Is dark chocolate a clean food?

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Replies

  • DopeItUp
    DopeItUp Posts: 18,771 Member
    I'm racist, white chocolate or GTFO.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    I'm racist, white chocolate or GTFO.

    I must be a self-hating racist because I'm European yet don't really like white chocolate all that much. I like it dark. The darker the better!
  • DopeItUp
    DopeItUp Posts: 18,771 Member
    I'm racist, white chocolate or GTFO.

    I must be a self-hating racist because I'm European yet don't really like white chocolate all that much. I like it dark. The darker the better!

    Ummm, chocolate traitor? Once you go dark, you never go back?
  • hmg90
    hmg90 Posts: 314 Member
    I eat 70% or above. They have considerably less sugar.

    You have to get to 85% before you get the antioxidants people associate with dark chocolate. I don't know what the definition is of "clean eating" but if I was obsessively on that, I'd stick to 85%.

    Obviously you need to always read the package carefully. I have read that the EU and the US Food Adm. only require a cocoa amount of 30% (!!) to qualify for putting "dark chocolate" on the cover.
  • TX_Rhon
    TX_Rhon Posts: 1,549 Member
    Not sure if it's "clean" but according to the interwebz....

    tumblr_n0buigssZv1tosx8wo1_500.jpg

    So it must be true cuz you can't put anything on their that is not true. :drinker:
  • shartran
    shartran Posts: 304 Member
    Remember to vote with your wallet...

    FAIR TRADE chocolate is the way to go...
  • harrypotter22
    harrypotter22 Posts: 27 Member
    my biology teacher says that dark chocolate would worsen your depression if you ate enough of it so he doesn't eat it and his diet is like 100% perfect. he's really strict.
    however i think dark chocolate is fine.
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    does it have less than five ingredients? If yes, then yes...
  • ayalowich
    ayalowich Posts: 242 Member
    I'm with you. If it's not healthy, it's a waste.

    Smug alert, smug alert.

    Enjoy it in moderation and stop worrying about it. 100 calories a day of chocolate isn't going to hurt.
  • jmv7117
    jmv7117 Posts: 891 Member
    This is my favorite: Intense Dark 86% Cacao Midnight Reverie Bar

    it's so yummy

    Dark chocolate is like a fine wine! My favourites: Habitual 100% cacao, Olivia 92% raw cocoa and pure maple syrup (organic), and Green & Blacks 85% cocoa (organic).
  • sullus
    sullus Posts: 2,839 Member
    I only eat conflict free chocolate. The rest of you enjoy your blood chocolate. You're worse than Hitler.



    :tongue:
    Doesn't 4Chan come to your house and kick your *kitten* if you invoke Hitler on an Internet thread? :laugh:

    No, it's Godwin's Law .. ("As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1")

    4 Chan are great guys. They send you pizzas.
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    This is my favorite: Intense Dark 86% Cacao Midnight Reverie Bar

    it's so yummy

    Dark chocolate is like a fine wine! My favourites: Habitual 100% cacao, Olivia 92% raw cocoa and pure maple syrup (organic), and Green & Blacks 85% cocoa (organic).

    six ingredients = not clean...
  • SunofaBeach14
    SunofaBeach14 Posts: 4,899 Member
    The definition of "clean food" I am familiar with is "natural". So, unless the food exists in nature, it's not 100% clean.

    But a food made from 100% natural ingredients could arguably be considered 'clean', in which case it would depend on the dark chocolate.

    In my world, there are varying degrees of 'clean'.
    So it's 0% clean, because chocolate is fermented.
    All of my wut.

    How does that make it not clean? I thought "clean eaters" were all about sauerkraut/kombucha/kim chee? What the hell is the problem with fermentation?
    Does it exist in nature? Dried, fermented beans?

    I guess that means beer is clean?
    I see.

    0.jpg
    Yup, that's exactly how cocoa beans are fermented.

    Oh wait, no it's not.

    So, answer the damned question: Is beer clean?

    No one cares. At least no one who uses his/her brain cares . . .
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    The definition of "clean food" I am familiar with is "natural". So, unless the food exists in nature, it's not 100% clean.

    But a food made from 100% natural ingredients could arguably be considered 'clean', in which case it would depend on the dark chocolate.

    In my world, there are varying degrees of 'clean'.
    So it's 0% clean, because chocolate is fermented.
    All of my wut.

    How does that make it not clean? I thought "clean eaters" were all about sauerkraut/kombucha/kim chee? What the hell is the problem with fermentation?
    Does it exist in nature? Dried, fermented beans?

    I guess that means beer is clean?
    I see.

    0.jpg
    Yup, that's exactly how cocoa beans are fermented.

    Oh wait, no it's not.

