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IP: 168.103.126.* 18.07.02, 00:53
Wednesday, 17 July, 2002, 20:57 GMT 21:57 UK
Chocolate's frothy past



By Christine McGourty
BBC science correspondent


Humans' love affair with chocolate began far earlier than previously thought.

New analytical techniques were used on 2,600-year-old ceramic vessels

US scientists have discovered residues of cacao - from which chocolate is
made - in pots dating to 600 BC.

This pushes back the earliest chemical evidence of chocolate use by about
1,000 years.

The Mayans were well-known chocoholics and the latest discovery of their
enthusiasm for liquid chocolate comes from jugs belonging to a collection of
well-preserved spouted ceramic vessels found at the Maya archaeological site
at Colha, in northern Belize, in Central America.

Small samples

It is possible that the liquid may have been poured back and forth from jug
to jug to produce the froth that was considered by the Maya and the Aztecs to
be the most desirable part of a chocolate drink.

Most of the ceramic vessels were found in the burial sites of elite
individuals, along with bowls, dishes and plates - all known to have been
manufactured only during the period 900 BC to AD 250.

Residues from 14 jugs were sent to Hershey Foods in Pennsylvania for
analysis. Jeffrey Hurst of the chocolate company used a combination of high-
performance liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry to analyse the tiny
0.5-gram samples and found traces of cocoa in three of the jugs.

He said they were surprised by the findings and added that the chocolate
company had no interest in reviving the Mayan's chocolate recipes.

Not the same

"It was a fun project to work on," he told BBC News Online. "But the recipe
is nothing like the chocolate taste we gravitate towards today.

"My guess is if you want to know what it tasted like in the time of the
Mayans, take a blender and mix cocoa with water and maybe some spices. It's
not really something I'd like to try."

The evidence suggests chocolate was not eaten as an occasional snack or used
as a sweet ingredient in puddings as it is today. Instead, it was consumed
with most meals, usually mixed with another ingredient, such as water, maize,
chilli and/or honey.

The jugs would have been used to pour the liquid from the spout, in the same
way we use a teapot today. Documents written at the time of the Spanish
Conquest suggest liquid chocolate was agitated to produce a foam.

The discoveries in northern Belize indicate this may have been one of the
main production areas for chocolate during this period.

The Mayan pot research is published in the journal Nature.
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