Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century (2024)

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Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century (1)

As I’ve looked through old cookbooks from the 19th century, one of the things that always stood out to me was the lack of recipes with chocolate. Modern cookbooks are usually filled with recipes for chocolate cakes and cookies and brownies, but you don’t really see any of those types of recipes until the second half of the 19th century, or at least you don’t tend to see them in American cookbooks anyways. Old-fashioned hot chocolate recipes, though, are a different story.

Even though chocolate wasn’t used for baking the same way we use it today until later on in the 19th century, people who lived before that time still got to enjoy chocolate flavor. They just enjoyed it as a beverage rather than as a cake or cookie or a candy bar.

As a chocolate lover, I always used to think it was pretty sad to see the absence of chocolate recipes whenever I looked at the baking section of old cookbooks, but it turns out that most of those same cookbooks have recipes or instructions for how to make hot chocolate as a drink. So even though people might not have been eating chocolate the same way we do today, hot chocolate was quite a popular beverage in earlier centuries.

The Differences Between Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate and Modern Hot Chocolate

Old-Fashioned hot chocolate is a bit different from modern hot chocolate. Most modern hot chocolate comes in a packet with dried ingredients (usually powdered cocoa and milk and sugar sometimes with other flavorings and additives) that you mix with water. In the 19th century, though, hot chocolate was often prepared at home with a block of solid chocolate.

As I saw in a demonstration once before when visiting Old Sturbridge Village, the solid chocolate was made by roasting cacao beans, husking the shells of them, and then grinding them until they formed a chocolate liqueur that would harden into a solid block of chocolate that could be grated. The Dutch process of producing cocoa that we think of today wasn’t invented until 1828, and it wasn’t until 1879 that the conching process was invented that allowed for a smooth and creamy chocolate consistency that we think of in chocolate bars today. Before that point, chocolate bars had a grittier texture than the smooth texture that we are used to now.

This video about chocolate making from the Old Sturbridge Village Youtube page shows the entire process of making chocolate the traditional way from start to finish when using cacao beans. Not everyone would have done the full process of roasting the beans and grinding them at home, though, since there were chocolate makers producing blocks of chocolate and even chocolate houses where you could go to get a drink of chocolate if you happened to live near one.

And the recipes that I’ve seen for making hot chocolate all start with using a solid piece of chocolate rather than giving any instructions for roasting or grinding the beans, assuming that people already had a block of chocolate that they were using. Even though the Dutch process invented in 1828 allowed for cocoa to be processed into a powder, the fact that many recipe books call for using a piece of chocolate suggests that many people were still using solid chocolate rather than chocolate powder to make their hot chocolate well into the 19th century.

Most 19th century hot chocolate recipes that I’ve seen don’t seem nearly as sweet as modern hot chocolate either. Old-fashioned hot chocolate wasn’t a sugary sweet kid’s beverage like we often think of it today. In some ways it was more similar to coffee with people adding milk or cream and sometimes a bit of sugar to the bitter chocolate. Several old recipes don’t even mention sugar at all, which would be sort of like the modern equivalent to having black coffee or having coffee with just cream but no sugar added.

Adding spices, and especially nutmeg, was a very popular addition to 19th century hot chocolate (and adding spices in general has been part of traditional hot chocolate for about as long as hot chocolate has been in existence.)

The History of Chocolate

If you are interested in learning more about the history of chocolate and hot chocolate as a beverage, these articles has some interesting information about how chocolate was used in previous centuries dating back hundreds of years:

Notes About the Hot Chocolate Ingredients

For this recipe, I used a block of unsweetened chocolate from the baking aisle of the store since the recipes I have seen for hot chocolate start with solid chocolate. If you don’t have unsweetened chocolate, you can substitute about 1 1/2 Tbs. of unsweetened cocoa powder instead. If the only chocolate you have is sweetened chocolate, you can reduce the amount of sugar that you add to the hot chocolate.

Several 19th century recipes I have seen call for making the chocolate with milk or cream. I prefer mine with just water, but you can certainly add a couple of spoonfuls of either milk or cream to your hot chocolate. Some old recipes even call for equal parts of water and milk, so the ratio is really up to your personal preference.

