Recipes
Growing Cocoa and Cocoa Nib Hot Chocolate
Everything that you want in a pizza crust a crisp, chewy and a wonderful base for all your favorite toppings, just in a gluten-free version.
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But where does this wonderful food, that is really a fruit, since the seeds are inside, grow? And who raises this food? Our journey takes us to another part of the world. Today, most of the cacao beans come from small, independent farms in tropical regions in Africa and Indonesia. On these small farms, the cacao trees are planted among taller trees, such as banana, rubber, and coconut. Cocao trees can only live in hot, rainy places near the Equator. It takes 3-4 years for the cacao tree to mature. Thereafter, one tree is capable of producing approximately 2,000 pods every year. The pods grow on branches and trunks of the cacao tree. Each pod has between 30-40 seeds inside it. Cacao seeds are sometimes referred to as the cacao beans.
A raw cacao bean is very bitter by nature. In the past, people would sweeten it with honey before they could eat it. This plant was also used as an item of trade in the Aztec empire. Cacao beans were also used as currency for trading at some point in history as well.
Chocolate is first made by harvesting the pods. Harvesting takes place biannually and involves cutting the pods from the cocao trees using knives. Secondly, the harvesters remove the beans from the pods with their hands. The third step is fermentation of the beans. At this stage, the beans are placed in wooden bins, covered with banana leaves, and allowed to ferment. Fermenting the cacao beans replaces the bitter flavor with a sweet one, changes color from pale to dark, and turns the sugars into acids. After fermentation, the cacao seeds are sun-dried, cleaned, and then roasted. Then they are transported to the factories. At the factory, the dried beans are ground, pressed, heated, and stirred to create chocolate.
Chocolate is made up of three components: cocoa solids, cocoa butter, and cocoa mass. The cocoa mass is responsible for the color and flavor of chocolate. More cocoa mass in the chocolate results in a darker chocolate and vice versa. The dark chocolate does not have milk in it and is dark in color.
I want to share a recipe with you today to complete this blog series. Cocoa Nib Hot Chocolate. I love this hot chocolate on a cool autumn morning watching a sunrise and starting my day. I hope you enjoy this and the other recipes and information that this blog series has shared with you.
Worldatlas.com, newsaf.com, CNN, WordPress, Alton Brown
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info@kitchenkneads.com2025 |Kitchen Kneads|All Rights Reserved|Privacy Policy|Shipping Policy|Return Policy|XML Sitemap