The Ancients - Origins of Chocolate
Episode Date: December 4, 2025Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr. Cameron McNeil, Mesoamerican archaeologist, to explore cacao, in ancient Mesoamerican societies like the Maya, Aztecs, and Olmecs. They discuss how was used as food, dr...ink, currency, and in ritualistic practices, and learn about its journey from South America to becoming a highly valued commodity in Mesoamerica.MOREOrigins of BeerListen on AppleListen on SpotifyPyramid of the SunListen on AppleListen on SpotifyPresented by Tristan Hughes. The audio editor and producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello. I hope you're keeping well. I'm all good here and always wanted to hear from you, the ancients family. I've had a few messages sent in this week from listeners of suggestions for future episodes and we've added all of them down. And of course, if you've got any stories to tell about the ancients and listening to the podcast over the years, well, we'd love to.
hear from you, really keen to develop this idea of an ancients community too. Now, with that all being
said, let's get on to today's episode. We figured that it had been long enough since we last
recorded an episode on the weird and wonderful origins of particular foods and drink. We've done
episodes on the origins of wine, the origins of olive oil, and the origins of beer in the past,
and we decided that it was about time to do the next one.
This time, it's the turn of chocolate,
and we're off to Mesoamerica to explore names like the Olmec, the Maya,
and even the Aztec.
It was really interesting to hear just how highly valued chocolate or cacao
was for these ancient societies.
Now, our guest today is Dr Cameron McNeil.
She's an associate professor at the City University of New York.
Cameron Dowden from the US for this chat
and I really do hope you enjoy.
Let's go.
Chocolate.
For so many of us today,
it's the sweet treat we can't live without.
And its origin story takes us back thousands of years
to those fascinating yet enigmatic ancient cultures of Mesoamerica.
In Mesoamerica, the chocolate that they made
was in the form of a drink.
They made it from the seeds and fruit of a cacao pot, which grew on the cacao tree.
Its scientific name being Theobroma cacao.
Chocolate became a valuable commodity for peoples across Mesoamerica.
It was traded far and wide.
It was used in rituals.
Cacao trees were depicted in art.
Cacao beans were used as currency.
The origins of chocolate is a fascinating story linked to so many days.
different aspects of Mesoamerican culture. This is its story with our guest, Professor Cameron
McNee. Cameron, it is such a pleasure to have you on the podcast today. Thank you.
And to talk about the origins of chocolate, Cameron, I had no idea just how important
chocolate was to these Mesoamerican societies thousands of years ago. It's a really interesting
story and an archaeological story too. Yes, certainly. It was one of the two most important foods.
And before we delve into the ancient history of chocolate in Mesoamerica,
there's no such thing as a silly question, but what do we mean by chocolate in ancient Mesoamerica?
The word chocolatol, that's not a word I use when I'm working in Mesoamerica
because we tend to think of it as the food that's been consumed as cacao, or cacaa, as they called it.
The word chocolatel appears in Mexico around 1580 in print.
So there's some debate as to whether that's a pre-conquest word or not.
I tend to think it is a pre-conquest word, but it's a word not used in all areas of Mesoamerica.
So it's a word that we associate with the Nawa of central Mexico, not a word that we associate with the Maya, who call this cacao or cacao or cacaowa.
And so what is cacao? Where do they acquire it from?
Well, it's the seeds of the cacao tree.
The process is that if you look at traditional communities, they will get,
mazurka of cacao, the cacao pot, and they open it up and they take out the fruit and the seeds
and they put that in some sort of container and they beat it with some water. And that actually
makes a fruity juice. So some people consume that juice. Other people like to put that juice
away for three days and it ferment and makes a slightly effervescent alcoholic beverage,
which I've been told is also an important ritual offering. And then they take the seeds.
out of that and they let them ferment in the pulp that's still clinging to them. And the pulp is this
really tasty, sweet fruit around the outside of the seed. It reminds me a little bit if you've
ever had a mango steen, which is also not a common fruit, but like a delicious fruit. And then
they ferment them and then they clean them off once they're fermented and dry them. And then
some people actually use un-toasted cacao in their beverages, and some people toast the seeds
for their beverages.
Some families make beverages that are half of toasted seeds and half not of toasted seeds,
so there's many different ways, and they grind it to produce these beverages.
