Itās easy to forget that chocolate is a fruit. Itās born on a tree and undergoes several steps that transform the bitter, astringent seed into the rich, flavorful bars that we know.
Letās take a little time to ponder the botanical story of chocolate and retrace the journey from its tropical origin. The cacao tree (officially, Theobroma cacao; theobroma translates as āfood of the godsā), was classified in 1753 by Swedish scientist Carl Linnaeus. The most recent genetic research points to the upper Amazon rainforests of South Americaānear present-day Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peruāas its origin. It grows only within a narrow latitudinal band, between 20ĖN and 20ĖS of the equator. From its origins in South and Central America, cacao cultivation now spans the circumference of the globe within its tropical range. West African countries, namely Ghana and the Ivory Coast, currently provide about 70 percent of the worldās cocoa supply.
The cacao tree is fairly small, commercially bred to grow roughly 9 to 12 feet high. Like grape vines, cacao must often reach six to seven years maturity before producing a full yield of fruit. Its fruit, the cacao pod, develops from flowers that blossom directly from the trunk and thicker branches of the tree, reaching maturity in five to six months (thus sometimes allowing for two harvests per year). Each individual bean is comprised of an outer shell, the germ, and the nib. Conveniently, one podās worth of beans produces a 100-gram bar of chocolate.
via How To Make Chocolate | Lucky Peach.




