The Asian Age

‘ Stressed cocoa trees produce tastier chocolate’

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Geneva: Cocoa trees that are exposed to stressful conditions produce tastier chocolates, a study has found. Cocoa trees grow in hot and humid climates near the equator. Traditiona­lly, these trees are raised together in mixed groves with other types of trees and plants that can cool the air and provide vital shade. The system, called agroforest­ry, provides a lowstress environmen­t, increases nutrients in the soil and helps maintain ground water levels. However, to gain higher yields, growers sometimes plant cocoa trees in solitary, “monocultur­al,” groves, in which the trees are exposed to stressful conditions. In response to the stress, trees produce antioxidan­ts that can potentiall­y counteract the damage, but these compounds also could change the quality characteri­stics of the beans. Scientists from Research Institute of Organic Agricultur­e ( FiBL) in Switzerlan­d wanted to find out whether differing growing methods can influence the chemical compositio­n, and potentiall­y the flavor, of cocoa beans. They harvested beans from five cocoa tree farms in Bolivia at the beginning and end of the dry season, which runs from April to September. The trees were raised in fullsun monocultur­al groves or in agroforest settings. The beans were fermented and dried, then analysed. The research team detected only minor difference­s in the chemical compositio­n among the beans harvested from the farms during the same weather conditions. Slightly more phenols and other antioxidan­t compounds were detected in beans taken from monocultur­ally grown trees than those that came from trees grown with agroforest methods, but the difference­s were not significan­t, according to the researcher­s. The larger contributi­on to chemical compositio­n was the weather.

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