And so can we call these beverages chocolate?
Is that okay?
You can call these beverages chocolate.
I generally use the term cacao, but I understand people that understand chocolate better.
No, but I completely understand because it's so different to our idea of chocolate today, isn't it, in the modern world?
But actually, this is the original recipes harkening back thousands of years ago to the earliest, you know, creations of chocolate.
It's getting it out of our heads what we think of chocolate today in the Western world to envisage where actually chocolate was in Mesoamerica and why sometimes it's easy just to say cacao instead.
Exactly, yes.
So were there different types of cacao tree which produced different types of chocolate in different.
places across Mesoamerica then?
I think a lot of places you would find people growing many different varieties of
cacao because as people adopted cacao as a beverage, they selected for specific
trades.
There are Spanish chroniclers that tell us that there are different kinds of cacao with
different flavors, maybe four different types.
I would imagine that in the Maya area, there was a tremendous amount of diversity in these
extremely refined
cacao trees.
There were probably area
specific.
So different
my apollities during
the classic period,
for example,
if we're going to go
further back to
200 to 850
CE,
we're going to see
that different
communities had
different cacao trees
that they had
further domesticated
over hundreds of years.
And then
maybe that one group
envied the other groups
cacao or that
they traded their special
cacao
But we don't have a lot of that anymore.
And so how do you learn more about the use of cacao in these Mesoamerican societies,
many centuries before the arrival of the Spanish?
Is this where archaeology really comes to the fall?
It does.
And there were two very important discoveries, I think in the late 80s.
One was David Stort determined what the glyph was for cacao.
And the other was a chemist named W. Jeffrey Hurst.
at Hershey Laboratories, he developed a method for identifying the presence of cacao vessels.
And that's opened up so much information.
Well, let's go right to the beginning, Karen, if we may.
I mean, do we have any idea which Mesoamerican people or culture, if we can use that word,
were the first people to discover cacao, to discover chocolate?
Who could we potentially say invented it?
Well, actually, we need to go to South America.
Oh, okay, great.
Because the cacao tree comes from South America.
It's found in the Amazon Basin.
And it seems that people down there were the first to domesticate this tree.
And along the way, it's been further domesticated in different directions once it was introduced to Mesoamerica.
But the oldest cacao that's been found being used by people in grinding stones and in vessels is from a site in Ecuador called Santa Ana La Florida.
and that dates to about 5,300 years ago.
Wow. Okay.
And what's that evidence of cacao of chocolate at that time 5,000 years ago?
So has it been ground down from the seeds?
They found DNA ground into rinding stones.
And that's really interesting because a lot of scholars had suggested that, of course,
South Americans would be consuming cacao but probably just the pulp.
And even today in South America, you can get vinegar made of the pulp and you can get,
ice cream made of the pole. But they thought that they wouldn't bother with the seeds
because they have other plants that provide a bigger kick than the limited caffeine
is in cacao. Mesoamerica doesn't have other stimulants, whereas South America has a lot of
stimulus or more stimulants. So for Mesoamericans, the stimulant is going to be extremely
attractive. It's the caffeine. I don't drink a lot of caffeine because I'm allergic
to it. So when I do have caffeine, I really feel it and chocolate can do it. I can feel
and chocolate in a way that if you're drinking coffee every day, you're not going to notice it.
Right. So actually, so we can potentially imagine then the first people who realized the seeds
of the cacao tree had these caffeine properties, the caffeine high you get from eating it.
Do you think that was one of the main reasons why it then spreads, it gets very popular?
It's not this idea that we have of chocolate bars today, you know, of a sweet taste or anything
like that. It was the caffeine nature of these grounded down seeds that made it so popular
from an early time that made it start to spread north from the Amazon Basin.
Definitely, definitely. Also, it was an easily transportable form of caffeine.
So it begins in South America in the Amazon basin. And when do we see the spread almost
of cacao further north into Mesoamerica? Do we know much about that journey?
We don't know exactly how I got there. Some scholars have suggested that it was introduced
coming up along the Pacific coast and maybe introduced also with ceramic tech.
So, for example, at the site of Paso de la Amado, which is Makayo people, that site,
which is in southern Mexico, has all of a sudden these beautiful ceramics, and one of them
has been found to have cacao in.