The most commonly used sweetener for hot chocolate in the 19th century would have been cane sugar, but you can substitute any sweeteners that you like and have on hand. The spice is optional, too. Nutmeg is the most commonly mentioned spice in 19th century recipes, but you could try other spices like cinnamon, too, or omit the spice altogether.

Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century

To make this recipe, I combined elements from two different 19th century recipes. The first is from The American Frugal Housewife by Lydia Maria Child published in 1833.

“Many people boil chocolate in a coffee-pot; but I think it is better to boil it in a skillet, or something open. A piece of chocolate about as big as a dollar is the usual quantity for a quart of water; but some put in more, and some less. When it boils, pour in as much milk as you like and let them boil together three or four minutes. It is much richer with the milk boiled in it. Put the sugar in either before or after, as you please. Nutmeg improves it. The chocolate should be scraped fine before it is put into the water.”

The American Frugal Housewife – pg. 83 in the 1833 edition

And the second recipe I used was from Miss Beecher’s Domestic Receipt-Book from 1858.

“Allow three large spoonfuls of scraped chocolate to each pint of water, or take off an inch of the cake for each quart of water, boil it half and hour, and do not boil the milk in it, but add it when wanted.”

Miss Beecher’s Domestic Receipt-Book – pg. 188 in the 1858 edition

It’s interesting to see the differences between the two recipes. One calls for boiling just a few minutes and the other one calls for boiling it for half an hour. One recipe says it’s better to add the milk with the water when it is boiling and the other one says to add the milk after. And one recipe mentioned both sugar and nutmeg while the other one doesn’t mention either. Since the second recipe is from later on in 1858, it’s possible that the chocolate being used at that point might have had some sugar mixed with it, or it’s also possible that the recipe simply assumes that people would add sugar to taste later on since it’s typically for 19th century recipes to omit details like that.

I combined both of these recipes to make a hot chocolate that would combine elements of both. I omitted the part about scraping the chocolate fine because modern chocolate has a smoother texture and melts very quickly in boiling water. And I decided that 3 minutes would be enough time for the chocolate to boil in the water. (I didn’t want to wait half an hour for my hot chocolate!) And I added both sugar and nutmeg like the first recipe suggests.

It was also popular for hot chocolate to be served with a froth of foam on top, so people would often stir their chocolate with a special tool to blend it well and they would pour it back and forth from a height to create the air bubbles to make a froth on top. I omitted this step, but you could certainly try that if you like.

You can enjoy this hot chocolate with your favorite breakfast or dessert recipes, or you can try it with some old-fashioned 19th century gingerbread cookies for a historic-tasting treat.

Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century (2)

Yield: 1 cup

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Cook Time: 3 minutes

Total Time: 8 minutes

This old-fashioned 19th century hot chocolate recipe is a rich dark chocolate drink that you can customize the way you like it. This recipe was adapted from two different 19th century cookbooks.

Ingredients

  • One 1/2 ounce square of unsweetened chocolate
  • 1 cup of water
  • About 1 tsp sugar (or sweetener of your choice)
  • Additional milk or cream to taste if preferred
  • A pinch of nutmeg or your favorite spice

Instructions

  1. Heat a cup of water until it is nearly at a boil.
  2. Add the square of chocolate and stir well, letting the chocolate melt and simmer in the hot water for a few minutes.
  3. Then add in the amount of sugar or other sweeteners that you like and any milk or cream that you may want.
  4. Pour the hot chocolate into your favorite cup or mug and add a pinch of nutmeg or other spices if you like.
  5. (An optional step if you want a froth on top would be to pour the chocolate back and forth from the pot to the cup several times from a height to create that foam or to which the chocolate while it is in the pot before pouring it into your cup.)

Notes

This recipe is very customizable. You can add more or less sugar depending on how sweet you want your hot chocolate and even though they might not be as authentic to the 19th century, you can use other sweeteners besides sugar too if you like.

Many old recipes call for the addition of milk or cream, so you can add either if you like. I prefer my hot chocolate without milk or cream, but adding some would give you a richer and creamier taste that is more similar to the hot chocolate we are used to today.

Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century (3)
Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century (4)
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The information in this post is not to be taken as medical advice and is not intended to diagnose or treat any disease.

