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He
took the beans and the process back to Spain. The Spaniards added sugar and honey
to the bitter liquid and then fell in love with it. As in the Americas, its use
was reserved for members of the court. Chocolate was kept a secret by the Spanish
court for almost a hundred years. Baker’s
Chocolate In
1755 the processing of chocolate moved back to the New World when John Hanau and
James Baker opened a processing house in Massachusetts, which was beginning of
the company now known as Baker's Chocolate. Now
for the Science Stuff Cocoa
butter is a triglyceride which begins to soften at 75 F., and melts at 97 F. It
is a highly saturated fat which consists principally of the fatty acid stearic
acid, which is found in higher concentration in chocolate that in any other food.
Stearic acid is rapidly converted by the liver into oleic acid, a monounsaturated
that neither raises nor lowers serum cholesterol. Oleic acid is also present in
olive and canola oils. Chocolate
does contain caffeine, but not much. One ounce of milk chocolate usually contains
5 mg of caffeine, one ounce of semi-sweet usually has 5-10 mg, and a six-ounce
cup of cocoa usually has 10 mg. For comparison, a six-ounce cup of coffee contains
100-150 mg. Chocolate does not cause acne. It does contain a protein that inhibits
bacterial growth on teeth, and since it melts at body temperature and melts off
one's teeth, the sugar in chocolate does not cling to one's teeth.
Why We Love Chocolate
The loveliest thing about chocolate, the thing
that makes us all so HAPPY when we eat it, is that it contains the highest concentration
in any food of phenylethylamine, which is the chemical produced in the brain when
a person is in love. Watch this space for more information about chocolate from
Peterbrooke Chocolatier, where we fall in love with chocolate a new every day.
How Phyllis Invented Chocolate-Covered Popcorn Phyllis Lockwood
Geiger, owner of Peterbrooke Chocolatier, says the company's chocolate-covered
popcorn - which she calls a "pure gift from God - was created by accident. "It
was back in 1984 when I had my first little chocolate shop in San Marco Square,
that I inadvertently invented it," she said. "All the San Marco merchants were
giving away free samples at the annual Holiday Magic celebration, and I had a
shop full of very expensive handmade items that I couldn't afford to give away.
I ran down to the theater, got some fresh popcorn and sprinkled chocolate on it
so we'd have something to give, too." This past holiday season, Peterbrooke sold
more than 5 tons of chocolate-covered popcorn. "It's turned into our most popular
item," laughs Geiger. "A true holiday blessing!" |