So there's not a learning curve for creating ceramics, suddenly they just are making these
beautiful ceramics.
And those ceramics look similar to ceramics coming from Panama.
So perhaps they're trading up the coast, and they introduce both the ceramic technology
and cacao trees.
So what are some of the earliest Meso American cultures
that very much
embrace cacao trees
once they go north from the Amazon basin?
Because I've got in my notes here, the Olmec.
I think everybody embraces cacao trees,
but the Olmec are one of the early groups.
So the makaya, the olmec, and the lanka
all have cacao at an early date.
I assume the Maya do as well.
The word, though, for cacao
is believed to come
from the Olmec language.
Kakawa is Mihazokian, and that's what the Olmec
relator has spoken.
And so how far back in time are we talking now?
So if the 5,000 years ago in the Amazon Basin is when you have that earliest evidence,
so what time frame are we talking with these Mesoamerican cultures that also all seem
to get fascinated and really interested in cacao and using cacao?
Well, the Olmec, there's been analysis done at the Cetus and Lorenzo, and the oldest
possible date on the materials they analyzed was 3,800 years ago. So 3,800 to 3,000
years ago. That crosses over, though, with the site of Hasse de la Mad, the one I told you about,
where cacao was found in one of the vessels there. And so what do we know about how these early
Mesoamerican societies were using cacao, were using chocolate? We know they were drinking it,
but at the Olmec site, there are vessels that we don't associate with drinking. So they
were likely using it as food as well. And I'm an archaeologist, and for my dissertation research,
I worked on a project at the UNESCO site of Copan in Honduras. I worked on excavations that were
directed by Robert Scherer, and he oversaw the excavation of tunnels into the Copan Acropolis,
and there he discovered three royal tombs. I took samples out of all of the vessels, and I also
two examples of pollen from the tombs to look at what kind of flowers were being used in ritual.
I sent the residue samples to W. Jeffrey Hearst at Hershey Laboratories, and he found
cacao in 11 of our vessels. And to this day, it's the only place where cacao has been found
with animal bone. So we know that they are using it as some sort of sauce or component in foods.
We've gone ahead to the Maya now on the site of coppan, which I know.
is important because that's your main area of research. So, as you mentioned, so evidence of it,
then drinking it, which I'd love to learn a bit more about in a moment, but also consuming
cacao, consuming chocolate as a food as well. So yeah, can you please tell us about this evidence?
So we have a tamale platter, which had cacao and its residue, the tamales didn't survive.
Tamales were the form in which a ruler would be consuming maize. In fact, what we think of today
tortillas as being common, they came along in a lot of areas much later. But we often see,
Tamales depicted on elite Maya vessels, they're at the foot of the ruler.
And if you look at these Mayan vessels, you see sauce often on the top of the tamales.
So we don't know whether the cacao was in the sauce that's on the tamale, or it could also be a sauce mixed with whatever meat is in the tamales.
So there is ethnographic evidence of deer meat being made.
Tamales with deer meat and cacao inside them.
many people make tamales with turkey and cacao inside them so it seems like they probably had something
like that as well my favorite discovery was a very small bowl full of riverine fish and cacao inside it
what i don't know is whether that had a sauce of the pulp or of the seeds because the chemical
signatures is the same. And honestly, I think the pulp might be, appeals to me more. A sweet sauce
made of the pulp on fish sounds better to me than ground seeds. If it is the pulp, should we be
imagining that this fish was dowsed in chocolate sauce almost? Yeah, yes, certainly. And also a sauce
that has a little caffeine kick to it. And I'm guessing it was the main incentive behind it, was it,
that caffeine kick? There's optimists that it wakes you up. So certainly you eat something and it makes
you feel more alive and more able to face the day. I think that's the appeal of caffeine.
That's why so many people consume coffee every day. So from that work you've done there at the
site of Copan, do you think it's likely then that chocolate was consumed almost as a source
or as a condiment to go with certain foods in Maya cities all across Mesoamerica and
potentially also in older places like mentioned the Olmec as well? And do you think this
could have been a way that they consumed chocolate with food. Definitely. I don't know if you
know about this debate. The Spanish and the Italians claimed that they invented cacao sauce. And the
cacao was only a beverage before they arrived to Meso America. And there's this story about
Spanish nuns, you know, by accident, it created sauces with cacao. And honestly, that's
ridiculous. And it's really offensive to people in Mexico where this is particularly talked about.
