The pleasing appearance of citrus trees and the fruit was mentioned by many ancient travelers, even though the fruit of citrus trees had not evolved to the point as an important food staple, the fragrance of all parts of the citrus trees, including the flowers and fruit, were desirable perfumers of rooms and were thought to repel insects.
The occurrence of citrus in Europe and Mideast were thought to have been natural occurring native trees and shrubs, but historians today believe that the ancestor of the citrus trees, Citrus medica L., was introduced by Alexander the Great from India into Greece, Turkey, and North Africa in the late 4th century BC. The most ancient citrus was called ?citron.?
There are ancient clues from wall paintings in the Egyptian temple at Karnak that citrus trees had been growing there. There were other suggestions that citrus trees may have been familiar to the Jews during their exile and slavery by the Babylonians in the 6th century BC. Even though speculations suggest that citrus trees were known and grown by the Hebrews, there is no direct mention in the Bible of citrus.
The first recording of citrus, Citrus medica L., in European history was done by Theophrastus, in 350 BC, following the introduction of the fruit by Alexander the Great.
In early European history, writers wrote about Persian citrus, that it had a wonderful fragrance and was thought to be a remedy for poisoning, a breath sweetener, and a repellant to moths.
Citrus was well known by the ancient cultures of the Greeks and later the Romans. A beautiful ceramic tile was found in the ruins of Pompeii after the city was destroyed by a volcanic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. Another mosaic tile in the ruins of a Roman villa in Carthage, North Africa, in about the 2nd century AD, clearly showed the fruit of a citron and a lemon fruit growing on a tree branch.
Early Christian tile mosaics dating back to 300 AD of both oranges and lemon were shown in lemon-yellow and orange colors surrounded by bright green leaves and freshly cut tree branches; the relics can still be seen in Istanbul, Turkey at mosques that once were churches of Emperor Constantine.
It is not known how, where, or when the exceptional present day varieties of citrus trees developed, such as the sweet orange, lemon, kumquat, lime, grapefruit, or pummelo, but there appears to be a general consensus of opinions that all these citrus developments and improvements were obtained by natural and artificial selection and natural evolution. It is well known, that the Romans were familiar with the sour orange, Citrus aurantium L. and the lemon tree, Citrus limon. After the fall of Rome to the barbarian invasions and the Muslims, the Arab states rapidly spread the naturally improving cultivars of citrus fruits and trees throughout much of North Africa, Spain, and Syria. The spread of sour orange, Citrus aurantium L., and the lemon, Citrus limon, extended the growing and planting of these trees on a worldwide scale by planting the seed, which produced citrus trees very similar to the parent trees. The Crusades conquest of the Arabs later spread citrus planting and growing throughout Europe.
The sweet orange, Citrus sinensis, appeared late in the 1400's, near the time of Christopher Columbus, who discovered America. After trade routes were closed when the Turks defeated the Eastern Roman Empire in 1453, centered in Constantinople (Istanbul), many European kings began to seek alternate, trade, sea routes to open trade by ships with China and India. The sweet orange tree introduction into Europe changed the dynamics of citrus fruit importance in the world. The voyage of Portuguese explorer, Vasco de Gamma, recorded that in 1498, there were multitudes of orange trees in India, and all the fruits had a sweet taste. The new sweet orange variety, known as the ?Portugal orange? caused a dramatic surge in citrus planting, much like the much later appearance of the ?Washington navel orange? tree introduction into California.
The lime, Citrus latifolia, was first mentioned in European history by Sir Thomas Herbert in his book, Travels, who recorded that he found growing ?oranges, lemons, and limes? off the island of Mozambique in the mid 1600's. Lime trees today are available in many cultivars.
In 1707, Spanish missions were growing oranges, fig trees, quinces, pomegranates, peaches, apricots, apples, pear trees, mulberries, pecans, and other trees according to horticultural documents.
The Mandarin orange, Citrus reticulata, was described in Chinese history in the late 1100's, but was unknown in Europe, until it was brought from a Mandarin province in China to England in 1805, where it spread rapidly throughout Europe.
