Conrad van Houten |
Coenraad Johannes van Houten or Conrad van Houten came from a family well-experience in the trade of chocolate. Born in 1801, his father, Casparus van Houten, had already established himself in the chocolate business. The Dutch East Indies Company provided the supply of cocoa beans from the tropics. Many people could afford chocolate in Amsterdam caused by the flourishing trade with the east. With money came luxuries. And the Van Houten family capitalized in the rising income and growing demand for luxurious goods.
At a young age, the young
Conrad van Houten started to learn about the trade. As a child he helped his
father in the business. He also started to learn the art of chocolate making. While
making chocolate, Conrad and his father observed a problem in the processing of
the cocoa beans. Part of the process of extracting cocoa from its beans was
taking out its fats located in its nib. The process that was being used then
was expensive, inefficient, and time consuming. Cocoa fat or butter could only
be extracted when the roasted cocoa beans were boil or freeze. If boiled, the
fat would rose to surface only then it could be extracted. If freeze, difficult
way because of lack of refrigeration, fat would could extracted when the beans
were hard. Both ways were ineffective as it only decreases by few amounts the
cocoa butter in the beans.
In 1815, the very young
Conrad van Houten began to find ways in extracting cocoa butter. In their shop
in Amsterdam, van Houten toiled for many years before finally, developed a way
to extract efficiently the cocoa butter.
In 1828, Van Houten found a
way to extract the cocoa butter from the nib of the bean. He created a
hydraulic press that would do the job. A roasted cocoa would be press by the
machine and it could reduce significantly the cocoa fat content of the bean,
from 54% down to 27 – 25%. The product of the press would leave a cake-like
piece of cocoa.
Later on, from the powder
cake that the van Houten Press created, Conrad discovered another significant
process. If the cocoa powder was added with alkaline salts, like sodium
carbonate, it would make the power more miscible to water, thus it could be used
to create chocolate drinks. It was also found out that it created a darker
chocolate as well as release more deliciously the chocolate flavor of the bean.
This process became known as Dutching.
For van Houten it was also a
beneficial for his business. By 1850 Conrad van Houten was wealthy enough to build
a large scale factory in Weesp. Van Houten presses were then later powered by
steam engine and helped to produce a lot of chocolate. Many of which were
exported to other countries, like Germany and France.
Van Houten’s claim over the process and the press, however, were challenge by some. But it was he who commercialized the idea and expanded it further across Europe. with his press and dutching, a chocolate revolution resulted to the bringing of chocolate from royals to the masses. Without the van Houten press, companies like Cadbury and other chocolate bars would not exist.
See also:
John Cadbury
Milton Hershey
Rodolphe Lindt
Bibliography:
Cadbury, D. Chocolate War: The 150-Year Rivalry Between the World's Greatest Chocolate Makers. New York: Public Affairs, 2010.
Murray, M. et. al. Encyclopedia of Healing Foods. New York: Atria Books, 2005.
Newton, D. Trademarked: A History of Well-known Brands. Gloucestershire: The History Press, 2008.
Pater, A. The Locomotives Built by Machinefabriek Breda: Voorheen Backer & Rueb. Netherlands: Brill, 1970.
Wilson, P. & W. Hurst. Chocolate as Medicine: A Quest over the Centuries. Cambridge: The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2012.
Van Houten’s claim over the process and the press, however, were challenge by some. But it was he who commercialized the idea and expanded it further across Europe. with his press and dutching, a chocolate revolution resulted to the bringing of chocolate from royals to the masses. Without the van Houten press, companies like Cadbury and other chocolate bars would not exist.
See also:
John Cadbury
Milton Hershey
Rodolphe Lindt
Bibliography:
Cadbury, D. Chocolate War: The 150-Year Rivalry Between the World's Greatest Chocolate Makers. New York: Public Affairs, 2010.
Murray, M. et. al. Encyclopedia of Healing Foods. New York: Atria Books, 2005.
Newton, D. Trademarked: A History of Well-known Brands. Gloucestershire: The History Press, 2008.
Pater, A. The Locomotives Built by Machinefabriek Breda: Voorheen Backer & Rueb. Netherlands: Brill, 1970.
Wilson, P. & W. Hurst. Chocolate as Medicine: A Quest over the Centuries. Cambridge: The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2012.
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