Because clearly we have sauces at Copan and those date to around 500 CE or a little before that.
And of course, there's Olmec vessels that are for food and they also have the signature.
We also have an extremely interesting offering at Cropan that Dr. Cher discovered.
it's a stone-lined box and it had a thick stone put over it so it was completely sealed and
the materials in it were well preserved and one of the vessels in there has two turkeys inside it
a male turkey and a female turkey and the male's head was cut off and put to the side of the vessel
and that also had cacao on it but that offering is extremely interesting because the sentence of
the Copan Maya are the Chorti Maya. And today, the Chorti continue to make an offering, which is quite
similar. They sacrifice a female turkey and they drop it into a sacred spring. And then they
slit the head of a male and they drip the blood into the spring, but they don't put the
male in the spring. It's a bit similar to that offering and I really like that because I haven't
read about any other Maya culture that makes an offering like that. And it's pretty incredible to
think about this 500-CE offering with cacao being so similar to the practices that the tortie
Maya are still doing today. So that seems like a way that cacao was being consumed as a food,
but of course there is that other key part in regards to consuming cacao, it being consumed
as a drink in these Mesoamerican societies. Cameron, do we know much about how they would
have consumed cacao as a drink, consumed chocolate as a drink back then?
We know a lot because the Maya wrote inscriptions on their vessels during the classic period.
Fantastic.
And they tell us about what's in the vessel, what kind of cacao beverages in the vessel and
not all the same kind. Also, we know that in today that in different areas, different
additives are put into cacao. Maze is always mixed with cacao. So there's not just a chocolate
beverage. The beverage is always going to have maize mixed with cacao. But then there's all kinds
of different addages. There's inscriptions that talk about honeyed cacao, so they're putting honey
into it. Fruity cacao, so they're putting some kind of fruit into it, unless that means that they're
using, they're making a cacao beverage of the bulk. Actually, they don't say vanilla on any of these
vessels, but the Spanish tell us that vanilla was being added to cacao. And then there's a range of
flowers that are added to cacao beverages as well. That might be regional, depending
which flowers are added. But some of those flowers are peppery, and some of those flowers
are perfumi. So it's not what we think of as chocolate. And so can we imagine with all of these
ingredients, can we imagine them almost putting them in a big mixing bowl or something like that?
So the cacao pulp, the regional flowers, the maize, and so on, and then mixing it all together?
Was that how they created the drink? Or what else do we know about the whole process?
Well, I've traveled all around Mesoamerica and gone to a lot of traditional communities
and filmed the process of making Kikau.
And it always starts out with the Matate grinding stone.
People often have matates that have been in their family for many, many generations.
Other people often get metatases out of archaeological sites and use those,
though these have been used for over 1,000 years by some people, or over 2,000 years.
And it's a really long process.
So you have to grind the maize.
And then you grind the cacao and you grind them together for a long period of time.
You get it very, very fine.
And only then do you put it into the vessel and mix it with water.
And they also are going to toast and grind the flowers usually.
So everything is being ground first.
And then it's put into the vessel.
And then the vessel is either beaten or in some areas people just use their hands and they whip it for a long, long period of time.
and eventually the cacao butter, what we think is cocoa butter,
right, cacao butter separates from the watery substance
and people get really excited and they say the flour is coming,
the flour is coming, they call the cocoa butter the flour.
And when the beverage is done, they tend to pour that into a vokal,
a traditional gourd drinking cuff and then they put some of the fat on top.
And then what happens next to do they heat it up or then
do they just consume it like that?
Well, they do sometimes heat it when they're making it.
With the families I've looked at, they tend to consume it all day long.
That with tortillas is their main food, and so it's room temperature.
And do we get a sense that the way they're doing it today is a continuation of how it was done,
let's say back in classic Maya times.
You can get a sense from these communities how these Mesoamerican cultures,
thousands of years ago, would have consumed chocolate, would have consumed cacao as a drink?
