Sunday, February 12, 2012

Things to Know About Chocolate Before That Valentine's Day Gift

CREDIT: Dreamstime

Valentine's Day is around the corner, most of us would probably gift up a box of chocolate for ours love one. A few of us probably know less of what make chocolate so great besides being the most popular valentine gifts. Ask yourself: does chocolate have any benefits to our health? Knowing what health benefit chocolate can bring to your love one is always a plus. Make this Valentine's Day more especial than last by knowing more about chocolate and share it with your love one so he/she can enjoy the heart-warming taste without regret this year.

Chocolate has many benefits since it is made from plants. The favonoids in chocolate plants help act as antioxidants that protect the body from aging caused by free radicals and heart disease. Flavonoids also help relax blood pressure through the production ofnitric oxide, and balance certain hormones in the body.

Dark chocolate contains certain antioxidants called polyphenols that could help fight chronic inflammation of tissues in the circulatory system and play a role in cancer prevention.

Read some fun facts about chocolate’s journey from tree to heart box. Learn a little more about chocolate and how many steps and tools are involved in bringing that yummy and heart-warming taste to your tummy. The process of making chocolate is pretty interesting.
Here are 7 facts about chocolate's journey from tree to heart box.


1. Chocolate comes from fruits called pods that grow on cocoa trees. Farmers grow these trees in hot, rainy regions, primarily near the equator. It tends to take about five years before a seedling has matured enough to produce these pods, reaching its peak pod production at about age 10. Even in what we humans call mid-life, age 30 to 40, cocoa trees may be producing pods still.


2. Each of the football-size pods can contain some 50 cocoa beans. It takes four cocoa seeds to make an ounce of milk chocolate, and 12 seeds to make an ounce of dark chocolate.


3. Once these beans get roasted and de-shelled, they are heated to high temperatures, resulting in a thick paste called chocolate liquor. Next, manufacturers blend the chocolate liquor with sugar and milk, depending on the type of chocolate they are making, to addflavor. The FDA has established standards for different kinds of chocolate, according to the Institute of Food Technologists, a nonprofit scientific society:

•    Milk chocolate must contain 10 percent chocolate liquor, along with its dream (or other dairy products) and sugar.
•    Dark, bittersweet or semisweet chocolate must contain at least 35 percent chocolate liquor.
•    White chocolate contains no chocolate liquor, but instead consists of cocoa butter, sugar, dairy products, and flavorings; it must contain at least 20 percent cocoa butter and no more than 55 percent sugar.

4. Once that chocolate gets packaged up, it heads for places like the United States and Switzerland. Every year, Americans enjoy nearly 12 pounds of chocolate, buying more of the sugary treat on Valentine's Day than any other day. If that doesn't sound like a lot, you may be Swiss; turns out, the Swiss treat themselves to more than 22 pounds of chocolate a year, according to 2007 numbers from the American Sugar Alliance.


5. Europe is full of chocolate lovers. In fact, as far back as the late 1700s, those who lived in Madrid, Spain, enjoyed nearly 12 million pounds of chocolate every year. Today, 15 of the 16 leading chocolate-consuming contries (per capita) are in Europe, according to the California Academy of Sciences (CAS).


6. That bar of chocolate may do the heart good. For instance, a study published in 2010 in the European Heart Journal, in which researchers followed more than 19,000 adults between 35 and 65 for at least 10 years, found those who ate chocolate had lower blood pressure and a 39 percent lower risk of having a heart attack or stroke compared with those who ate the least amount of chocolate.


7. As for whether that chocolate will boost your libido this Valentine's Day, the jury is out. Scientists have no proof of this seeming folklore. As long ago as A.D. 1000, chocolate drinks were exchanged at weddings in southern Mexico and parts of Central America, according to CAS. Legend has it that Casanova ate the sweet treat to improve his love-making, and Marquis de Sade was so passionate about it, he had his wife send it to him while he was in prison, according to CAS.

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