How to tell if your favourite Easter treats are ‘real chocolate’
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Not all chocolate is created equal. For
that matter, not all of the bunnies and eggs lining store shelves this
Easter are even chocolate. They might be brown and taste sweet, but
according to the definition set out by the federal government, that’s
where the similarities end.
That’s why some of Easter’s beloved sweet treats are labelled “candy” and “chocolaty.”
Given that millions of kids (and, let’s
face it, grownups) will be mutilating confectionary bunnies and eggs for
the next week, it’s worth taking a look at what is actually in those
Easter “chocolates.”
The basics
First,
a bit of context. Chocolate is made from cacao beans, which contain two
different components: cocoa mass and cocoa butter. In simple terms, the
beans are roasted, shelled and ground into a paste called chocolate
liquor, explains Pam Williams, founder of Ecole Chocolat in Vancouver.
Adding ingredients like sugar and vanilla makes this bitter paste taste
sweet, though nothing like a commercial chocolate bar. Manufacturers
will continue to grind the product, sometimes adding vanilla as well as
an emulsifier, like soy lecithin, to make it smooth. If the end product
is milk chocolate, then milk powder is also added.
According
to Canada’s Food and Drug Regulations, the only products that can be
called chocolate must be made with some form of pure cocoa and cocoa
butter combined with a sweetening agent. Various types of chocolate have
to follow specific rules spelling out the minimum amounts of
ingredients needed to fit the definition. For instance, milk chocolate
has to contain at least 15 per cent cocoa butter, 2.5 per cent cocoa and
12 per cent milk solids. You read that right: a milk chocolate bar only
needs to contain 2.5 per cent cocoa. The regulations also state that
chocolate products can contain small amounts of flavouring agents, salt
and emulsifiers.
It’s a pretty short
ingredient list. Which makes distinguishing real chocolate from the
pretenders quite easy, says Williams, who is also this year’s president
of the Fine Chocolate Industry Association.
Beware the hydrogenated oil
There
is immediately something wrong on the ingredient list of the $2.50
blue-eyed Easter bunny at Dollarama. The second ingredient after sugar
is vegetable oil. It’s a dead giveaway: no product containing a fat
other than cocoa butter can be called chocolate. That’s why this
particular bunny is called “Chocolaty Bunny”. But the rushed consumer
just looking for enough sweet treats to fill a child’s Easter basket may
miss that entirely.
Oh and the blue
eye? Made with the help of tartrazine, or Yellow #5, the same colour
that is being eliminated from Kraft Dinner following an online petition.
Some research has linked tartrazine to hyperactivity and worsening
symptoms of asthma, among other health problems.
“Of
course,” you say while munching on a bowl of Cadbury Mini Eggs, “it’s
hardly a surprise that dollar-store Easter bunnies aren’t made with the
world’s finest ingredients.”
But – bad news – Mini Eggs aren’t real chocolate either.
If
the glaring “candy” label on the front of the package wasn’t enough of a
giveaway, the ingredient list is. “Modified palm and modified vegetable
oil” are the third ingredients on the list. Mini eggs also contain
natural and artificial flavours and colours, including tartrazine.
Current federal regulations don’t require food manufacturers to spell
out exactly what artificial flavours or colours are added to products,
although many disclose when products contain tartrazine.
In
the U.S., Hershey has the license to produce Mini Eggs. Interestingly,
the ingredient list shows that Mini Eggs made south of the border are,
in fact, real chocolate.
If you love
Cadbury Creme Eggs, rest assured they are made with milk chocolate in
Canada. The filling also contains a variety of unspecified artificial
colours and flavours, as well as calcium chloride, a rising agent and
preservative, as well as soy lecithin.
85 per cent cocoa: doesn’t matter
It’s
one thing to be able to tell fake chocolate from the authentic. It’s
quite another to figure out which varieties of chocolate are made with
high-quality, better-tasting ingredients. The ingredient list on a $2
chocolate bunny on sale at Loblaws is strikingly similar to the $10,
much smaller, bunny sold by Soma, a high-end chocolate store in Toronto
that roasts its own cacao beans. That doesn’t mean they’re going to
taste the same, by any stretch.
Contrary
to popular belief, you can’t judge the quality of chocolate by the
amount of cocoa it contains. It’s become common for manufacturers to
display the cocoa percentage in bold letters on chocolate bars and
they’ve successfully convinced many that more cocoa equals better
chocolate, according to Williams. But all that figure tells you is how
much sugar the chocolate contains. A bar that is 40 per cent cocoa
contains 60 per cent sugar.
If you are
truly on the lookout for better-quality chocolate, let your senses, and
your wallet, be your guide. Chocolate made with high-quality beans, more
cocoa butter and few additives is usually going to be pricier than the
average grocery-store chocolate bunny.
To
put it another way, there’s a good chance the locally raised, grass-fed
steak you buy from the butcher down the street will taste better than
the low-grade cut of beef on sale at a discount grocer.
You get what you pay for.
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