not
an easy one. The tree is so frail and its
roots are so shallow that workmen cannot risk
injuring it by climbing to reach the pods
on the higher branches.
The
planter sends his tumbadores, or pickers,
into the fields with long handled, mitten-shaped
steel knives that can reach the highest pods
and snip them without wounding the soft bark
of the tree. Machetes are used for the pods
growing within reach on the lower trunk.
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Where
Experience Counts
It requires training and experience to know
by appearance which fruit is ripe and ready
to be cut. Ripe pods are found on trees at
all times since the growing season in the
tropics, with its evenly distributed rainfall,
is continuous.
For
most localities there is a main harvest lasting
several months and a mid-crop harvest lasting
several more months. Climatic differences
cause wide variations in harvest times with
frequent fluctuations from year to year even
within the same location.
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What
Happens after Picking
Gathers follow the harvesters who have removed
the ripe pods from the trees. The pods are
collected in baskets and transported to the
edge of a field where the pod breaking operation
begins. One or two lengthwise blows from a
well-wielded machete is usually enough to
split open the woody shells. A good breaker
can open 500 pods an hour.
A
great deal of patience is required to complete
harvesting. Anywhere from 20 to 50 cream-colored
beans are scooped from a typical pod and the
husk and inner membrane are discarded. Dried
beans from an average pod weigh less than
two ounces, and approximately 400 beans are
required to make one pound of chocolate.
The
beans are still many steps away from the familiar
finished product. Exposure to air quickly
changes the cream-colored beans to a lavender
or purple. They do not look like the finished
chocolate nor do they have the well-known
fragrance of chocolate at this time.
Preparing
the Crop for Shipment
The cocoa beans or seeds that are removed
from the pods are put into boxes or thrown
on heaps and covered. Around the beans is
a layer of pulp that starts to heat up and
ferment. Fermentation lasts from three to
nine days and serves to remove the raw bitter
taste of cocoa and to develop precursors and
components that are characteristic of chocolate
flavor.
Fermenting
is a simple "yeasting" process in
which the sugars contained in the beans are
converted to acid, primarily lactic acid and
acetic acid.
The
process generates temperatures as high as
125 degrees Fahrenheit, which kill the germ
of the bean and activate existing enzymes
in the beans to form compounds that produce
the chocolate flavor when the beans are roasted.
The result is a fully developed bean with
a rich brown color, a sign that the cocoa
is now ready for drying.
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Drying
is Important
Like any moisture-filled fruit, the beans
must be dried if they are to keep. In some
countries, drying is accomplished simply by
laying the beans on trays or bamboo matting
and leaving them to bask in the sun. When
moist climate conditions interfere with sun-drying,
artificial methods are used. For example,
the beans can be carried indoors and dried
by hot-air pipes.
With
favorable weather the drying process usually
takes several days. In this interval, farmers
turn the beans frequently and use the opportunity
to pick them over for foreign matter and flat,
broken or germinated beans. During drying,
beans lose nearly all their moisture and more
than half their weight.
When
the beans are dried, they are prepared for
shipping in 130 to 200 pound sacks. They are
seldom stored except at shipping centers,
where they await inspection by buyers.
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Marketing
for export
Buyers sample the quality of a crop by cutting
open a number of beans to see that they are
properly fermented. Purple centers indicate
incomplete fermentation.
If
the prevailing crop is found satisfactory,
the grower is paid at the current market price.
The market price depends not only on the abundance
of the worldwide crop and the quality of farmers'
crops in a number of countries, but on a number
of economic conditions throughout the world.
The industry has set up Cocoa Exchanges, similar
to stock exchanges, in principle cities such
as New York, London, Hamburg and Amsterdam.
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From
the Bean to Chocolate
We now come to the remarkable art of chocolate
making, a process that is comparable with
the skill and finesse of the world's greatest
chefs. The manufacturing process requires
much time and painstaking care. Just to make
an individual-size chocolate bar, for instance,
takes from two to four days or more.
Manufacturing
methods will differ in detail from plant to
plant, but there is a general processing pattern
which prevails everywhere. It is this pattern
that makes the chocolate industry distinctive
from every other industry.
For
example, all manufacturers carefully catalogue
each shipment according to its particular
type and origin. This is very important, because
it enables them later to maintain exact control
over the flavor blending of beans for roasting.
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Prior
to Roasting
While awaiting the blending process, the beans
are carefully stored. The storage area must
be isolated from the rest of the building
so the sensitive cocoa does not come into
contact with strong odors which it may absorb
as an off-flavor. Every step of the way so
far reflects the close regulation of conditions
which is needed to ensure the production of
uniformly high quality chocolate.
The
first step to actual manufacturing is cleaning.
This is done by passing the cocoa beans through
a cleaning machine that removes dried cacao
pulp, pieces of pod and other extraneous material
that had not been removed earlier.
