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August 10, 2007
Sweet Debate: What Is Chocolate?
"At stake is the very definition of chocolate, and whether cheaper vegetable oils can be substituted for what many consider the very quintessence of every block, bar and square of chocolate: cocoa butter.
In Europe, the cocoa butter vs. vegetable oil fight took 30 years to resolve. In the United States, it's been less than a year since the first volley. Hundreds of chocoholics have joined the fray, the outcome of which could in turn affect the livelihoods of millions of cocoa farmers in Africa and South America.
It all began in October, when a dozen industry groups filed a petition with the Food and Drug Administration seeking to amend the standards that guide how nearly 300 foods can be produced, from canned cherries to evaporated milk.
Broadly speaking, the so-called standards of identity are meant to ensure listed products contain the right amount of key ingredients and are both properly made and not deceptively packaged. For example, chocolate in its purest state -- the "liquor" made from ground, processed cacao beans -- must contain between 50 percent and 60 percent cocoa butter, also known as cocoa fat."
"The broadly written petition skimps on the details but includes an appendix that lists examples of proposed changes. Tucked between requests to allow antifungals on bulk cheese and powdered milk in yogurt is what has people riled up the most: a proposal that would let manufacturers 'use a vegetable fat in place of another vegetable fat named in the standard (e.g. cacao fat).'"
"Manufacturers already can use vegetable fats instead of cocoa butter -- they just can't call it 'chocolate.' Hundreds of people have filed comments with the FDA, with the overwhelming majority seeking to keep it that way, according to an Associated Press review of the file."
"The Grocery Manufacturers Association sees its petition as an effort to bring some 'new thinking' to the modernization of food standards, allowing tweaks and changes to 'old-fashioned recipes' without having to change each standard in the process."
Related from the Joint Center:
Finding Things to Fear
Anne Applebaum
Posted by the Joint Center at August 10, 2007 12:53 PM
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