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Theobroma Cacao (стр. 2 из 2)

from Vienna who made such delicacies as chocolate mixed with powered orchid

bulbs to charmingly plump out her figure (Anonymous 1, 1997). The Marquis de

Sade, a chocoholic who became grotesquely obese during his long captivity,

when denied other outlets, he spent his time overindulging in all manner of

chocolate delicacies, of which he was always demanding more from his loyal

and long-suffering wife. ” asked…for a cake with icing, but I want it to be

chocolate,” he demanded in 1779, “and black inside from chocolate as the

devil’s ass is black from smoke. And the icing is to be the same (Maxwell,

1996).”

We have seen how chocolate progressed from a primitive drink and food

of ancient Latin American tribes, a part of their religious, commerce and social

life, to a drink favored by the elite of European society and the many different

uses European’s found for chocolate, including medicinal, aphrodisiac and

religious. To this day, chocolate is still very popular. By the 1990’s, annual

world consumption of cacao beans averages approximately 600,000 tons and

chocolate consumption is on the rise (Neft and ResSeguie, 1996). The United

States consumed an average of 11.5 pounds of chocolate per person per year

(Neft and ResSeguie, 1996). Theobroma cacao is still the “food of the gods.”

References

Anonymous 1. (1997). Xocoatl: Food of the gods. World Wide Web.

http://www.vivelavie.com/sotries970316/stories/chocolate.html

Anonymous 2. (1997). A brief history of chocolate. World Wide Web.

http://www.hhh.org/cloister/chocolate/history.html

Anonymous 3. (1997). Healthy calories. Economist. 344 (8028), 68-69.

Cadbury. (1997). Cadbury’s chocolate history and the growing of cocoa.

World Wid Web. http://www.cadbury.co.uk/html/facts/cocoa.htm

Empty, T. (1997). Emptys page of the history of chocolate. World Wide

Web. http://hp5.econ.cbs.dk/people/toha96ad/chocolate/history.html

Godiva. (1997). An age-old obsession: A brief history of chocolate.

World Wide Web. http://www/2.godiva.com/resources/history.html

Maxwell, K. (1996). The road to kisses. New York Review of Books. 43

(14), 23-25.

Neft, R. and ResSeguie, D. (1996). Clear accounts and thick chocolate.

World Wide Web. http://www.efn.org/~sundance/chocolate.html

Topik, S. C. (1996). From coin to commodity. World Trade. 9 (2), 80.

Van Epen, K. (1996). Sustainability — chocolate addict: The cacahuatl

eater by Jonathan Ott. Whole Earth Review. (89), 43.