Definitely. I certainly believe that. They don't have as many additives because globalization has
taken over land. For example, it's even hard to get cacao in many areas because the lands that
were good for cacao are good for coffee. And so the cacao trees are long gone and now there's
coffee plantations or there's sugarcane in some of the areas where.
a cacao once grew. So this tradition has been lost from some areas. But where people can still
grow cacao, then there's many communities where our cacao is a daily role.
I've got to ask, how does it taste? Does it taste?
Anything like hot chocolate today?
It doesn't taste anything like hot chocolate today.
Not at all.
It's kind of like a gruel, like an oatmeal sort of flavor if you blended your oatmeal.
So it's thick often and it tastes extremely hardy.
But I've been to cafes in New York City, for example, and they tout that they have
judicial milk and chocolate and they don't.
They absolutely don't.
They don't usually speak in it.
I've never been to a community anywhere.
wear and had it sweet. Although there are my inscriptions that say honey is cacao, but I don't think
that's the common way to consume cacao. And someone told me that ritual beverages of cacao are
never sweet. Like, absolutely not. So the original use of chocolate in these Mesoamerican cultures,
it's not a sweet delicacy in any sense of the idea when it's consumed as a drink. This is very
much hardy to wake you up to make you feel more alive. Exactly. And also, it's consumed the entire day.
That's what you have to eat. You have tortillas and you have the same.
atoll, like a gruel of maize and cacao.
So how accessible do you think chocolate was?
Cacao was for Mesoamerican cultures like the Maya, the Olmec and so on?
Let's focus on those for the moment.
Do we have any idea how accessible they were?
Would it be everyday families who would have access to this, you know, drinks several times
a day?
I believe that in areas where cacao grows well, people would be consuming it maybe daily.
it was expensive. The ruler's expected tribute of cacao. The rulers are certainly consuming it every day. But where cacao grows well, they also have the pulp. And they could be consuming the pulp to get that caffeine from it. And they could save the seeds to use for special occasions and to trade for things they need and to give to the ruler as tribute.
What I found also very interesting that you mentioned there, Cameron, was the use of chocolates of cacao, not just for consuming, you know, privately to stimulate you, to wake you up, but also for ceremonial purposes as well, for like, you know, tribute to the kings and so on. So do we know much about this ceremonial importance of chocolate in Mesoamerican societies like the Maya?
Well, we do because of how often it's offered in royal tombs, for example.
I worked on, again, at Kro-Pan on Robert Sherr's project, and there's a very famous vessel
that came out of a fiends tomb.
It's one of the most touted vessels in Mesoamerica.
I know that at our university, art historians have to learn the 400 most important pieces
of art in the world, and this vessel is on that list of 400 most important pieces of art.
It's a very beautiful vessel that has an image of a burning temple with a face picking out of the burning temple with goggle eyes.
This vessel is beautifully painted and the project called it the dazzler.
And the dazzler had a lid on it, which is wonderful.
And it had layers of textiles, very fine textiles wrapped all around it.
And when they lifted the lid, there was just this very thin, dark layer of perfectly preserved.
does a do in it. And we sent that to Jeffrey Hurst and yes, it had cacao. I don't know what else it had in it. The picture on it, which is believed to be of the first Maya ruler of the classic period dynasty, whose name is Kanich Ashkukmo, kicking out of this, what's a burning temple, so his funerary temple, which is being burned in his honor. So this vessel is sort of an embodiment of this ruler. And of course, it has cacao in it. It also,
has unbelievable amounts of burn charcoal in it and a little bit of pollen in it. I found
some cat tail pollen in it. And there are stories about how you collect the water for ritual.
It says young virgin children must go out and collect. This is, of course, in the 1920s,
but our sent out to collect sacred water to make, you know, ritual beverages. I like to think
about that having been a tradition from long ago and these children going and collecting this
water from a spring surrounded by cat tails. And then making this beverage and you still have
a cattail pollen grain in there. And then you have the charcoal from the burning temple in there
because they only close it after they burn the temple. And then you get this perfectly preserved
residue of chocolate. So you can imagine certain ritualistic traditions being associated with
chocolate back in Maya times for particular ceremonies. As you say, it was in this case for the
preservation of it as well. Yes, I think so. There's really only one good account from when the
Spanish first arrived of how the Maya are using cacao, and they're using it in feast. It's men,
men at this feast, and it says it's served by beautiful young women, and they are given a vessel,
and it has a little holder. They weave these little basket circular stands so that the vessel
which is round doesn't turn over. And so these beautiful young women serve the cacao, and then they
turn their backs while it's consumed. And each person gets to take home their vessel with them.
