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What is Cacao?

LEARN EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS SACRED PLANT

WILD-CRAFTED         INDIGENOUS-GROWN        CEREMONIAL GRADE        REGENERATIVE CACAO 

What is Cacao?

Revered by many as the "Food of the Gods," cacao has been considered sacred for thousands of years. Traditionally used in ceremonies as a bridge to connect with the spirit realm, today we use it in our daily practice to elevate health, happiness, and bring us into a state of harmony.

Sacred Superfood

Cacao (pronounced Ka-kow) is the raw form of chocolate, and in its raw form it’s not a confectionary item but a sacred superfood. Cocoa (pronounced Ko-ko) is raw cacao that has been ultra-heat treated, destroying the nutrients to form today’s modern chocolate.

Nutrient Dense

Cacao is one of the most nutrient-dense superfoods on the planet. Packed with antioxidants that fight aging, magnesium that relaxes the nervous system, and theobromine – the compound that helps produce happiness – it’s a true natural mood booster.

The History of Cacao

FROM REVERED RITUAL TO CANDY BAR

Sacred Origins

The Amazon Basin, the world’s largest tropical rainforest, is home to vast biodiversity and the Amazon River. It is the birthplace of cacao, where Indigenous communities have cultivated and cherished it for over 5,000 years, using it as both a nourishing food and a sacred plant medicine.

Meso -American Culture

Cacao spread north into Mesoamerica, where the Olmecs were among the first to consume it. The Maya and Aztec civilizations later embraced it deeply, preparing it as a ceremonial drink, offering it in rituals, and even valuing it as currency. To them, cacao was a symbol of life, abundance, and connection to the divine.

European Influence

After the Spanish conquest, cacao reached Europe and quickly became a prized commodity. By the 19th century, European colonisers introduced it to West Africa, where plantations were established under colonial rule and forced labor. The region soon became the world’s largest producer of cacao.

Modern Day Chocolate

In the 19th century when Dutch chemist Coenraad van Houten invented the alkalization process, allowing for mass production of cocoa powder. Soon after, Swiss chocolatier Daniel Peter added milk, creating the first milk chocolate and transforming cacao into the everyday chocolate we know today.

The Journey of Cacao

`

90%

Cacao grown is turned into Cocoa

10%

Remains Cacao - Less as Ceremonial

70%

Worlds Cacao grown in Africa

1.5m+

Children in slave labour

The Dark Side of Cacao

CACAO'S BITTER TRUTH

Child Labour

Over 1.5 million children work on cacao farms in West Africa, many forced into hazardous labour with machetes and chemicals. Families earn less than $1 a day, leaving children no choice but to work instead of going to school. Cheap chocolate exists because exploitation keeps farmers in poverty.

The True Cost of Cacao

More than 70% of the world’s cacao comes from West Africa, where deforestation for plantations has destroyed over 80% of original forests in Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana. Farmers are paid less than 6% of a chocolate bar’s retail price, while the environmental and human costs remain hidden.

How You Can Help

By choosing wild-crafted cacao, you support fair wages for farmers, protect rainforests from further destruction, and help reduce child labour. Every cup contributes both the land and the Indigenous families who depend on it, creating a future where cacao empowers communities instead of exploiting them.

The Cacao Family Tree

The 3 Strains of Cacao

CRIOLLO (Native)

Scientific Name:
Theobroma cacao var. Criollo (Meaning Native)

Origin:
Native to the Amazon Basin and domesticated in Meso-America.

Flavour Profile:
Exceptionally delicate and complex, with low bitterness and subtle notes of fruit, nuts, caramel, and spice. Highly aromatic with a smooth, refined finish.

Characteristics:
Thin-skinned pods (often red or yellow), low-yielding, and highly susceptible to disease. Known as the “original cacao,” cultivated and revered by the Maya and Aztec for ceremonial use.

Global Production:
Less than 5% of the world’s cacao. Rare, prized, and sought after for ceremonial cacao and fine-flavour chocolate.

Summary:
Criollo is the rarest and most treasured cacao strain, celebrated for its unique flavour complexity and cultural heritage. Though difficult to cultivate, it remains the gold standard for purity and quality, embodying cacao’s sacred origins.

FORESTERO (Foreigner)

Scientific Name:
Theobroma cacao var. Forastero (meaning Foreigner)

Origin:
Native to the Amazon Basin and widely cultivated across West Africa.

Flavour Profile:
Strong, bold, and earthy with higher bitterness and less complexity than Criollo. Often described as robust but lacking in fine flavour or aroma.

