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Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?

by VtSkier <VtSkier@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Feb 13, 2007 at 06:10 PM

bobbie sellers wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 08:32:05 -0500,VtSkier,  wrote
> 
>> bobbie sellers wrote:
>>> On Mon, 12 Feb 2007 21:02:37 -0500,Matt Giwer,  wrote
>>>
>>>> dances_with_barkadas@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
>>>>> Cortes re****ted that Montezuma drank 50 goblets of  (non-sweetened)
>>>>> cocoa beverage before entering his harem.
>>>>> a goblet of cocoa was expensive to make in pre-mechanized society.
>>>>> Even if the laborers were nominally slaves, they had to be fed,
>>>>> clothed, housed, etc.   In fact, the houseservants of a sovereign
are
>>>>> normally  well kept.
>>>>> Is it possible to estimate an equivelant 2007 value of a goblet of
>>>>> Monteuma's cocoa drink?
>>>>     One presumes what about the nature of the drink? Was it made from
>>>> the bean? Did  it contain leaves? How was it prepared? One presumes
it
>>>> was whatever they  considered the best quality but we have no idea
what
>>>> they thought that was. If  we are just talking the bean the
preparation
>>>> is trivial independent of the  quality of the bean. Consider it like
>>>> gourmet coffee. Other than civet coffee it  is all the same process.
>>>>
>>>>     And then who made it? The cost would be the cost of keeping that
>>>> person  employed or alive or whatever. Clearly it would cost more if
a
>>>> priest made it  than a slave but it could have been a cheap
apprentice
>>>> priest and slave for  display who had to be kept in expensive
clothing
>>>> to show of the emperor wealth.
>>>>
>>>>     And a dozen other factors such as did the great beans grow in his
>>>> backyard or  in the farthest reaches of the empire?
>>>>
>>>>     All of this means we may never know what it cost. And if my some
>>>> miracle we  found all the factors above translating that into dollars
>>>> would be near  impossible because the basis for the economy was
entirely
>>>> different. In a  well-run economy slaves cost more than
share-croppers.
>>>> In a hierarchical system  with great rewards at the top an apprentice
>>>> priest may work for scraps for the  op****tunity.
>>> From the chocolate FAQ:
>>>
>>>  1.1 What is chocolate? Where does it come from?
>>>
>>>     Chocolate is a food made from the seeds of a tropical tree called 
>>> the cacao. These trees flourish in warm, moist climates. Most of the 
>>> world's cacao beans come from West Africa, where Ghana, the Ivory
Coast 
>>> and Nigeria are the largest producers.  Because of a spelling error, 
>>> probably by English traders long ago, these beans became known as
cocoa 
>>> beans.
>>>
>>> -=-=-=-=-
>>>
>>>  1.2 What is the history of chocolate?
>>>
>>>     (Excerpted with permission from the Godiva WWW site)
>>>
>>> * In 600 A.D. the Mayans migrated into the northern regions of South 
>>> America, establi****ng the earliest known cocoa plantations in the
Yucatan. 
>>> It has been argued that the Mayans had been familiar with cocoa
several 
>>> centuries prior to this date. They considered it a valuable commodity,

>>> used both as a means of payment and as units of calculation. 
>>>
>>> * Mayans and Aztecs took beans from the "cacao" tree and made a drink
they 
>>> called "xocolatl." Aztec Indian legend held that cacao seeds had been 
>>> brought from Paradise and that wisdom and power came from eating the
fruit 
>>> of the cacao tree.. 
>>>
>>> * The word "chocolate" is said to derive from the Mayan "xocolatl";
cacao 
>>> from the Aztec "cacahuatl". The Mexican Indian word "chocolate" comes
from 
>>> a combination of the terms choco ("foam") and atl ("water"); early 
>>> chocolate was only consumed in beverage form.
>>>
>>>     In addition it has been said that the Aztec preparation included
>>> corn meal.
>>>
>>>     As for how much it cost it was a luxury on the order of
>>> a fine wine for the Aztec and use was reserved to the powerful.
> 
> snip of old sig file
> 
>> How much of this can I believe since the quote doesn't even get the
>> geography right?
> 
>     What is wrong with the geography?


YUCATAN IS NOT IN THE NORTHERN PART OF SOUTH AMERICA!!!



>     Cacao started as a New World crop and imperial colonizers moved it
> to Old World regions where it could be farmed with native labor.  Most
> likely originally with slave labor just underpaid children most often
> today.
>     Curious thing is that most of the African children involved in
> cacao cultivation have never tasted the end product.  They couldn't
> afford Western prices in any event.
> 
>     later
>     bliss -- C  O C O A  Powered... (at california dot com)
> 
> --       
> bobbie sellers - a retired nurse in San Francisco
>  
>      "It is by will alone I set my mind in motion.
>      It is by the beans of cocoa that the thoughts acquire speed,
>      the thighs acquire girth, the girth become a warning.
>      It is by theobromine alone I set my mind in motion."
>         --from Someone else's Dune spoof ripped to my taste.
>
 




 7 Posts in Topic:
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
Matt Giwer <jull43@[EM  2007-02-12 21:02:37 
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
"bobbie sellers"  2007-02-12 20:02:19 
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
VtSkier <VtSkier@[EMAI  2007-02-13 08:32:05 
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
"bobbie sellers"  2007-02-13 08:19:25 
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
VtSkier <VtSkier@[EMAI  2007-02-13 18:10:08 
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
Matt Giwer <jull43@[EM  2007-02-13 21:11:42 
Re: cost of producing a goblet of Montezuma's cocoa beverage?
"bobbie sellers"  2007-02-19 07:45:17 

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