WONDERFUL CHILLIES

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Chillies are one of my most favourite things. They come in such beautiful colours and shapes (like the wonderful packet of East Indian chillies I picked up in Kerala, left) & they’re always so exciting to eat and cook with. I think that I’m actually slightly addicted to that heat rush, but despite often burning my mouth & developing irritating hiccups, I always come back for more.

Ear Flowers

The chilli is native to Central and South America and the Carribean, so it’s no real surprise that this spice was one of the first additions to the earliest forms of chocolate, made by the forefathers of the Mayans and Aztecs. Along with Vanilla, Bee Honey and the peppery Ear Flowers (right), Chilli was used to add flavour to the bitter liquid they called xoclatl.

According to Fred Czarra (Spices, A Global History), the Spanish were the first to bring chillies to Europe, courtesy of Christopher Columbus in the 16th century. The Spanish & Hernando Cortes are also often thought to be responsible in bringing chocolate to Europe soon after. However, it was the Portuguese who were probably responsible for taking chillies to South and East Asia, via their mighty trading routes which ran from Brazil to Macao and Goa.

Bhut Jolokia

The heat of a chilli is measured by the Scoville Heat Index, named after the pharmacist William Scoville. The hottest chilli on record is the Trinidad Scorpian ‘Butch T’, discovered in Australia in 2011 which measured 1,463,700 Scovilles. By comparison, a jalapeño comes in at 10,000!

The home of the chilli belongs to Mexico, who use them in salsas (guajillo), pickles (jalapeno), for stuffing (manzano) and even as vegetables (poblano). My favourite is the chipotle, which is a mild, dried & smoked jalapeño and will star in our Mexican chocolate bar. They have a delicious, smoky flavour and just the perfect amount of heat.

Chocolate and chilli also star in Mole, which is a dark, rich sauce popular throughout Mexico. Here’s a recipe for Chicken Mole, which tastes like a Latino Chicken Chasseur & goes perfectly with rice & home-made guacamole. It’s a simplified recipe for four people, which is easy to cook but will take you about an hour…

1. Blend 1 clove of garlic, 1 sliced onion, 500g of chopped tomatoes, 4 tablespoons of toasted sesame seeds, 1, tablespoon of paprika, 1 teaspoon of cumin, 1/2 teaspoon of ground cloves and 1 teaspoon of chilli powder (I’m using a mild Guajillo chilli). This gives you a rich fragrant tomato sauce.

2. Heat some oil in a big pan, then add the tomato sauce and simmer for 20 minutes, then cover & leave.

3. Cover 4 chopped chicken breasts with 1 chopped clove of garlic, 1 sliced onion and a few sprigs of mint in a pan with water & simmer for 30 minutes until the chicken is white & tender. Then remove the chicken & add to the tomato sauce. Finally carefully strain the remaining stock from the pan into a container & put to one side.

4. Pour a little of your stock into the pan with the tomato sauce & chicken, add 25g of dark chocolate & stir / simmer for ten minutes or so until the sauce thickens. Add more stock if the sauce becomes too thick, then serve up!

HERNANDO CORTES: DISCOVERER OF COCOA?

Hernando CortesHernando Cortes was a famous Spanish explorer who tred in the footsteps of Christopher Columbus during the 16th century. Cortes was a controversial & bold leader, however he is also widely regarded as the first European to discover chocolate.

After spending years in Haiti & Cuba, Cortes moved onto his most famous expedition in Mexico, where he defeated King Montezuma & the Aztec Empire, then developed Mexico City (formerly Tenochtitlán) into the most important European city in the Americas. However, the defeat – by a dramatically smaller army – may have actually been largely assisted by a Smallpox epidemic brought over by the Spaniards, which then spread like wildfire throughout the Aztec population, as suggested by great American historian William H McNeill.

During the conquest, Cortes also tasted a warm, bitter drink made with cocoa beans called ‘xocoatl’. This was also called the ‘royal drink, which Emperor Montezuma apparently consumed 50 times a day. Furthermore, Cortes noted that the Aztecs were using cocoa beans as a currency substitute for gold, which led him to promote the development of cocoa bean plantations across Mexico, Trinidad, Haiti & throughout the Caribbean.

However, there is actually little historical evidence to suggest that Cortes was the first transporter of chocolate to Europe. In fact, in the book ‘The True History of Chocolate’, the writers states “No one knows for sure when cacao first reached Spain. There is no credible evidence to support the oft-repeated claim that it was the work of Hernán Cortés. He sent a ship to Spain from the coast of Veracruz in 1519 and visited Charles V in person in 1528 with “a dazzling sample of Mexico’s riches and wonders” including dwarves, bouncing rubber balls, monsters, and albinos, fans, shields, plumes, obsidian mirrors. But no mention of chocolate. More likely is that the Maya introduced it to Europe. Specifically the Kekchi Maya of Guatemala, who live in the Alta Verapaz (True Peace)… beautiful region of cloud-swirled mountains. Here, Dominicans led by Bartolomé de las Casas had taken over a delegation of Maya nobles to visit Prince Philip in Spain in 1544. Amongst the other things they brought were ‘receptacles of beaten chocolate’ “.

Maybe we’ll never know for sure……

21.12.2012 – END OF THE WORLD?

Aswell as being one the earliest consumers of chocolate, the Mayans are also known for their famous calendars – one of which is about to reach a dramatic milestone.

On Friday 21 December 2012, the Mayan Long Count will read 13.0.0.0.0 for the first time in 5,125 years, meaning the completion of 13 cycles & marking the creation of the human world. The earliest known Long Count was recorded in 32AD at Chiapa de Corzo in the Southern Mexican state of Chiapas, which was the one of first & largest settlements of Mesoamerica.

According to the Popol Vuh, the Mayan sacred book, the previous creation ends at the start of the 14 cycle or b’ak’tun, which some doom-mongers are interpreting as meaning the end of the world. However, many historians believe that Mayans simply saw the end of a cycle as a time for huge celebrations – celebrations which may have featured plenty of chocolate.