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قراءة كتاب Cocoa and Chocolate: Their History from Plantation to Consumer

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Cocoa and Chocolate: Their History from Plantation to Consumer

Cocoa and Chocolate: Their History from Plantation to Consumer

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 4

class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">Women Grinding Chocolate

  • Cacao Bean Warehouse
  • Cacao Bean Sorting and Cleaning Machine
  • Diagram of Cacao Bean Cleaning Machine
  • Section through Gas Heated Cacao Roaster
  • Roasting Cacao Beans
  • Cacao Bean, Shell and Germ
  • Section through Kibbling Cones and Germ Screens
  • Section through Winnowing Machine
  • Cacao Grinding
  • Section through Grinding Stones
  • A Cacao Press
  • Section through Cacao Press-pot and Ram-plate
  • Chocolate Mélangeur
  • Plan of Chocolate Mélangeur
  • Chocolate Refining Machine
  • Grinding Cacao Nib and Sugar
  • Section through Chocolate Grinding Rolls
  • "Conche" Machines
  • Section through "Conche" Machine
  • Machines for Mixing or "Conching" Chocolate
  • Chocolate Shaking Table
  • Girls Covering or Dipping Cremes, etc.
  • The Enrober
  • A Confectionery Room
  • Factory at which Milk is Evaporated for Milk Chocolate Manufacture
  • Cocoa and Chocolate Despatch Deck
  • Boxing Chocolates
  • Packing Chocolates
  • Factory at which Milk is Evaporated for Milk Chocolate Manufacture
  • Cacao Pods, Leaves and Flowers

  • INTRODUCTION

    In a few short chapters I propose to give a plain account of the production of cocoa and chocolate. I assume that the reader is not a specialist and knows little or nothing of the subject, and hence both the style of writing and the treatment of the subject will be simple. At the same time, I assume that the reader desires a full and accurate account, and not a vague story in which the difficulties are ignored. I hope that, as a result of this method of dealing with my subject, even experts will find much in the book that is of interest and value. After a brief survey of the history of cocoa and chocolate, I shall begin with the growing of the cacao bean, and follow the cacao in its career until it becomes the finished product ready for consumption.

    Cacao or Cocoa?

    The reader will have noted above the spelling "cacao," and to those who think it curious, I would say that I do not use this spelling from pedantry. It is an imitation of the word which the Mexicans used for this commodity as early as 1500, and when spoken by Europeans is apt to sound like the howl of a dog. The Mexicans called the tree from which cacao is obtained cacauatl. When the great Swedish scientist Linnaeus, the father of botany, was naming and classifying (about 1735) the trees and plants known in his time, he christened it Theobroma Cacao, by which name it is called by botanists to this day. Theo-broma is Greek for "Food of the Gods." Why Linnaeus paid this extraordinary compliment to cacao is obscure, but it has been suggested that he was inordinately fond of the beverage prepared from it—the cup which both cheers and satisfies. It will be seen from the above that the species-name is cacao, and one can understand that Englishmen, finding it difficult to get their insular lips round this outlandish word, lazily called it cocoa.

    CACAO PODS (Amelonado type) in various states of growth and ripeness.

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