Characteristics:
Thick-skinned pods, highly resistant to disease, and extremely high-yielding. This resilience makes Forastero the preferred strain for industrial farming and mass-produced chocolate.

Global Production:
Around 80–85% of the world’s cacao supply, making it the dominant variety.

Summary:
Forastero is the backbone of the global chocolate industry. While hardy and reliable for large-scale farming, it is less prized for flavour. Its widespread cultivation has often come at the expense of rainforest ecosystems and fair conditions for farmers.

TRINATARIO ( Hybrid)

Scientific Name:
Theobroma cacao var. Trinitario (from Trinidad)

Origin:
First cultivated in Trinidad in the 18th century, after a natural hybrid formed between Criollo and Forastero.

Flavour Profile:
Balanced and refined, combining Criollo’s delicate fruity and floral notes with the robust body of Forastero. Considered a fine-flavour cacao with good complexity.

Characteristics:
Pods vary in colour and form. More resilient and higher-yielding than Criollo, yet capable of producing chocolate with distinct aromatic qualities.

Global Production:
Roughly 10–15% of global cacao, most often used for premium and artisanal chocolate.

Summary:
Trinitario bridges the gap between strength and delicacy. With the hardiness of Forastero and the elegance of Criollo, it offers a balance of resilience and quality, making it a favourite in fine chocolate production around the world.

What is Wild-Crafted Cacao?

CACAO THAT IS GOOD FOR THE PLANET AND YOU

Conventional Cacao

Conventional cacao is the most common. Grown on large plantations for mass-produced chocolate. While affordable, it often comes at a hidden cost. Low farmer wages, child labour and deforestation. This industrial model prioritises yield over quality, stripping cacao of its richness and disconnecting it from its origins.

Organic Cacao

Organic cacao is grown without synthetic pesticides or chemicals, making it a healthier and more sustainable option than conventional cacao. However, it is still often cultivated on plantations, meaning many of the same issues of monoculture, low farmer income, and loss of biodiversity remain.

Wild-Crafted Cacao

Wild-crafted cacao is the rarest and most sacred form, growing naturally in the rainforest without plantations or chemicals. Hand-harvested by Indigenous families, it works with the forest rather than destroying it. This makes it the most conscious choice — better for your health, the people who grow it, and the planet we all share.

Wild Crafted Cacao VS Other Cacao

Wild Crafted

Organic

Conventional

Cocoa

Grown in the wild - not on a plantation

Supports Indigenous Communities

Free from Child & Slave labour

Not ultra-heat treated to retain nutrients

Not grown on deforested land

Helps regenerate the Rainforest

Wild-Crafted

Grown naturally in the rainforest, never on plantations.Carries the richness of the jungle, untouched and pure.Nourishes body, mind, and spirit as nature intended.

Indigenous Grown

Hand-harvested by Asháninka families who protect the land.Guided by generations of traditional wisdom.Supports communities and keeps culture alive.

Protects the Rainforest

Not grown on farms or plantations, wild-crafted cacao protects the rainforest by valuing its biodiversity and thriving ecosystem growing syntropically in harmony with nature.

The Cacao Process

FROM THE HEART OF THE AMAZON TO YOUR HOME

From Seed to Serve

GROWN

Deep in the Amazon rainforest, wild cacao trees grow in harmony with the land. Nurtured by over 350 Asháninka families, these trees thrive alongside fruit and medicinal plants, absorbing the richness of the jungle. Every bean begins as a gift of the forest, pure, untamed, and alive with spirit.

HARVESTED

When the pods ripen, they are gathered by hand with care and tradition. Each vibrant pod holds 30 to 50 precious beans, cradled in sweet white pulp. This sacred harvest ensures only the finest cacao continues its journey, protecting both flavour and heritage.

FERMENTED

The beans are placed in wooden boxes and covered with banana leaves, where nature works her quiet magic. Over 5 to 7 days, the beans transform as bitterness softens and complex chocolate notes begin to bloom. This is where cacao’s true character is developed.

DRIED

Spread under the warmth of the Amazon sun, the beans dry slowly on wooden trays. For up to a week, they soak in the energy of the forest, reducing moisture and locking in their flavour. Each bean carries with it the strength of the land and the patience of time.

ROASTED

The dried beans are gently roasted to awaken their deepest flavours. Kept below 40°C, the nutrients remain intact while the cacao’s essence is revealed. Unlike industrial roasting which can heat over 100°C and destroy its true nature, this process honours cacao as medicine, preserving its vitality for the heart, body, and spirit.

