The Hidden History Podcast
Before it was a candy bar — it was a currency, a battlefield ration, and a state secret one empire kept hidden for nearly 100 years. This week on The Hidden History Project, Aiden Thomas traces chocolate from its origins as a bitter, sacred drink in ancient Mesoamerica to the Valentine's Day box sitting on your kitchen counter. The story moves through Olmec jungle settlements, Aztec throne rooms, European colonial courts, and industrial-era English factories — and at every step, the "official" history has been quietly rewritten to protect the powerful. The cacao bean was first cultivated by the Olmecs over 3,500 years ago. The Maya declared it sacred — a gift from the gods — and used it as currency, in religious ceremony, and in trade. The Aztecs elevated it further: Montezuma II reportedly drank 50 cups a day, and warriors were paid in cacao instead of gold. When Hernán Cortés arrived in 1519 and called the drink "fit for pigs," he shipped it back to Spain anyway. What followed was nearly a century of enforced secrecy, a colonial supply chain built on enslaved African labor, and one of the most consequential industrial inventions in food history — made by Joseph Fry in 1847, a man who died in obscurity while the companies that copied his process built dynasties that still dominate the industry today. And then there's Richard Cadbury, who didn't create the heart-shaped box for love. He created it to move product. What we cover in this episode: — How the Olmecs, Maya, and Aztecs used cacao, and why it was never "sweet" until Europe got hold of it — Spain's 100-year embargo on chocolate knowledge, and how it collapsed — The chocolate house era and its ties to the transatlantic slave trade — Coenraad Van Houten's press, Joseph Fry's bar, and the industrial moment that changed everything — Richard Cadbury's Valentine's Day marketing masterstroke — The child labor crisis in West African cacao farming that persists today New episodes every Thursday. Find The Hidden History Project on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you listen.
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