Archaeologists find traces of 2,500-year old chocolate
4 August Daily Mail
Archaeologists say they have found traces of 2,500-year-old chocolate
on a plate in the Yucatan peninsula, the first time they have found
ancient chocolate residue on a plate rather than a cup, suggesting it
may have been used as a condiment or sauce with solid food.Experts have
long thought cacao beans and pods were mainly used in pre-Hispanic
cultures as a beverage, made either by crushing the beans and mixing
them with liquids or fermenting the pulp that surrounds the beans in the
pod.
Such a drink was believed to have been reserved for the elite. But
the discovery announced this week by Mexico's National Institute of
Anthropology and History expands the envelope of how chocolate may have
been used in ancient Mexico.It would also suggest that there may be
ancient roots for traditional dishes eaten in today's Mexico, such as
mole, the chocolate-based sauce often served with meats."
This is the first time it has been found on a plate used for serving
food," archaeologist Tomas Gallareta said. "It is unlikely that it was
ground there (on the plate), because for that they probably used metates
(grinding stones).
"The traces of chemical substances considered "markers" for chocolate
were found on fragments of plates uncovered at the Paso del Macho
archaeological site in Yucatan in 2001.
The fragments were later subjected to tests with the help of experts
at Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi, as part of a joint project.
The tests revealed a "ratio of theobromine and caffeine compounds
that provide a strong indicator of cacao usage," according to a
statement by the university."These are certainly interesting results,"
John S Henderson, a Cornell University professor of Anthropology and one
of the foremost experts on ancient chocolate, said in an email on
Thursday.
Henderson, who was not involved in the Paso del Macho project, wrote
that "the presence of cacao residues on plates is even more interesting
... the important thing is that it was on flat serving vessels and so
presented or served in some other way than as a beverage.""I think their
inference that cacao was being used in a sauce is likely correct, though
I can imagine other possibilities," he added, citing possibilities like
"addition to a beverage (cacao-based or other) as a condiment or
garnish."
The plate fragments date to about 500 BC, and are not the oldest
chocolate traces found in Mexico. Beverage vessels found in excavations
of Gulf coast sites of the Olmec culture, to the west of the Yucatan,
and other sites in Chiapas, to the south, have yielded traces around
1,000 years older.
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