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  2. Chocolate truffle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_truffle

    A chocolate truffle is a French chocolate confectionery [1] traditionally made with a chocolate ganache center 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]

  3. Chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate

    Chocolatiers use the finished couverture to make chocolate candies (bars, truffles, etc.). [151] Production costs can be decreased by reducing cocoa solids content or by substituting cocoa butter with another fat. Cocoa growers object to allowing the resulting food to be called "chocolate", due to the risk of lower demand for their crops. [148]

  4. Chocolate bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_bar

    In many varieties of English, chocolate bar refers to any confectionery bar that contains chocolate. In some dialects of American English, only bars of solid chocolate are described as chocolate bars, with the phrase candy bar used as a broader term encompassing bars of solid chocolate, bars combining chocolate with other ingredients, and bars containing no chocolate at all.

  5. 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.

  6. Candy making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy_making

    Candy making is the preparation and cookery of candies and sugar confections. Candy making includes the preparation of many various candies, such as hard candies, jelly beans, gumdrops, taffy, liquorice, cotton candy, chocolates and chocolate truffles, dragées, fudge, caramel candy, and toffee.

  7. History of chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_chocolate

    Chocolate is a Spanish loanword, first recorded in English in 1604, [1] and in Spanish in 1579. [2] However, the word's origins beyond this are contentious. [3] Despite a popular belief that chocolate derives from the Nahuatl word chocolatl, early texts documenting the Nahuatl word for chocolate drink use a different term, cacahuatl, meaning "cacao water".

  8. Discontinued Candy All Boomers Should Remember - AOL

    www.aol.com/discontinued-candy-boomers-remember...

    9. Seven Up Bar. Introduced: Sometime in the 1930s Discontinued: 1979 Not to be confused with the fizzy lemon-lime soda 7 Up, the Seven Up candy bar was like a box of Valentine's chocolates all ...

  9. Candy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy

    In this model, chocolate candies like chocolate candy bars and chocolate truffles are included. Hot chocolate or other cocoa-based drinks are excluded, as is candy made from white chocolate. When chocolate is treated as a separate branch, it also includes confections whose classification is otherwise difficult, being neither exactly candies nor ...