eHow launches Android app: Get the best of eHow on the go.
Summary: Learn the process of how cacao beans become chocolate in this free instructional video clip all about making, eating, and general information on raw chocolate.
Kelly Johnson is a professional Chocolatier, but not a regular one. He devotes his life to the production and education of people about raw chocolate, and its healthy benefits.read more
"Hi, I’m Kelly Johnson of Sedona Chocolate Super Foods and we’re here on location in the chocolate room of the Ridiculous Chocolate Factory, inside the Bliss Café in Sedona, Arizona on behalf of Expert Village. Cacao originated apparently in the Amazon River Basin and then it migrated to southern Mexico and Venezuela, and then once, once Cortez came and conquered the Mayan or Aztec Empire it spread to Europe and then all around the world. Now since that has happened, what’s happened is that seventy percent of the world’s cacao comes from Africa and they grow it on plantations. It’s a hybrid strain of cacao, it’s a poor quality, it has a high fermentation level, that means in order to get it out, cacao comes in a pod that looks like a football and in order for them to get this out of the pod they let it sit for days and days and days and it gets very strong, and, and, not really rancid but very strong, it smells like alcohol and it makes it easy to get out like I said, out of the pod. Now they take this and the reason why they roast it is to get rid of the bad flavor. They cook it to burn the alcohol off and then in order to make it taste good because at this point it really doesn’t taste good. It tastes kind of like burnt dirt, then it’s added into sugar and milk to make typical chocolate, what you’re used to, what we’re used to and the difference in this is that we use a very small ethical farm that grows those trees in the rain forest, they have a very low fermentation level, they hand peel the pods, dry them in the sun under a shade cloth, at very low temperatures and then bag them by hand and then ship them to us and then we here. The whole time preserving the low temperature and the natural qualities, of the, the real bean of, we use the original heirloom strain of beans, cacao beans, cacao seed, whichever one you want to call it, in order to maintain, you know the best quality. So it has a natural chocolately flavor and a natural chocolately aroma and if you just taste it you know. Then bringing it here through this, this slow grinders and keeping it at low temperatures and holding it a low temperatures that keeps all of the enzymes intact and keeps all of the natural aroma and the natural quality inside the cacao, the natural flavors, the way it is meant to be intact and whole. We do this in order to keep the integrity intact so that that natural essence of the cacao tree and the rain forest can come through in what we serve here. "