Chocolate is as close to a universally-loved food as you can get. In fact, people love chocolate so much regular studies are carried out in a bid to prove that it's a healthy food. After all, if it's good for us, we won't feel guilty about eating more of it. But aside from all the great ways to consume chocolate, how much do we really know about it? Here are 14 things we bet you didn't know about chocolate: We are constantly looking for a good excuse to much on chocolate, and the calendar offers plenty of excuses to purchase a bar or two. For example, July 7 is Chocolate Day, a nod to the day when chocolate was first brought into Europe on July 7, 1550 (although a number of sources argue that it might have hit the continent's shores as far back as 1504, thanks to Christopher Columbus. There's also National Milk Chocolate Day on July 28, International Chocolate Day on September 13, and National Bittersweet Chocolate with Almonds Day on November 7. 2. Chocolate is Actually a Vegetable – Kind of… Dark and milk chocolate are made from the cacao bean, which grows on the cacao tree, an evergreen from the family Malvaceae. Therefore, this makes the most important part of chocolate a vegetable. 3. White Chocolate is Not Actually Chocolate Since it doesn't contain cocoa solids or chocolate liquor, white chocolate isn't chocolate in the strict sense. However, it does contain parts of the cacao bean – mainly cocoa butter. 4. The Cacao Bean is Native to Mexico and Both Central and South America It's is believed that inhabitants of these areas started cultivating the bean as far back as 1250 BCE, and perhaps even earlier. 11. Making Chocolate is Hard Work Despite its revered status and regal background, the cacao bean doesn't just magically turn into chocolate – it takes around 400 beans to make a single pound of the good stuff. 12. The First Chocolate Bar Was Made in England Way back in 1842, the Cadbury company made the world's very first chocolate bar. The company still exists today, and are well-known for their Easter-themed treats. 13. Most Cacao is Now Grown in Africa Despite its Amazonian roots, most cacao – nearly 70% of the world's supply – comes from Africa. The Ivory Coast is the largest single producer, providing about 30% of the world's cacao. 14. Chocolate Has a Special Melting Point Chocolate is the only edible substance to melt at 93F, just below the human body temperature. This is why it melts so easily on your tongue. |
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Keep_Mailing" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to
keep_mailing+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to
keep_mailing@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at
https://groups.google.com/group/keep_mailing.
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/keep_mailing/CAH3M5OupP56nTxUnLDEVJUbeWU4xyrbXLtH6P5x2s2uz4Up2dg%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit
https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
No comments:
Post a Comment