|
Mexico Road Logs & Driving Guides - Click Here

Mexico
Photo's
Colonial Cities and Towns
Archeological Sites
If you travel to Mexico
then you should check these publications out!

RV
Parks
The Baja
The
Pacific Coast
The Gulf Coast
The Interior
The Yucatan
| |

Mexico Headline News

Ancients had a
taste for cocoa 3500 years ago
Go to original
article
CHEMICAL traces
from an ancient pottery vessel from Mexico show it had been used to drink a
chocolate beverage more than 3500 years ago.
Although cacao
(or cocoa) beans are grown today in many parts of the world, the tree which
bears the seed pods, Theobroma cacao, is native to southern Mexico, Belize and
Guatemala.
The Spanish
conquistadors
remarked that a drink made from the toasted and ground beans, whisked, frothed
and flavoured with hot chilli peppers, was consumed by the elite of the Aztec Empire.
Other parts of the pod, including its soft inner pith, were fermented into
various beverages.
With the recent decipherment of Maya hieroglyphic writing, the history of cacao
and chocolate was pushed back into the early centuries AD.
A lock-top vessel from a royal tomb at Rio Azul in
Guatemala
was inscribed with the hieroglyphic for "cacawa", and the brown stain inside was
identified by chemists at Hershey,
the American chocolate maker, as the remains of a chocolate liquid.
More recently, similar deposits from earlier Maya pottery vessels have also been
identified as chocolate: only last year one from Puerto Escondido in the Ulua
Valley of Honduras, another noted cacao-growing area in pre-Columbian times, was
dated to 1100-1200BC.
The residue was found in a pot with a vertical spout thought to have perhaps
been used to blow air to froth the liquid.
The latest discovery, which pushes the earliest use of cacao so far known to
between 1500BC and 1900BC, was made by analysing pottery from the site of Paso
de la Amada, an early village just inland from the Pacific Coast in Mexico. The
site has already yielded evidence of a complex society, including the oldest
known court for playing a Mesoamerican rubber-ball game and the oldest pottery
in the Maya area.
Although the region of Soconusco in which Paso de la Amada lies was one of the
richest cacao-producing regions in pre-Hispanic America, no evidence for early
use of the plant had emerged from excavations. The earliest pottery, known as
Barra ware and dating between 1900BC and 1700BC, included large jars suitable
for brewing and smaller bowls for drinking.The question was, what had been
brewed and drunk?
One possible answer was chicha,
a maize beer widely consumed in tropical America; another was some form of
chocolate beverage. Cacao has a unique chemical composition of over 500
different compounds, including theobromine and caffeine, Terry Powis and his
colleagues report in Mexicon. Powis scraped the interiors of 16 vessels from
Paso de la Amada, along with samples from other sites, and Jeffrey Hurst at the
Hershey Foods Technical Centre analysed them for cacao using high-performance
liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry.
Theobromine
was found in two vessels, one from Paso de la Amada and one from the Olmec site
of El Manatí dating to slightly later, between 1650BC and 1500BC. The former was
a small brown bowl of a shape known as a tecomate, with a narrow mouth. Various
functions have been suggested for them including keeping tortillas hot; the
present example seems, however, to have been a drinking vessel.
The results provide conclusive proof that the Mokaya people of the Soconusco
were involved in the production and consumption of liquid chocolate at the very
beginning of the Early Formative period, the team reports.
Feasting and drinking chocolate beverages was critical to the development of
complex societies on the Pacific Coast of Chiapas.
.
| |
Mexico
Road Logs & Driving Guides - Click Here


|