“Chocolate is a junk
food.”
-- A
CUSTOMER IN A HEALTH FOOD STORE
“Chocolate is an
ideal survival food.”
-- A MOUNTAIN CLIMBER
“Montezuma believed
that chocolate was the food of the gods.”
n AN HISTORIAN
WHO’S RIGHT?
|
[Nyerges leads outdoor expeditions
regularly. He is the author of “How to
Survive Anywhere,” “Extreme Simplicity: Homesteading in the City,” “Guide to
Wild Foods and Useful Plants,” and other books. He can be reached at www.SchoolofSelf-Reliance.com.]
A woman I know saw me trying to
select chocolate at a store.
“Chocolate?”
she said to me. “Why are you looking
for chocolate? I thought you only ate
health foods. Chocolate is a junk food!” Was she right? Is chocolate a worthless food, something to
be avoided?
WHAT
EXACTLY IS CHOCOLATE?
Chocolate
pods are produced on a smallish tree, grown and harvested in a region 20
degrees below and above the equator. The
pods – maybe a foot long – contain white beans.
Once picked, these beans are allowed to ferment for a few days or
longer, whereupon they take on their characteristic chocolate aroma and brown
color.
Once
dried, the beans are then exported and typically processed with modern
machinery. However, it is certainly possible to process your own, as
it’s often done today in Mexico.
During
the normal manufacturing process, the beans are first "conched,"
which means that heat and grinding
pressure are applied to produce a thick liquid called chocolate liquor. When this chocolate liquor hardens, bitter --
or baker's -- chocolate results. This is
indeed bitter – and most people don’t care for it since it has no sweetness.
When
this baker's chocolate is then subjected to great pressure, both a liquid and
solid result. The liquid is cocoa butter, and the solid is cocoa. Cocoa butter added back to baker's chocolate
in greater amounts results in bitter-sweet, semi-sweet, or sweet chocolate,
three more grades or types of chocolate.
The addition of milk creates milk chocolate. Sugar, vanilla, and various other ingredients
are often also be added.
For
example, some of the “designer” chocolates can have hot chilis added, as well
as a great variety of nuts, raisins, and even dried fruits.
COMPOSITION OF CHOCOLATE PRODUCTS
[source:
University of Calif, Berkeley Wellness Letter]
TYPE
|
CALORIES (per oz.)
|
FAT (%)
|
PROTEIN (%)
|
Bitter (dark). No sweeteners added.
|
197
|
55
|
10
|
Bittersweet. Must contain at least 35% chocolate liquor.
|
170
|
45
|
7
|
Sweet. Must contain at least 15% chocolate liquor and no more than 12% milk solids.
|
162
|
35
|
4
|
Milk. Must contain
at least 10% chocolate liquor and at least 12% milk solids.
|
150
|
30
|
5
|
Cocoa (powder). All cocoa butter removed.
|
121
|
15
|
18
|
PHARMACEUTICALLY ACTIVE COMPOUNDS IN CHOCOLATE
[Source:
Los Angeles Times science writer Usha Lee McFarling, Feb. 16, 2000]
Serotonin
|
A neurotransmitter which plays a role in regulating mood.
Though found in chocolate, it’s found in much higher amounts in other
carbohydrates.
|
Caffeine
|
This stimulant is found in very small amounts in chocolate.
|
Theobromine
|
Cocoa beans are about 2% theobromine, a central nervous system stimulator, which
stimulates and dilates the blood vessels of the heart and brain, and dilates
the bronchii of the lungs.
|
Phenylethlamine
|
An amphetamine-like substance, also found in the brains of
people “in love.” Though found in chocolate, it’s found in much higher
amounts in meats, such as salami.
|
Polyphenols
|
These antioxidants (also found in green tea and red wine)
may prevent heart disease by preventing the clogging or arteries, and
lowering cholesterol levels.
|
Cannabinoids
|
These chemical, which are the active ingredients in
marijuana, are found in very small amounts in chocolate, and may influence
the brain’s own production of painkilling compounds. By “very small amounts,”
you’d have to eat about 22,000 pounds of chocolate to have any drug-like
response.
|
"White
chocolate," however, is really a misnomer.
If a product contains no cocoa, it’s simply not chocolate! Cocoa is the sine qua non of any true
chocolate product. So-called white
chocolate is made from the cocoa butter, but because it contains no cocoa, it is
technically not “chocolate”
at all but what I call “bogus chocolate.” And, in some cases if they didn’t
even use cocoa butter, but just some cheaper oils, it has no business being
called any kind of chocolate.
Since
there are so many factors from start to finish, no two chocolate products have
exactly the same properties. In other
words, when you try to answer the question “Is Chocolate good or bad for
me?”, you cannot do so without precisely
defining what you mean by “chocolate.”
Is it even remotely possible that chocolate might have some redeeming
qualities? Fortunately, when you read
medical studies of various “good” or “bad” effects from chocolate, they tell
you what type of chocolate was fed to the test subjects, and in some cases, the
brand of chocolate as well.
Certainly,
chocolate is fattening if you consume a lot and are sedentary. A small 12 ounce candy bar typically contains
about 220 calories.
The
raw bean does contain high amounts of theobromine and caffeine, but these
oil-soluble stimulating alkaloids are largely lost during the processing. An average ounce of bittersweet chocolate contains
from five to 10 mg. of caffeine, compared with 100 to 150 mg. of caffeine in an
average cup of coffee.
So
what about cavities and acne -- two often-cited results of chocolate
consumption?
Although
it is commonly believed that eating chocolate causes an increase the incidence
of acne, there is no scientific data to support this belief. Numerous tests with acne sufferers who were
fed large doses of chocolate showed that chocolate did not increase the
incidence of acne. It’s much more likely
that people are simply eating chocolate at the age when they are getting acne,
but one didn’t cause the other.
