enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_chocolate

    Chocolate is a Spanish loanword, first recorded in English in 1604, [1] and in Spanish in 1579. [2] However, the words origins beyond this are contentious. While it is popularly believed that chocolate derives from the Nahuatl word chocolatl (the language of the Aztecs), early texts documenting the Nahuatl word for chocolate drink use a different term, cacahuatl, meaning "cacao water".

  3. Chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate

    Chocolate. Chocolate is a food made from roasted and ground cocoa beans that can be a liquid, solid, or paste, either on its own or as a flavoring in other foods. The cacao tree has been used as a source of food for at least 5,300 years, starting with the Mayo-Chinchipe culture in what is present-day Ecuador.

  4. Chocolate bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_bar

    A chocolate bar is a confection containing chocolate, which may also contain layerings or mixtures that include nuts, fruit, caramel, nougat, and wafers. A flat, easily breakable, chocolate bar is also called a tablet. In some varieties of English and food labeling standards, the term chocolate bar is reserved for bars of solid chocolate, with ...

  5. Milk chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_chocolate

    The word chocolate arrived in the English language about 1600, but initially described dark chocolate. The first use of the term "milk chocolate" was for a beverage brought to London from Jamaica in 1687, but it was not until the Swiss inventor Daniel Peter successfully combined cocoa and condensed milk in 1875 that the milk chocolate bar was ...

  6. Ancient chocolate factory — built in 600-year-old building ...

    www.aol.com/ancient-chocolate-factory-built-600...

    A large medieval house was built 600 years ago in Barcelona, Spain. By the 19th century, it was a chocolate factory. Now, archaeologists are exploring the remains of the ancient building ...

  7. Have Swiss scientists made a chocolate breakthrough?

    www.aol.com/news/swiss-scientists-made-chocolate...

    In the 19th Century, Rudolf Lindt, of the famous Lindt chocolate family, accidentally invented the crucial step of "conching" the chocolate – rolling the warm cocoa mass to make it smooth and ...

  8. Milton S. Hershey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milton_S._Hershey

    Milton Snavely Hershey (September 13, 1857 – October 13, 1945) was an American chocolatier, businessman, and philanthropist. Trained in the confectionery business, Hershey pioneered the manufacture of caramel, using fresh milk. He launched the Lancaster Caramel Company, which achieved bulk exports, and then sold it to start a new company ...

  9. Coenraad Johannes van Houten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coenraad_Johannes_van_Houten

    27 May 1887. (1887-05-27) (aged 86) Weesp, Netherlands. Coenraad Johannes van Houten (15 March 1801 – 27 May 1887) was a Dutch chemist and chocolate maker known for the treatment of cocoa mass with alkaline salts to remove the bitter taste and make cocoa solids more water-soluble; the resulting product is still called "Dutch process chocolate".