So they have this evidence that they attended this important ritual feast held by the Lord.
And when we go back to a classic period, there are these vessels with inscriptions that say
the name of the Lord and often what's inside them. And we find them buried in elite graves,
not necessarily the graves of the Lord's, but I think it's basically your trophy.
I got to attend this special feast.
I got this vessel, and then the vessel is bearing with that.
So do we get other indicators of chocolate of cacao, either as a drink or as a food,
being used as a marker of status of importance in my society from any sites?
Not necessarily the consumption, but the importance of cacao we can see in sculptures
on some of their temples in the form of censors.
So cacao iconography is abundant in Mesoamerica.
And what do we see?
Cacao is always second to maize.
And I think I have to start with work by Simon Martin.
He wrote this excellent piece on cacao, where he suggests that cacao is the first food born of the Maze God's body in the underworld.
The Maze god cyclically dies, just like Maze dies, and goes into the underworld and then is reborn.
and all foods, fruits, vegetables are born from the body of the maize god, but the first thing
born from his body is cacao. And there's this beautiful, beautiful vessel, which is at Dunbar
and Oaks in their museum of the maize gods, swimming in the underworld, and coming off of his body
are cacao pot. And we have an almost identical censor at Copan, a lid with the
the maize god with a glyph that says tree because they perceive of maize also as a tree and with
these cacao pods coming off its body that's what my favorite sensor from copan though my favorite
sensor from copan is a sensor that's in the form of a young woman's body and her breasts are cacao pods
and her stomach is a giant cacao pod and her skirt is covered in cacao except she never had a head
And this is because at some way I cites, women are depicted in powerful position.
At copon, generally not.
And so this is taking on the concept of fertility, of female fertility, and using cacao and the feminine form to depict that.
But it's not actually a woman.
It's just taking on that concept.
Do you think they value cacao really highly because of, you know, all of the resources that they could get for it?
you know, the caffeine, the stimulation, the food, the drink, the offerings, and so on.
I don't know.
One thing that made cacao more valuable was that there were many areas it wouldn't grow in.
So it's a finicky tree, and it likes moist, dark valley bottoms.
And there are many parts of Mesamerica where you cannot grow it.
So Highland, Mexico, you cannot grow it.
They have to import it.
And for those areas, that makes it very valuable.
That's why not everyone can consume it, just men consume it, and only elite men.
Only people hanging out with the emperor are going to be consuming this.
It's not for everybody in areas where it doesn't grow well.
In areas where it grows well, we look at Maya communities, looking at ethnographies,
and even we're going back to some of the early Spanish briers like Thomas Gage.
And they're saying that it's used for all important life markers.
the birth of a child, the naming dates of the child, marriage, and of course, death.
It has a role in every single one of those ceremonies.
But in Highland, Mexico, that's not happening because it's too hard to get, too rare.
So the more highly sought after by the elites where it doesn't grow as much.
Was cacao also used as a currency among some of these cultures?
Yes, it was.
We don't know how far that goes back.
The Spanish write about what things cost, and some things are lewd things that you can buy with cacao seeds.
Other things are, for example, a turkey costs 100 cacao seeds.
But I'm really interested by some of the accounts in the 1800s and early 1900s where people are still using cacao as a currency.
And one of my favorite descriptions of this comes from the work of Charles Wisdom, who was working with the Chorti in Guatemala.
And people were no longer doing it by the 1920s, but they had been doing it like 20 years
earlier.
And so they explained to him how it worked.
And they said they would bring anything they had to sell into town.
And they would go to a cacao seed broker.
And they would, with him or her, they would trade whatever they had for cacao seeds.
And then they could just go into the market and buy, you know, a turkey, 100 cacao seeds.
I don't know if it was the same price there.
But they could use it just like a farm of money.
And so in this case, it's the seeds.
It's not the pulp.
It's not the drink as it's being created.
It's very much just the seeds that are used as a currency.
Just the seeds.
I mean, there's documents that say that people would make counterfeit seeds.