When
thoroughly cleaned, the beans are carefully
weighed and blended according to a company's
particular specifications. These formulas
are based on experience and desirability.
In the science of chocolate making, much depends
upon the ability to achieve the right formula
for the desired end product through the proper
selection of beans available.
To
bring out the characteristic chocolate aroma,
the beans are roasted in large rotary cylinders.
Depending upon the variety of the beans and
the desired end result, the roasting lasts
from 30 minutes to two hours at temperatures
of 250 degrees Fahrenheit and higher. As the
beans turn over and over, their moisture content
drops, their color changes to a rich brown,
and the characteristic aroma of chocolate
becomes evident.
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What
Follows Roasting
Proper roasting is one of the keys to good
flavor, but there are still several more steps
to follow. After roasting, the beans are quickly
cooled and their thin shells, made brittle
by roasting, are removed. In most factories,
this is done by a "cracker and fanner,"
a giant winnowing machine that passes the
beans between serrated cones so they are cracked
rather than crushed. In the process, a series
of mechanical sieves separate the broken pieces
into large and small grains while fans blow
away the thin, light shell from the meat or
"nibs."
The
nibs, which contain about 53 percent cocoa
butter, are next conveyed to mills, where
they are crushed between large grinding stones
or heavy steel discs. The process generates
enough frictional heat to liquefy the cocoa
butter and form what is commercially know
as chocolate liquor. The term liquor does
not refer to alcohol, it simply means liquid.
When the liquid is poured into molds and allowed
to solidify, the resulting cakes are unsweetened
or bitter chocolate.
Up
to this point, the manufacturing of cocoa
and chocolate is identical. The process now
diverges, but there is an important interconnection
to be noted. The by-product of cocoa shortly
becomes an essential component of chocolate.
That component is the unique vegetable fat,
cocoa butter, which forms about 25 percent
of the weight of most chocolate bars.
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How
to Make Cocoa Powder
The chocolate liquor, destined to become a
cup of cocoa, is pumped into giant hydraulic
presses weighing up to 25 tons, where pressure
is applied to remove the desired cocoa butter.
The fat drains away through metallic screens
as a yellow liquid. It is then collected for
use in chocolate manufacturing.
Cocoa
butter has such importance for the chocolate
industry that it deserves more than a passing
mention. It is unique among vegetable fats
because it is a solid at normal room temperature
and melts at 89 to 93 degrees Fahrenheit,
which is just below body temperature. Its
success in resisting oxidation and rancidity
makes it very practical. Under normal storage
conditions, cocoa butter can be kept for years
without spoiling.
The
pressed cake that is left after the removal
of cocoa butter can be cooled, pulverized
and sifted into cocoa powder. Cocoa that is
packaged for sale to grocery stores or put
into bulk for use as a flavor by dairies,
bakeries, and confectionery manufacturers,
may have 10 percent or more cocoa butter content.
"Breakfast cocoa," a less common
type, must contain at least 22 percent cocoa
butter.
In
the so-called "Dutch" process, the
manufacturer treats the cocoa with an alkali
to develop a slightly different flavor and
give the cocoa a darker appearance characteristic
of the Dutch type. The alkali acts as a processing
agent rather than as a flavor ingredient.
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How
to Make Eating Chocolate
While cocoa is made by removing some of the
cocoa butter, eating chocolate is made by
adding it. This holds true of all eating chocolate,
whether it is dark, bittersweet, or milk chocolate.
Besides enhancing the flavor, the added cocoa
butter serves to make the chocolate more fluid.
One
example of eating chocolate is sweet chocolate,
a combination of unsweetened chocolate, sugar,
cocoa butter and perhaps a little vanilla.
Making it entails melting and combining the
ingredients in a large mixing machine until
the mass has the consistency of dough.
Milk
chocolate, the most common form of eating
chocolate, goes through essentially the same
mixing process-except that it involves using
less unsweetened chocolate and adding milk.
Whatever
ingredients are used, the mixture then travels
through a series of heavy rollers set one
atop the other. Under the grinding that takes
place here, the mixture is refined to a smooth
paste ready for "conching."
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What
is Conching?
Conching is a flavor development process which
puts the chocolate through a "kneading"
action and takes its name from the shell-like
shape of the containers originally employed.
The "conches," as the machines are
called, are equipped with heavy rollers that
plow back and forth through the chocolate
mass anywhere from a few hours to several
days. Under regulated speeds, these rollers
can produce different degrees of agitation
and aeration in developing and modifying the
chocolate flavors.
In
some manufacturing setups, there is an emulsifying
operation that either takes the place of conching
or else supplements it. This operation is
carried out by a machine that works like an
eggbeater to break up sugar crystals and other
particles in the chocolate mixture to give
it a fine, velvety smoothness.
