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  2. Al Nassma Chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Nassma_Chocolate

    Al Nassma manufactures its own chocolates from cocoa beans. In 2006 the company set up a Halal-certified production facility. [10] The milk from which the chocolates are produced comes from camels at the Camelicious Farm in Umm Nahad. The farm belongs to the Emirates Industry for Camel Milk & Products (EICMP). The farm houses over 3,500 camels.

  3. Is Camel Milk the Next Big Dairy Alternative? Experts Say It ...

    www.aol.com/camel-milk-next-big-dairy-165630249.html

    “As camel milk lacks beta-lactoglobulin, it is potentially less allergenic,” says research published in the journal Food Chemistry. As the National Library of Medicine points out, ...

  4. Oat Milk vs. Almond Milk: Which One's Better for You? - AOL

    www.aol.com/oat-milk-vs-almond-milk-112500611.html

    The Pros and Cons of Oat Milk. Oat milk is popular thanks to its “creamy texture,” says Tamar Samuels, MS, RDN, co-founder of Culina Health. It’s nut-free and dairy-free, but it’s not ...

  5. List of bean-to-bar chocolate manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bean-to-bar...

    A bean-to-bar company produces chocolate by processing cocoa beans into a product in-house, rather than melting chocolate from another manufacturer. Some are large companies that own the entire process for economic reasons; others are small- or micro-batch producers and aim to control the whole process to improve quality, working conditions, or environmental impact.

  6. Chocolate milk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_milk

    Sugar used in commercial chocolate milk are used as preservative, and the energy from the sugar also makes it a convenience food.It can also be made at home by blending milk with cocoa powder and a sweetener (such as sugar or a sugar substitute), melted chocolate, chocolate syrup, or a pre-made powdered chocolate milk mix.

  7. Compound chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compound_chocolate

    Compound chocolate is a product made from a combination of cocoa, vegetable fat and sweeteners. It is used as a lower-cost alternative to pure chocolate, as it uses less-expensive hard vegetable fats such as coconut oil or palm kernel oil in place of the more expensive cocoa butter. [1]

  8. Milk chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_chocolate

    Milk chocolate is a form of solid chocolate containing cocoa, sugar and milk. It is the most consumed type of chocolate, and is used in a wide diversity of bars, tablets and other confectionery products. Milk chocolate contains smaller amounts of cocoa solids than dark chocolates do, and (as with white chocolate) contains milk solids.

  9. Types of chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_chocolate

    Pure milk chocolate material (純ミルクチョコレート生地, jun-miruku chokorēto kiji) Cocoa content ≥21%, cocoa butter ≥18%, milk solids ≥14%, milk fats ≥3.5%, sucrose ≤55%, lecithin ≤0.5%, no additives other than lecithin and vanilla flavoring, no fats other than cocoa butter and milk fats, water ≤3%