So they would take the husk that's on the outside of the seed and stuck it full of clay.
And there was a discovery in Guatemala, and I don't know the period, or even the site right now off the top of my head.
but where they found huge vessel
and at the bottom of it were like five cacao seeds
and they were so excited that these had been preserved
and they sent them to be analyzed
and it turned out they were just clay
in the exact form cacao seeds
and what I like to think of with that vessel
is it was full of cacao
with a couple of counterfeit in there
and the counterfeits they survived
and of course over a thousand years
the seeds did not serve
So we covered so many different things in regards to the Maya and their use of cacao of chocolate in particular and alsoarkening back to earlier Mesoamerican cultures too.
We've talked about that kind of drink, food, use in rituals, depictions of cacao in sculpture
and so on, in currency as well.
Are there any other key things that we should mention about the use of cacao that we know
are from archaeology in, let's say, the time of the classic Maya, that we haven't yet
highlighted, that we should mention once again to signify the great importance, the significance
of cacao for the Maya.
A cow is often used as a tree that brings the dead back to life, that they're reborn as
cow cow trees. We see that most famously at the site of Palenca, where a queen is depicted
reborn as a cacao tree on the sarcophagus of her son, but at Coupon, we also see that
there are sensors that are in the form of a cacao tree with cacao pots coming off of them,
and they have the basis of ancestors on the front.
Sometimes they're offered, so they're used at a temple and then they're smashed.
And sometimes they're placed in elite structures.
I often think that that vessel, the dazzler, was an early form of that,
that vessel itself is helping to bring the ruler back to life,
to take them through the process of rebirth.
And so this idea of the ruler being recreated as a cacao tree,
could we potentially imagine there almost being sacred groves of cacao trees
in certain Maya cities, you know, if they very much had that belief of linking certain
cacao trees with, you know, the rebirth of deceased rulers?
I don't know if that's why the groves would be sacred.
There is a tradition in Highland, Guatemala, where trees are planted over the bodies of dead
individuals.
So the cemetery itself becomes a forest, and that's quite a wonderful idea.
There are groves that are believed to be sacred cacao grows in Yucatan.
where cacao didn't grow well.
And so for the rulers at Chichen Itza, for example,
they might have gotten their cacao supply
from these very limited areas where it could be grown.
And people propose they may be sacred.
The site of Chichinica, which is an important Maya site there,
there's an area there called Chichen Viejo,
and the buildings are just covered in cacao iconography.
And cacao, like dancing with monkeys,
like monkeys mixed with the cacao iconography.
and quite wonderful.
I don't know if it's open to tourism
because I was able to go.
They were first excavating it.
In central Mexico,
the emperor of Mexico
had a pleasure garden,
a garden that was just for him.
And he also had cacao trees
that were tended and could grow there
because there were 200 or 400 gardeners
every day to make sure it got watered
and that it got what it wanted,
that they received proper care.
so very limited ways rulers could have access to cacao in places where otherwise it would be very
difficult to get it. In the Yucatan, we know from the contact period, they are trading people
to Honduras, so slaves and slave people for cacao. Because I was about to say, I can imagine
that the trade of cacao from a place where they can grow the cacao tree to places where they
can't. It must have been extensive at this time. The last chapter I was hoping to do in our
chat, potentially could be going to the Mexica, Aztecs as well. But do we get a sense that
the Maya became big exporters of cacao to other places in Mesoamerica and potentially beyond
where they couldn't grow it and they really wanted it? Yes, definitely. One thing that's
interesting about the Mexica is there's a document called the Codex Mendoza. And it's a
early colonial document made in the 1500s, but it's basically a guide for the Spanish to understand
what the Mashika, how they were exploiting their provinces. And each province has to give a certain
amount of tribute. And it tells you everything that that province had to get. And in some cases,
they had to give large baskets of cacao. But those aren't areas where cacao grows at all. It didn't
matter what you grew or what you had, you had to get those things. So you have these provinces
that have to trade, often into the Maya area, to get cacao and then to deliver it as tribute to
the emperor. So do we think the meshika, do we think that they imported cacao then from
the Maya world extensively? I think so, yes. And so, like, by the time we get to the
like the Spanish arriving, just how widespread is cacao and the consumption of cacao in Meso
by this time? How, you know, from its beginnings, some 5,000 years ago, as you mentioned right
near the beginning, to this time now in the last 600 years or so, just how much has it
exploded across Mesoamerica and become popular? I mean, I think it's everywhere. I think that
even in places where it doesn't grow, you need to have it for ritual. It's
something that's fed to the gods, for example, rain ceremonies often require cacao. I think that
everyone is going to have it in the marketplace, but they may not consume it in areas where it
doesn't grow well, but they're going to offer it to the gods. And so, Cameron, how are people
still using cacao in rituals today? It's particularly used in areas where they can still acquire
cacao. I've been doing research along the Pacific coast of Guatemala for more than 15 years
and going to communities and learning about how cacao continues to be used in daily life and
also in ritual life. And my very favorite ritual location on the Pacific coast is an area where
people have gathered together three sculptures that are more than a thousand years old. And they
make daily offerings of cacao to these sculptures.