GROUND

Once lightly roasted, the beans are cracked, winnowed and broken into cacao nibs, then ground down into a thick rich paste. This paste is the heart of cacao, the foundation of ceremonial drinks, nourishing powders, and everything cacao can offer in its purest form.

SEPERATED

From this paste, cacao can be separated into butter and powder, each with its own gifts. Nothing is wasted, every part of the bean is honoured. It is a process of respect, ensuring the cacao remains whole, versatile, and true to its nature.

PACKED

With love and care, the cacao is packed by the very hands that grew and harvested it. Every package carries more than cacao, it carries the story of the Asháninka, their land, and their commitment to protecting the rainforest for future generations.

ENJOYED

From the heart of the Amazon to your cup, cacao completes its journey. Every sip honours the Asháninka families who grow it and the rainforest they protect. By choosing Sacred Taste wild-crafted cacao, you help safeguard thousands of acres of Amazon rainforest and support more than 350 Indigenous families to thrive in their communities.

Remember what is Sacred

PEOPLE AND PLANET OVER PROFIT

FAQs

What is cacao exactly?

Cacao is the seed of the tropical Theobroma cacao tree, a plant native to the Amazon rainforest and revered for over 5,000 years. Known by the ancient Maya as the “food of the gods,” cacao is the purest and most natural form of chocolate. It is harvested from pods that grow directly on the trunk of the tree, then fermented, dried, and ground into cacao nibs, paste, powder, or butter. Unlike processed chocolate, cacao remains rich in nutrients, antioxidants, and plant compounds that support health, vitality, and emotional well-being. Today, wild-crafted and ceremonial-grade cacao is celebrated not just as food, but as a sacred plant medicine that connects us to ourselves, our communities, and the Earth.

How is cacao different from cocoa?

Although the words are often used interchangeably, cacao and cocoa are very different. Cacao usually refers to the raw or minimally processed form, often unroasted or lightly roasted, cold-pressed, and nutrient-dense. It has a rich, complex flavour and is packed with antioxidants, magnesium, iron, and theobromine, making it a natural superfood. Cocoa, on the other hand, refers to cacao that has been roasted at high temperatures, alkalised, and sometimes blended with sugar, milk, or additives to create conventional chocolate. While cocoa is smoother and less bitter, it contains fewer nutrients. Choosing wild-crafted or ceremonial cacao ensures you are experiencing chocolate in its purest, most powerful form.


Why is cacao considered a superfood?

Cacao is considered one of nature’s most powerful superfoods thanks to its extraordinary nutrient profile. It is one of the highest natural sources of antioxidants, specifically flavanols, which protect cells from damage and support heart and brain health. Cacao is also rich in magnesium, known to support relaxation, muscle function, and energy production, as well as iron, calcium, and zinc. Unique compounds like theobromine provide gentle, sustained energy without the crash of caffeine, while phenylethylamine and anandamide stimulate the release of serotonin, dopamine, and endorphins, lifting mood, reducing stress, and enhancing emotional well-being. For these reasons, cacao is celebrated not only as food but also as a natural medicine for body, mind, and spirit.


Where does cacao come from and how long has it been used?

Cacao originates in the Amazon Basin, where Indigenous communities have cultivated and honoured it for over 5000 years. The earliest evidence of cacao use dates back to Ecuador, where it was prepared as a fermented drink. From there, it spread into Mesoamerica, where the Maya and Aztec civilisations elevated cacao into ritual, ceremony, and even currency. For them, cacao was not just food, it was sacred, a bridge to the divine, and a symbol of abundance and life. Spanish colonisers later brought cacao to Europe in the 1500s, transforming it into sweetened chocolate. Today, cacao continues to hold both cultural and nutritional significance, with wild-crafted and ceremonial cacao reconnecting us to its ancient heritage while supporting Indigenous families and protecting the rainforest.


Is cacao safe and how much should I consume?

Yes, cacao is safe for most people and offers gentle, heart-opening energy thanks to its natural compound theobromine, which stimulates circulation and focus without the crash or jitters of caffeine. However, because cacao is potent, it is best enjoyed mindfully. A typical serving of ceremonial cacao ranges from 20 to 42 grams, depending on your body, intention, and sensitivity. Consuming too much may cause mild discomfort, such as nausea or overstimulation, particularly on an empty stomach. For most people, a daily cup of cacao is a nourishing ritual that enhances mood, clarity, and connection. When consumed consciously, cacao is not just safe, it is deeply supportive of overall well-being.

A Message from Our Growers

Cacao might have nutritional benefit, but the real benefit is the conservation

Pedro

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