18th-century Drinking Chocolate

The things we subject ourselves to in the name of research! Just recently Jo visited her local Christmas Market in the city of Lincoln and returned having purchased two packets of ‘18th Century Hot Chocolate Drink’, one for her and the other which she kindly sent to me, an acknowledged ‘chocoholic’ to sample.

The Chocolate Maiden; M. Beaune; Museums Sheffield
The Chocolate Maiden; M. Beaune; Museums Sheffield

I’m writing this blog with a most wonderful cup of the chocolate at the side of me. I have to say the taste is totally different to the usual brands of hot chocolate you buy in the supermarket today, it’s a much richer, creamy ‘chocolately’ taste and has been infused with long pepper, cardamom and cinnamon – the perfect drink for a frosty winter morning.

So the aim is that the blog should be written in the time it takes me to drink this lovely concoction!

As we all know chocolate has been enjoyed for centuries but as we focus on the 18th century it seems only right to take a quick peek at how the Georgians preferred to make the drink.

Chocolate seller
Courtesy of Lewis Walpole Library

We begin with a recipe from a cookery book we have referred to before by M E Rundell:

Chocolate

Those who use much of this article will find the following mode of preparing it both useful and economical:

Cut the cake of chocolate in very small bits; put in a pint of water, and, when it boils put in the above. Mill it off the fire until quite melted, then on a gentle fire till it boil; pour into a basin and it will keep in a cool place eight or ten days or more. When wanted, put a spoonful or two into milk, boil it with sugar and mill it well.

This, if not made thick is a very good breakfast or supper.

We then move on to The experienced English house-keeper, consisting of near 800 original receipts by Elizabeth Raffald which suggests a slight variation on this method.

To Make Chocolate

Scrape four ounces of chocolate and pour one quart of boiling water on it, mill it well with a chocolate mill and sweeten it to your taste; give it a boil and let it stand all night, then mill it again very well; boil it two minutes, then mill it, it will leave a froth upon the top of your cups.

Finally, I have found a recipe by Hannah Glasse for preparing the chocolate itself which seems to be the closest match in taste to the drink I have just finished!

Chocolate

Still life with a Chocolate Service (1770) by Luis Egidio Meléndez. Courtesy of Prado Museum.
Still life with a Chocolate Service (1770) by Luis Egidio Meléndez. Courtesy of Prado Museum.

Featured image 

The Family of the Duke of Penthièvre in 1768, also known as The Cup of Chocolate. Jean-Baptiste Charpentier the Elder, 1768, oil on canvas, Château de Versailles.

30 thoughts on “18th-century Drinking Chocolate

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  2. I have just had a lovely message posted to our facebook page from one of your readers asking about our 18th century recipe hot chocolate from The Copper Pot. I immediately searched for your blog to see what he had seen, and was delighted to read your kind comments. I think that I do recall chatting with you, despite it being the busiest event of the year! Your reader did mention that the link to our webpage was not working, so I hope that you will permit me to put it here should anyone want to learn more about our chocolate.

    With very best wishes,

    Nick

    http://www.thecopperpot.co.uk
    http://www.facebook.com/TheCopperPot

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    1. joannemajor

      So sorry the link wasn’t working, hopefully it is now. Loved the hot chocolate and I knew Sarah would too so had to send her a pack.

      Like

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  22. drkottaway

    Fascinating. I think chocolate with almonds and pistachios, not to mention the spices, would be delicious. Ambergris, no, I think I’ll avoid that ingredient. I have a set of Coalport china and it has three kinds of cups: a coffee cup that is 8 sided, a smaller round cup that I think is for tea and an even smaller eight sided cup. Is the smallest for chocolate? And what does a chocolate mill look like?

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    1. Sarah Murden

      Thank you so much for your comments. I’m not an expert on china, but the chocolate cups I have seen send to be slightly taller and slimmer than coffee cups and often slightly wider at the top than the base – I’m not sure if that helps at all.

      The chocolate mill, I believe was like a ‘swizzle stick’. The chocolate pot itself had a hole in the top into which you inserted the ‘stick’ to grind the chocolate. – check out the last picture in the article, hopefully it’ll make more sense 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

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