As
for cavities, at least three separate research centers have revealed that the
cocoa powder within chocolate contains a substance that actually inhibits
cavities.
THE
BAD
The
culprit in this case is not chocolate, but sugar. Sugar is clearly is a cause of cavities. Milk chocolate, for example, contains 55%
sugar by weight. And most often, chocolate is made with “white sugar,” which is
the cocaine of the food industry. White
sugar is a foodless “food.” In most cases, the worst thing about
chocolate is that it contains so much white sugar. Most commercial chocolate products list white
sugar (in any of its various guises) as the primary ingredient.
One
way to sidestep the detrimental effects of so much white sugar in chocolate is
to make your own chocolate products by mixing cocoa (or bitter or baker's
chocolate) with honey, or other natural sweeteners. There are a few commercial
chocolate bars which contain no white sugar, but these are not yet common, and
cost up to three times as much as others with white sugar.
HARD
TIMES BARTER
Talk
to anyone who’s lived through hard times and they’ll tell you that certain basic commodities were hard
to get. This usually includes such items
as coffee, sugar, tobacco, alcohol, and yes, chocolate. These might seem like
vices, but chocolate is the best of the batch, and you’d be able to trade
chocolate for other items you need. After all, who doesn’t like chocolate?
Unless
you live in the Tropics, you won’t be growing your own chocolate. Stock up and store it in a cool dry
place. Don’t store it high up in an
uninsulated cupboard. I learned that the
hard way. Once during a heat wave of 100
+ degrees f., I found that all my chocolate had melted. At the time, I’d been storing chocolate nibs
in glass jars, so I was left with a block of solid chocolate in each jar. IF you purchase the unsweetened nibs (a good
choice), store it in a solid container and keep it all wrapped. Store it in the
basement if you have one, or in a low spot (remember, heat rises).
The
unsweetened baking chocolate is perhaps one of the best ways for chocolate
storage. It will keep the longest, and since it is unsweetened, you can melt or
shred it and use it any way you wish. The unsweetened blocks are also of a
uniform size, and are ideal for trading.
If
you don’t want to bother with the unsweetened chocolate, 85% cocoa would be a
good next choice in the sense of versatility and trade value.
THE
UGLY
The
more common chocolate bars often contain more sugar than chocolate. That’s OK if that’s what you like, but
because of the high sugar content, you’ll get the good with the bad. And some people might want a quick sugar rush
in certain emergency situations.
Chocolate,
properly stored, lasts almost indefinitely.
In time, it develops a white coating, and gets harder, but is still
edible.
So
we now know that it’s the sugar, not the chocolate, that’s the cause of
chocolate’s sometimes-bad reputation. Is
there anything good to say about chocolate?
THE
GOOD
Ninety
percent of the cocoa bean is digestible, comprising 40% carbohydrates, 22% fat,
and 18% protein. Chocolate contains
substantial amounts of vitamins A, D, B2, as well as vitamin E and
K, calcium, thiamine, riboflavin, iron, phosphorus, linoleic acids, and
phenylethylamine. For a food that is
often regarded as a junk food or pleasure food, it’s really pretty good
for you!
A
study conducted at the Harvard School of Public Health indicated that people
who eat from one to three chocolate bars a month live almost a year longer than
those who do not eat chocolate.
In
fact, chocolate is a quickly-assimilated nourishing energy food. Chocolate was taken on all of the American and
Soviet space flights, onto all modern battlefields, and it was taken to Mount
Everest on the Hillary expedition.
Chocolate goes with many
backpackers, hikers, and hunters on their field trips.
It might also be a good item for your food
storage, and for possible barter.
BACK
TO THE ROOTS
I
made my first "authentic" chocolate drink by steeping the coarsely
ground beans of the chocolate plant in warm water, adding a little honey. If historians are correct, this was the type
of beverage -- called "xocoatl" -- that Cortez found Montezuma
drinking.
We
found the whole beans quite oily. Once
ground and made into a beverage, the drink had the color of weak coffee and was
a bit oily. It had a pleasant
bitter-chocolate flavor. One cup seemed
as stimulating as two to three cups of coffee.
It was good!
Montezuma
believed chocolate to be a food of the gods, which was brought to the Aztecs by
a healer or prophet who traveled over the waters, possibly Quetzalcoatl. To this day, chocolate is known to botanists
as Theobroma, or "Food of the gods."
It was widely regarded as an aphrodisiac, a food that gave Montezuma the
strength do deal with his many wives!
Chocolate
is a valuable energy food for active individuals. As with coffee, tea, and even tobacco,
chocolate has the ability to enhance our lives when consumed moderately.
RECIPES
CHOCOLATE
RECIPES
Traditional
CHAMPURADO Beverage
4
C masa
2
pieces Mexican chocolate
2
Tbsp carob powder (optional)
dash
of sea salt
½
C Alta Dean eggnog (or other health-quality egg nog)
Warmed
in pot, After chocolate has cooled to approx.120 degrees f., add 1 C milk.
2
C water.
MUD
BALLS
3
C. uncooked quick-cooking oats
6
Tbsp. Grated dark chocolate
½
C. dry milk
½
tsp. Sea salt (optional)
1
C. currants or raisins
½
C. chunky peanut butter
½
C. raw honey
2
tsp. Vanilla
Put
the oats, cocoa, dry milk, and salt into a bowl and mix well. Add the remaining
ingredients and mix together. Mix
thoroughly. Then, pick up a tablespoon of the mix at a time and roll in to a
ball with your hands. Put into a serving
plate and serve.
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