After
the emulsifying or conching machines, the
mixture goes through a tempering interval-heating,
cooling and reheating-and then at last into
molds to be formed into the shape of the complete
product. The molds take a variety of shapes
and sizes, from the popular individual-size
bars available to consumers to a ten-pound
block used by confectionery manufacturers.
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Ready
for Shipment
When the molded chocolate reaches the cooling
chamber, cooling proceeds at a fixed rate
that keeps hard-earned flavor intact. The
bars are then removed from the molds and passed
along to wrapping machines to be packed for
shipment to distributors, confectioners and
others throughout the country.
For
convenience, chocolate is frequently shipped
in a liquid state when intended for use by
other food manufacturers. Whether solid or
liquid, it provides candy, cookie, and ice
cream manufacturers with the most popular
flavor for their products. Additionally, a
portion of the United State's total chocolate
output goes into coatings, powders and flavorings
that add zest to our foods in a thousand different
ways.
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Inside
a Chocolate Factory
In touring a chocolate factory, one is particularly
impressed by the close controls maintained
throughout operations. Work is carried out
in an atmosphere of scientific exactness and
nothing is left to chance.
Precision
instruments regulate temperatures, stabilize
the moisture content of the air, and control
the time intervals of manufacturing operations
and other items necessary to achieve quality
results.
The
equipment of a factory is heavy, massive and
complex. Often representing an investment
of many millions of dollars, there are literally
tons of equipment that the cocoa beans must
pass through on their way to becoming chocolate.
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Automation
Does the Job
Besides the equipment already described, the
industry employs a number of fascinating machines
to do the work of shaping and packaging chocolate
into the familiar forms that we see every
day on store counters. Some of the shaping
machines perform at amazing speeds, squirting
out jets of chocolate that solidify into special
shapes at a rate of several hundred a minute.*
Other machines do a complete job of wrapping
and packaging at speeds that human hands would
find impossible.
*
Separate from the chocolate industry but of
interest nonetheless, is the enrober-a machine
employed by many candy manufactures in the
creation of assorted chocolates. The enrober
receives lines of assorted centers (nuts,
nougats, fruit or whatever desired filling)
and showers them with a waterfall of liquid
chocolate. This generally covers and surrounds
each center with a blanket of chocolate. Yet
other confectionery machines create a hallow-molded
shell of chocolate which is then filled with
a soft or liquid center before the bottom
is sealed with chocolate.
The
mechanized nature of the entire chocolate-making
process contributes greatly to the industry's
high standards of hygiene and sanitation.
To keep check on these standards, chocolate
factories constantly run quality tests, which
show whether the process is proceeding within
the strict limitations designed for each product.
These tests cover an amazing range-there are
tests for the viscosity of chocolate, for
the cocoa butter content, for acidity, for
the fineness of a product and, of course,
tests for purity and taste of the desired
finished product.
All
chocolate manufacturers, it is important to
note, must meet the standards as set forth
in the rules and regulations of The Food and
Drug Administration. These govern manufacturing
formulas, even to the extent of specifying
the minimum content of the chocolate liquor
and milk used. They also impose strict rules
regarding the flavorings and other ingredients
that may be used.
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Reasons
for Secrecy
Where methods of manufacturing are concerned;
however, manufacturers have a completely free
hand and have developed individual variations
from the "pattern." Each manufacturer
seeks to protect his own methods by conducting
certain operations under an atmosphere of
secrecy. Modern technology, in this respect,
is reminiscent of the day of the Spanish monopoly.
Today's
"secrets," unlike those of old,
include many small but important details which
center around key manufacturing operations.
No chef guards his favorite recipes more zealously
than the chocolate manufacturer guards his
formulas for blending beans or the time intervals
he gives to his conching. Time intervals,
temperatures and proportions of ingredients
are three critical factors that no company
wants to divulge.
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A
Sanitary Atmosphere
A visit to a chocolate factory certainly will
not reveal any secrets; however, the visitor
will be impressed by the gleaming appearance
that such a place has. Chocolate manufacturers
conduct all operations under sanitary, laboratory-like
conditions in keeping with the purity of the
products they make. They follow a daily regimen
of machine maintenance and general housekeeping
that is not exceeded in the food industry.
Cleanliness
is, indeed, the universal byword of the chocolate
industry. Chocolate factories not only have
careful programs for industrial sanitation
and for the personal hygiene of their employees,
but they are continually striving to improve
their programs.
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A
Plant Within a Plant
Technicians use laboratories to analyze every
phase of chocolate preparation-from raw materials
to finished products. They test samples for
the market as well as experimental products
produced in a company's pilot plants.
These
pilot plants consist of miniature equipment
which duplicates a company's entire chocolate
making process and those of some of their
customers, as well as providing sample quantities
of any product desired. Chocolate manufacturers
are making increasing use of pilot plants
in conjunction with their laboratory research
programs to develop interesting new products
and find new ways of making the old ones.
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