The pummelo, Citrus grandis, also called the shaddock and the ?Adam's Apple? was growing in Palestine in the early 1200's and was planted and grown by the Arabs. The pummelo is believed to have an Asian origin and was planted as seed in the New World.
The grapefruit, Citrus paradisi, is believed to have arisen as a mutation from the pummelo tree. Grapefruit were so named because they grew in clusters like grapes, but most gardeners considered them to be inedible until A.L. Duncan found an outstanding seedling grapefruit that was named Duncan grapefruit in 1892; the original tree is still alive and growing in Florida.
Christopher Columbus introduced citrus on the island of Haiti in 1493. It is believed that he brought citrus seed to be planted and grown of the sour orange, the sweet orange, citron, lemon, lime, and pummelo fruits. Records show that these citrus trees were well established in the American colonies in about 1565 at Saint Augustine, Florida, and in coastal South Carolina.
William Bartram reported in his celebrated botanical book, Travels, in 1773 that Henry Laurens from Charleston, South Carolina, who served as a President of the Continental Congrees, introduced ?olives, limes, ginger, everbearing strawberry, red raspberry, and blue grapes? into the United States colonies after the year 1755.
William Bartram in his book, Travels, reported that near Savannah, Georgia, ?it is interesting to note that as late as 1790, oranges were cultivated in some quantity along the coast, and in that year some 3000 gallons of orange juice were exported.?
Many of these wild orange groves were seen by the early American explorer, William Bartram, according to his book, Travels, in 1773, while traveling down the Saint John's River in Florida. Bartram mistakenly thought these orange trees were native to Florida; however, they were established centuries earlier by the Spanish explorers.
The citrus industry began rapidly developing in 1821 when the Spanish gave up their territories and its many orange groves to the United States. Wild orange tree groves were top-worked with improved cultivars and residents traveling to Florida realized how refreshing orange juice tasted; thus began the shipments of oranges, grapefruit, limes, and lemons that were sent to Philadelphia and New York by railway and ships in the 1880's.
Citrus plantings were extensively done in California by the Spanish missionaries; however, the commercial industry began to grow with the 1849 Gold Rush boom, and efforts to supply the miners from San Francisco with citrus fruit were successful. The completion of the Transcontinental Railway further stimulated the citrus industry, since citrus could be rapidly sent to eastern markets. Later improvements of refrigeration helped to increase citrus growing and planting, mainly oranges, lemons, and limes throughout the world in 1889.
Florida at first dominated citrus production in the United States, but because of some devastating freezes in 1894 and 1899, Satsuma orange trees were virtually wiped out in the Gulf States. Thousands of acres of Satsuma orange trees were wiped out in Alabama, Texas, and Louisiana in the hard freeze of 1916; thus the citrus production of the United States began to shift from Florida to California.
Citrus is marketed throughout the world as a beneficial health fruit that contains Vitamin C and numerous other vitamins and minerals in orange and citrus products lime marmalade, fresh fruit, and frozen and hot-pack citrus juice concentrates.
Copyright 2006 Patrick Malcolm
For a long time chocolate was only thought of as a beverage. It wasn't until the nineteenth century that it started being eaten.
The bitter chocolate beverage drank by the ancient tribes was a highly prized beverage. Sacrifices were a common practice done in the hope of persuading the gods to protect each year's crop. Cocoa beans were so highly prized that they were used as currency by some of the ancient tribes in Central America. A rabbit cost eight beans.
The Aztecs of Mexico worshipped a God named Quetzalcoatl who was known as the giver of chocolate. According to legend, Quetzalcoatl was a bearded and white-skinned man who came from the Land of Gold. He came down from his heaven to Mexico to be the priest-king and to teach the Aztecs how to paint, do silver crafts, and other arts. He is said to have given the Aztecs their calendar and to have shown them how to grow maize. When he came from the Land of Gold he brought cocoa tree seeds with him. He showed the people how to grow the trees and how to make chocolate from the cocoa beans.