Old-Fashioned Hot Chocolate Recipe from the 19th Century (2024)

FAQs

Did they have hot chocolate in the 1800s? ›

In 1849, Cadbury started selling 'milk chocolate'. This was a hot chocolate mix, including cocoa powder and milk. While this hot milk chocolate was popular, it was not an original invention. Cadbury's product was based on a much older recipe, by a man named Hans Sloane.

What was the original hot chocolate? ›

It Started in Mexico

As early as 500 BC, the Mayans were drinking chocolate made from ground-up cocoa seeds mixed with water, cornmeal, and chili peppers (as well as other ingredients)—a much different version from the hot chocolate we know today.

How do you make Regency period hot chocolate? ›

TAKE a pint of milk, boil it over a slow fire, with some whole cinnamon, and sweeten it with Lisbon sugar; beat up the yolks of three eggs, throw all together into a chocolate-pot, and mill it one way, or it will turn. Serve it up in chocolate-cups. Gingerbread might also be added to this beverage as a thickener.

What did chocolate taste like in the 1800s? ›

In 1803 French chemist Antoine-Augustin Parmentier published an essay in which he warned of chocolate which left a 'pasty taste in the mouth'.

How was chocolate made in the 1800s? ›

In 1847, British chocolatier J.S. Fry and Sons created the first chocolate bar molded from a paste made of sugar, chocolate liquor and cocoa butter. Swiss chocolatier Daniel Peter is generally credited for adding dried milk powder to chocolate to create milk chocolate in 1876.

Did Victorians drink hot chocolate? ›

We tend to think of tea being the quintessential drink of Victorian England, but in fact coffee and hot chocolate had quite the ardent following, as well.

Is hot chocolate bad for you when your on your period? ›

Milk chocolate contains milk solids, sugar, and a comparatively low percentage of cocoa solids. It has a sweet taste and may be softer than dark chocolate. However, milk chocolate can actually worsen your period symptoms. Dark chocolate is the best type of chocolate to enjoy during your period.

What happens when you drink hot chocolate on your period? ›

Dark chocolate with 70% cocoa or higher has a surprisingly rich and diverse nutrient content. It contains significant volumes of magnesium, iron, potassium, and antioxidants that help regulate blood flow, hormonal fluctuations, and pain management.

What does hot chocolate do to your period? ›

Dark chocolate appears to live up to the hype when it comes to relieving period cramps. Studies suggest that eating between 40–120 grams of dark chocolate daily during your period may help reduce pain. This is probably because dark chocolate is rich in magnesium, which can relax muscles and ease aches.

How did they make chocolate in the olden days? ›

Mayan chocolate was a revered brew made of roasted and ground cacao seeds mixed with chilies, water and cornmeal. Mayans poured this mixture from one pot to another, creating a thick foamy beverage called “xocolatl”, meaning “bitter water.”

What did ancient chocolate taste like? ›

Chocolate is chocolate, not because it's sweet, but because it's bitter. And for the first 3,500 years of human consumption, chocolate was only bitter. Theobroma cacao, the tree that produces the beans for chocolate, comes from the Amazonian basin in South America.

What is the oldest chocolate in history? ›

World's oldest chocolate was made 5300 years ago—in a South American rainforest.

When did hot chocolate start? ›

It's believed that the origins of hot chocolate, or rather its earliest version, can be traced back to around 500 BC in the regions of present-day Mexico. The ancient Mayans, a civilisation with an advanced understanding of agriculture and astronomy, were one of the first to cultivate the cacao tree.

When was the first cup of hot chocolate made? ›

The first chocolate drink is believed to have been created at least 5,300 years starting with the Mayo-Chinchipe culture in what is present-day Ecuador and later consumed by the Maya around 2,500–3,000 years ago. A cocoa drink was an essential part of Aztec culture by 1400 AD, by which they referred to as xocōlātl.

What year was hot chocolate? ›

Hot Chocolate
OriginWest Hampstead, London, England
GenresFunk soul pop disco
Years active1968–1986 1988 1992–present
LabelsRak EMI MCA Apple WEA Manticore
9 more rows

What was chocolate like in the 1700s? ›

Although slightly grittier than modern day drinking chocolate because it was impossible to grind by hand to a fine consistency, the resulting drink was nevertheless rich and delicious and became especially popular as a breakfast beverage, often with the addition of grated bread or egg yolks which transformed it into a ...

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