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  2. Swiss chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_chocolate

    The primary ingredient, cocoa, is not grown in Switzerland; only anecdotal quantities of chocolate using fully indigenous ingredients have been made to date. [36] Cocoa is essentially imported from West Africa. The other common ingredient, milk, is widely available in the country, which has a long dairy farming tradition. Milk ingredients are ...

  3. French chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_chocolate

    By 2000, French chocolate was considered culturally authentic and gourmet in French society. A trend of consumers choosing chocolate for their high cocoa percentages and bean origins and varieties. By 2008, the French were among the highest consumers of chocolate. [10] As of 2014, the Salon du Chocolat's fashion show was still being exhibited.

  4. Chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate

    Maya glyph for cacao. Cocoa is a variant of cacao, likely arising from a confusion with the word coco. [2] Through cacao, it is ultimately derived from kakaw(a), but whether that word originates in Nahuatl or a Mixe-Zoquean language is the subject of substantial linguistic debate.

  5. Chocolate truffle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_truffle

    A chocolate truffle is a French chocolate confectionery [1] traditionally made with a chocolate ganache centre and coated in cocoa powder, coconut, or chopped nuts. A chocolate truffle is handrolled into a spherical or ball shape. [2] The name derives from the chocolate truffle's similarity in appearance to truffles, a tuber fungus. [2]

  6. Cacao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cacao

    Cocoa bean, the seed from the tree used to make chocolate; Cacao paste, ground cacao beans. The mass is melted and separated into: Cocoa butter, a pale, yellow, edible fat; and; Cocoa solids, the dark, bitter mass that contains most of cacao's notable phytochemicals, including caffeine and theobromine.

  7. Banania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banania

    It is made from cocoa, banana flour, cereals, honey and sugar. There are two types of Banania available in French supermarkets: 'traditional' which must be cooked with milk for 10 minutes, and 'instant' which can be prepared in similar fashion to Nesquik .

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    mail.aol.com

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  9. Chocolate liqueur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_liqueur

    A French manual published in 1780 also describes chocolate liqueur. [3] An 1803 French pharmacy manual includes a recipe for a chocolate liqueur (ratafia de chocolat, also ratafia de cacao). [4] An early 19th-century American cookbook, published in 1825 and preserved in an historical archive in South Carolina, includes a similar recipe. [1]