Types of chocolate


is a range of foods derived from cocoa, mixed with fat and finely powdered sugar to produce a solid confectionery. There are several types of chocolate, classified according to the proportion of cocoa used in a particular formulation.
The use of particular name designations is sometimes subject to international governmental regulation.
Some governments assign chocolate solids and ranges of chocolate differently.

Terminology

The cocoa bean products from which chocolate is made are known under different names in different parts of the world. In the American chocolate industry:
Different forms and flavours of chocolate are produced by varying the quantities of the different ingredients. Other flavours can be obtained by varying the time and temperature when roasting the beans.
, with a minimum cocoa content of 40%
s
bar
cake coating
Flavours such as mint, vanilla, coffee, orange, or strawberry are sometimes added to chocolate in a creamy form or in very small pieces. Chocolate bars frequently contain added ingredients such as peanuts, nuts, fruit, caramel, and crisped rice. Pieces of chocolate, in various flavours, are sometimes added to breakfast cereals and ice cream.

By country/region

United States

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulates the naming and ingredients of cocoa products:
ProductChocolate liquorMilk solidsSugarCocoa fatMilk fat
Buttermilk chocolate≥ 10%≥ 12%< 3.39%
Milk chocolate≥ 10%≥ 12%≥ 3.39%
Mixed dairy product chocolates≥ 10%≥ 12%
Skim milk chocolate≥ 10%≥ 12%< 3.39%
Sweet chocolate≥ 15%< 12%
Semisweet or bittersweet chocolate≥ 35%< 12%
White chocolate≥ 14%≤ 55%≥ 20%≥ 3.5%

In March 2007, the Chocolate Manufacturers Association, whose members include Hershey's, Nestlé, and Archer Daniels Midland, began lobbying the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to change the legal definition of chocolate to allow the substitution of "safe and suitable vegetable fats and oils" for cocoa butter in addition to using "any sweetening agent" and milk substitutes. Currently, the FDA does not allow a product to be referred to as "chocolate" if the product contains any of these ingredients. To work around this restriction, products with cocoa substitutes are often branded or labeled as "chocolatey" or "made with chocolate".

Canada

The legislation for cocoa and chocolate products in Canada is found in Division 4 of the Food and Drug Regulations, under the Food and Drugs Act. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is responsible for the administration and enforcement of the FDR and FDA.
ProductCocoa butterMilk solidsMilk fatFat-free cocoa solidsCocoa solids
Milk chocolate≥ 15%≥ 12%≥ 3.39%≥ 2.5%≥ 25%
Sweet chocolate≥ 18%< 12%≥ 12%≥ 31%
Chocolate, bittersweet chocolate, semi-sweet chocolate or dark chocolate≥ 18%< 5%≥ 14%≥ 35%
White chocolate≥ 20%≥ 14%≥ 3.5%

The use of cocoa butter substitutes in Canada is not permitted. Chocolate sold in Canada cannot contain vegetable fats or oils.
The only sweetening agents permitted in chocolate in Canada are listed in Division 18 of the Food and Drug Regulations. Artificial sweeteners such as aspartame, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, and sugar alcohols are not permitted.
Products manufactured or imported into Canada that contain non-permitted ingredients cannot legally be called "chocolate" when sold in Canada. A non-standardized name such as "candy" must be used.

European Union

Products labelled as "family milk chocolate" elsewhere in the European Union are permitted to be labelled as simply "milk chocolate" in Malta, the UK and the Republic of Ireland.

Japan

In Japan, 'chocolate products' are classified on a complex scale.
Chocolate materials:
Chocolate products:
Products using milk chocolate or quasi milk chocolate as described above are handled in the same way as chocolate / quasi chocolate.
Chocolate is a product based on cocoa solid or cocoa fat or both. The amount and types of cocoa solids and fat that the term implies is a matter of controversy. Manufacturers have an incentive to use the term for variations that are cheaper to produce, containing less cocoa and more cocoa substitutes.
There has been disagreement in the EU about the definition of chocolate; this dispute covers several ingredients, including the types of fat used and the quantity of cocoa. In 1999, however, the EU resolved the fat issue by allowing up to 5% of chocolate's content to be one of 5 alternatives to cocoa butter: illipe oil, palm oil, sal, shea butter, kokum gurgi, or mango kernel oil.
A recent workaround has been to reduce the amount of cocoa butter in candy bars without using vegetable fats by adding polyglycerol polyricinoleate, which is an artificial castor oil-derived emulsifier that simulates the mouthfeel of fat. Up to 0.3% PGPR may be added to chocolate for this purpose.

Quality

Cacao beans can be tested for their quality as a certain variety using DNA tests, especially by testing single-nucleotide polymorphisms that act as markers.