Legend goes on to say that Quetzalcoatl had a soul that was pure, and the people were very happy and prosperous during his entire rule. When he grew old he decided he needed to leave his people because he felt his ?ugliness? terrified them. He did so even though he was sad to leave. Quetzalcoatl burned his palace and buried his treasures in the mountains of Mexico. He turned his cocoa trees into mesquite. He then departed. But, before he left he promised to return once every ?One Reed? which is once every fifty two years according to the calendar he had given to the Aztecs.
At the end of one of the fifty-two year cycles, the white-skinned and bearded Hernan Cortes and his troops marched to Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital. The people were excited because they thought Quetzalcoatl had finally returned. They held a banquet in Cortes honor at which they served him xocoatl, which was a cold chocolate beverage that had honey, vanilla and other spices mixed in it. The year was 1519.
Montezuma II was the ruler of Mexico when Cortes arrived. It is said chocolate with honey and spices was the only thing Montezuma drank and everyone in his household drank it too. The household drank 2,000 pitchers of chocolate every day. Montezuma drank his chocolate beverage from golden goblets. Every time he emptied one of the golden goblets he would toss it into the lake outside of his palace. Many years after the Aztec empire was gone, divers were still bringing up the golden goblets from the lake.
The Aztecs thought chocolate was intoxicating. Part of the reason for that belief is probably because the Aztecs often mixed their chocolate with wine or a corn mash that had been fermented. And because they sometimes consumed so much of the chocolate, the small amount of caffeine in it may have given them a slight jolt. Pepper and pimiento were other ingredients that were often added to the chocolate beverage before it was consumed.
Today if we drink an unsweetened chocolate beverage it tastes very bitter to us. Today's cocoa beans are less bitter than the ones in ancient times so their drinks must have been very bitter indeed.
Montezuma firmly believed chocolate was an aphrodisiac. During his time, it was also thought to give a person strength and vigor, so much so that at times the beverage was reserved for consumption by the rulers and soldiers only.
Cortes was impressed by the chocolate beverage. He is the person who brought chocolate to Europe in 1528, when he sailed home to Spain after he had completed his conquest of the Aztec people.
When Cortes brought chocolate to Charles V, Charles was intrigued by the taste of the beverage but thought it could use some sweetening so he added sugar to it. Both chocolate and sugar were rare at the time so the chocolate beverage Charles V created was very costly.
Word about chocolate and the cocoa beans began to spread. By the early 1600's people were traveling to Spain to taste the beverage. In 1609 the first book on chocolate was written.
Chocolate then started to make its way to other parts of Europe. The first chocolate shop in London was opened in 1657. By 1662 chocolate was being used for medicinal purposes in England. Chocolate houses started being opened all over Europe and were highly popular establishments. Towards the end of the 1600's chocolate started to appear in Germany.
In 1828 a Dutch chemist named Coenraad van Houten developed a press that squeezed out approximately two-thirds of the cocoa butter from the beans, leaving a chocolate powder that was known as, and is still known as cocoa. People liked the cocoa, but weren't sure what to do with the cocoa butter. In 1847, the English developed the first eating chocolate using the cocoa butter. It was a hard and grainy chocolate. The Swiss developed milk chocolate in 1875. Smooth and creamy chocolate fondant was developed around the same time. Jean Tobler started his own chocolate company in 1899 producing a delicious assortment of chocolate. In 1913, chocolate covered liqueurs were first made.
Because of all the demand for chocolate by this time, a need to grow more cocoa trees developed and they started being cultivated outside of their native Central American areas. Trees started being planted in the Sumatra, Timor, the Congo, the West Indies, Madagascar, Martinique and several other areas.
Today chocolate is enjoyed and consumed by most people in the world. In the United States alone, each person consumes (on average), 51 pounds of chocolate every year. Chocolate is used in beverages, candy, desserts, and even as a savory ingredient in main course dishes. It is said the world has a love affair with chocolate. If the amount eaten is any indication, it is indeed a great love.
Both Patrick Malcolm & Dorrie Ruplinger are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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