A Little of What You Fancy.They say that a little of what you fancy does you good. I don’t know who “they” are, but I believe them. In my own case, I fancy chocolate. I fancy it often, as a matter of fact. It appears that my colleagues in the medical profession increasingly fancy it too, for its potential therapeutic benefits.
Let us
start with the obvious. The cacao bean is a fruit, right? And we are urged to
eat two servings of fruit a day, are we not? I (almost) rest my case.
A second
point: history is on the side of chocolate-as-therapy. Sure, we are talking
here about therapy-before-science, but anecdotal evidence is not completely to
be ignored, it is often where the serious science gets started, isn’t it? And surely
it is foolish to ignore several centuries’ worth of anecdotes and testimonials?
It is
difficult to think of something that chocolate has not at some time or other
been credited with fixing – everything from stomach upsets to kidney stones to ‘female
complaints’ to syphilis, and a whole lot more. It has been used to increase strength
and bravery before battle, to promote breast-milk, encourage hair growth, and promote
fertility. And of course, it has been promoted as an aphrodisiac, which is
common knowledge or chocolate sales would not be so high on Valentine’s Day. Naturally
also, it has also been credited with increasing longevity – whether by positive
effects or the reduction of the above diseases, I cannot say – but a few extra
years is a few extra years, right?
A
spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, as they also say. In the case of
chocolate, added flavours may also help the therapeutic effect. This is
certainly what physicians and apothecaries believed in the seventeenth to
nineteenth centuries believed. I am sure that the clients of such as Sulpice
Debauve, the pharmacist of King Louis XVI, and Parisian chocolate shop-owner (the
shop is still there) agreed. What lady, suffering from ‘spasms’ would not
appreciate the orange-blossom water added to Debauve’s ‘Ladies Chocolate”?
Other common additives to his included vanilla, almond oil, ambergris, and
musk.
Any good
advertising agent likes testimonials too. Here are a few, if you don’t mind
them being a little old.
“Twill make Old Women Young and Fresh; Create New-Motions of the
Flesh”
Chocolate; or, An Indian Drink (1652) Antonio Colmenero de
Ledesma.
“Walked in the morning with my head in a sad taking through the
last night's drink, which I am very sorry for; so rose, and went with Mr Creed
to drink our morning draught, which he did give me in Chocolate to settle my
stomach.”
Samuel Pepys, in his diary on April 24, 1661, after celebrating the
coronation of Charles II.
“Dr. Munday noted a patient in a ‘miserable condition’ who, after ‘supping of
Chocolate…[was] recovered in a short Time; but what is more extraordinary is,
that his Wife in Complacency to her Husband, having also accustomed herself to
sup Chocolate with him, bore afterwards several Children, though she was looked
upon before not capable of having any’ ”.
Treatise on All Sorts of Foods…also of Drinkables (1745) M.L. Lemery
Modern
research is coming up with some intriguing prospects for chocolate therapy.
There will be many more studies no doubt, and I, for one, put my hand up as a
volunteer for any research project involving the consumption of chocolate. In
the meantime, there is increasingly convincing evidence that the flavonoids in
chocolate may have a powerful anti-oxidant
effect which may be of benefit in
heart disease and cancer.
So, in
the hope and expectation that The Food of the Gods may, in my lifetime, become
The Prescription of Choice, I give you a recipe for chocolate ice-cream, from Menon’s
La Cuisinière Bourgeoise (1750)
Chocolate Ice Cream.
Take 12 pints of cream and 4 pints of milk and let it boil with
¾ pound of sugar. Take ½ pound of chocolate that you melt in a pan of water set
in the fire, which you stir with a spatula or wooden spoon, and let it simmer
just to the point of boiling. You must add three egg yolks that you have mixed
well with the milk and cream. Pour it all into the pan with the chocolate and
mix together. Then you must place it in a terrine until you are ready to place
it on ice.
I'm all for more chocolate! I usually have dark chocolate (at least 85% cocao) before I exercise. I seems to help since I don't feel as fatigued while cycling or walking. Horace Kephart recommends packing a pound of chocolate per man on hunting and camping trips in his book Camp Cookery claiming it increases stamina on long treks. Might as well carry a pound of chocolate as anything else in my pack.
ReplyDeleteHow about "wine chocolate"? It's delicious made with port.
ReplyDeleteTo make Wine Chocolate.
Take a Pint of Sherry, or a Pint and a half of red Port, four Ounces and a half of Chocolate, six Ounces of fine Sugar, and half an Ounce of white Starch, or fine Flour; mix, dissolve, and boil all these as before. But if your Chocolate be with Sugar, take double the Quantity of Chocolate, and half the Quantity of Sugar; and so in all. [‘The Cooks and Confectioners Dictionary’, John Nott, 1733]
Great post..love the old quotes. I myself also take chocolate on hikes but my real wekness is chocolate with chili...unbeatable combination!
ReplyDeleteHi All.
ReplyDeleteLes - I reckon dark chocolate is the ultimate all-purpose food.
Elie - I had completely forgotten this concept - thanks for reminding me.
Paddy - I love the combo too! and chocolate with vanilla.