Filters
Search Programmes
Programmes Categories
- Airlines and Aviation ( 2 )
- Archaeology ( 4 )
- Architecture and Design ( 4 )
- Bacon, Deli Meats & More ( 3 )
- Beer ( 5 )
- Blockchain and Hospitality ( 2 )
- Body Language ( 2 )
- Bourbon ( 2 )
- Bread ( 3 )
- Business Etiquette ( 13 )
- Butcher ( 7 )
- Champagne ( 3 )
- Cheese ( 8 )
- Chocolate ( 3 )
- Cigars ( 1 )
- Cocktails ( 1 )
- Coffee ( 4 )
- Communication Skills ( 11 )
- Cultures ( 7 )
- Digital Media ( 15 )
- Disability Awareness ( 3 )
- Diversity at work place ( 3 )
- EcoTourism ( 3 )
- Eggs ( 7 )
- Etiquette ( 12 )
- Fish ( 1 )
- Food & Beverage ( 1 )
- Food Photography ( 6 )
- Fruit ( 1 )
- Hospitality & Innovation ( 4 )
- Hotel Standards ( 2 )
- International Cuisine ( 1 )
- Job Interviews ( 3 )
- Languages ( 2 )
- Leadership and Management ( 11 )
- Liquor ( 1 )
- Maltese History ( 4 )
- Michelin Star ( 4 )
- On line events ( 1 )
- Pasta ( 4 )
- Personal Development ( 8 )
- Pricing Hotel Rooms ( 2 )
- Project Management ( 2 )
- Restaurants ( 13 )
- Revenue Management ( 1 )
- Seed Investments ( 1 )
- Service Techniques ( 10 )
- Shellfish ( 1 )
- Sign language for Hospitality ( 9 )
- Spices ( 1 )
- Sport Tourism ( 3 )
- Strategy ( 4 )
- Sustainable tourism and hotels ( 5 )
- Tea ( 4 )
- Tequila ( 1 )
- Tourism History ( 1 )
- Whiskey ( 10 )
- Wine ( 19 )
The history of chocolate - Deanna Pucciarelli
If you can’t imagine life without chocolate, you’re lucky you weren’t born before the 16th century. Until then, chocolate only existed as a bitter, foamy drink in Mesoamerica. So how did we get from a bitter beverage to the chocolate bars of today? Deanna Pucciarelli traces the fascinating and often cruel history of chocolate.
-
-
The history of chocolate - Deanna Pucciarelli00:05 hour(s)
-
YouTube allows users to upload, view, rate, share, add to playlists, report, comment on videos, and subscribe to other users. It offers a wide variety of user-generated and corporate media videos. Available content includes video clips, TV show clips, music videos, short and documentary films, audio recordings, movie trailers, live streams, and other content such as video blogging, short original videos, and educational videos. Most content on YouTube is uploaded by individuals, but media corporations including CBS, the BBC, Vevo, and Hulu offer some of their material via YouTube as part of the YouTube partnership program. Unregistered users can only watch (but not upload) videos on the site, while registered users are also permitted to upload an unlimited number of videos and add comments to videos.