And they're surrounded by this cement block enclosure on three sides.
Also along the Pacific Coast during Easter,
and I think at some other times of the year,
they make these constructions over the road that are called Arcos.
And they have this striped pattern on them
that is similar to images of vessels of the entrance to the underworld.
And these seem to be ceremonially introduced.
is to the underworld and they're hung with cacao fruits and sometimes patashti fruits also belong,
the cousin of cacao, along with other fruits that are endemic to that area. I think that's just
incredibly wonderful to have this ongoing tradition. Unfortunately, more and more evangelical people
along the coast say that that's associated with the devil. And those communities I've been to
where there were many articles one year and now they're not doing that.
And I must ask, given you said all those recipes, Cameron, do you have a particular favorite
cacao recipe that is endured? Yes. My favorite recipe is certainly tahate, which is from
Waxaca. It is just so flavorful. It tends to be thinner than other areas where I've consumed
cacao beverages. But it has the addition of, it mixes both Theabrama bi-color and Theabrama
Cacao, so Balam or Patashia, if you want to call it that, and cacao. And it also has these native
of coconuts in it. So it's a coconut chocolate. It's not sweet. There's only one place where I've
had sweet cacao beverages, but it is absolutely delicious and it feels so healthy and it has
this really thick foam on it that is full of that mix of cacao and coconut. It's delicious.
Just getting my head around this idea that these cacao recipes, they give you a healthy
feeling and not a sweet feeling. It's such an alien idea to what we used to when someone mentions
cacao or chocolate today. Well, Cameron, is there anything else you want to mention about the use
of cacao by these Mesoamerican societies that we haven't yet covered? I was thinking about the
fact that they often colored their cacao beverages with atiote, which is a red pigment
from the Bixarolana tree. And basically the outside, this waxy outside of the seeds is pink,
and it looks like lipstick. And people even, for fun, you know, kids play with it and put on their
lips. But the Spanish write about the fact that when you put it into cacao, it makes the cacao
look like blood and how freaked out they are by seeing people drink this and then they have
this like blood left on their upper lip from consuming this. And I'm sure that that was the point.
I mean, blood is incredibly important to Mesoamericans and it is something that they personally
sacrificed. They practice autosacrificial, right? They cut their pettuses of your men and their ears,
areas that will bleed well, the women, the elite women we know, would cut holes in their tongues
and drag thorns, embedded in rope. Is it the Maya, at least, through their tongue?
Blood is very, very important. So I like to think of that image of the Spanish, like, are they
drinking chocolate? Are they drinking chocolate? Chocolate and blood, chocolate linked together
in these societies and these various rituals. It's so absolutely fascinating. Cameron, this has been
really, really interesting, shining a light on the use of cacao and chocolate in Mesoamerican
times and how different it was to what we think of chocolate today. I'm really grateful for your
time. Last but certainly not least, you have edited a book all about this, which is called
Chocolate, Mesoamerica. And Karen, it just goes to me to say, thank you so much for taking the
time to come on the podcast today. Thank you.
Well, there you go. There was Professor Cameron McNeil talking you through the mysterious origins
and the many uses of chocolate in Mesoamerica, of cacao. I hope you enjoyed the episode. Thank you
for listening. Please follow the ancients on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. That really
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That's all from me. I'll see you in the next episode.
