RECIPE JOURNAL Just desserts
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From its sacred Mayan origins in the rainforests of the upper Amazon region, the travels of the cacao bean have been complex and far-reaching. Since they were first brought to Europe by Spanish explorers, the bitter beans have been roasted and ground, melted and conched, and used to create countless delicious desserts.
The regions in which the beans are grown — the humid areas along the equator known as the cacao belt — have seldom produced chocolate themselves. Yet as colonists, missionaries and those fleeing the Spanish invasion transported cocoa beans across borders, the countries they arrived in made chocolate their own. The chocolatier culture rooted in grand 17th-century French homes gave rise to patisseries, their counters filled with exquisite displays; two centuries on, British chocolatier JS Fry & Sons developed the first solid chocolate bar.
Today, chocolate dominates dessert menus all over the world. You could road trip around the US, hunting down Boston cream pie, Mississippi mud cake
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