    So, answer the damned question: Is beer clean?

    No one cares. At least no one who uses his/her brain cares . . .

    lol..agreed x 100000000000
  • missiontofitness
    missiontofitness Posts: 4,059 Member
    Only if you don't drop it on the floor
  • tennisdude2004
    tennisdude2004 Posts: 5,609 Member
    my biology teacher says that dark chocolate would worsen your depression if you ate enough of it so he doesn't eat it and his diet is like 100% perfect. he's really strict.
    however i think dark chocolate is fine.

    I'm sure it's the other way round!
  • Brack3t
    Brack3t Posts: 5 Member
    My absolute favorite chocolate is unsweetened 100% cacao baking chocolate. Each person will have their own definition of what they consider clean, and for me that chocolate is.
  • tennisdude2004
    tennisdude2004 Posts: 5,609 Member
    My absolute favorite chocolate is unsweetened 100% cacao baking chocolate. Each person will have their own definition of what they consider clean, and for me that chocolate is.

    Wow 100% - bet that goes nicely with a glass of red wine.
  • Brack3t
    Brack3t Posts: 5 Member
    My absolute favorite chocolate is unsweetened 100% cacao baking chocolate. Each person will have their own definition of what they consider clean, and for me that chocolate is.

    Wow 100% - bet that goes nicely with a glass of red wine.

    I've never tried it, but now I will have to. Thanks for the suggestion!
  • tennisdude2004
    tennisdude2004 Posts: 5,609 Member
    My absolute favorite chocolate is unsweetened 100% cacao baking chocolate. Each person will have their own definition of what they consider clean, and for me that chocolate is.

    Wow 100% - bet that goes nicely with a glass of red wine.

    I've never tried it, but now I will have to. Thanks for the suggestion!

    Red wine is great with dark chocolate - it just takes the edge off the bitterness.
  • darkangel45422
    darkangel45422 Posts: 234 Member
    You people with your clean vs. unclean, healthy vs. unhealthy, when are you going to learn that food is food? There's nothing unhealthy about chocolate, be it dark, milk, or white. What makes a food "clean" anyway? There are only unhealthy quantities of food, not the food itself. Back to your debate of he inane. :yawn:

    Rigger

    Do you not think that getting a wide variety of nutrients, or anti-oxidants, etc. is important for health? Maybe not necessarily for weight loss (it's debatable at this point) but for just general human health? Eating unhealthy foods (or foods high in unhealthy/undesirable ingredients, etc. if you prefer) is either going to put you into excess eating or take room in your diet away from healthier foods. White chocolate for instance is less healthy than dark chocolate because it's more heavily processed and contains less of the healthful nutrients. Therefore for good health, you'd obviously prefer dark chocolate to white chocolate. Similarly, clean foods (not processed or not heavily processed, natural nutritious ingredients or natural foods, etc.) are by and large healthier than processed foods, and therefore for good health its preferable to eat clean.

    I'm quite happy for chocolate and ice cream to take room in my diet away from "healthier" foods, because they taste so good that it's worth it :drinker:

    and yes I do pay attention to macronutrients and micronutrients but ice cream and chocolate isn't going to cause me to become malnourished...

    And most people will obviously try to make a balance between how much of their concentration in their diet is healthy foods and how much is on foods they love (though obviously in a lot of cases foods will be both healthy and loved, which are just awesomely convenient lol). And I never said it would make you malnourished to have unhealthy/less healthy foods sometimes, but there is a difference between saying (as the person I'd replied to did) that it doesn't matter what you eat, only how much calories you eat, and saying that occasionally having something that's unhealthy won't hurt you. I'm not saying food needs to be healthy 100% of the time, I merely meant that you can't ignore the healthiness of the food and concentrate entirely on calories if you want to be healthy.


    This isn't middle school. There's no extra credit once you meet your nutritional needs.

    Well, for one thing eating a diet of only Twinkies WON'T meet your nutritional needs, and for another, sure there is. In some cases there's no such thing as too much (or at least it's very difficult to achieve while still eating within your calorie goals), and getting as much nutrition from various sources is generally considered ideal. Besides, what do you consider your nutritional needs? Just your macros, or does that take into account all micros including antioxidants, phytonutrients, flavonoids, etc.? There are so many different things that play a part in health just in terms of what you eat that I really don't think it's correct to say that there's no difference between meeting your basic needs to stay alive/functioning relatively well and eating as optimally as you can. Obviously there are considerations other than just health at play in diet choices - food preferences, money, time, etc. - but if we're simply talking health wise, there IS actually extra credit for going above and beyond your basic, required to function nutritional needs.


    The definition of "clean food" I am familiar with is "natural". So, unless the food exists in nature, it's not 100% clean.

    But a food made from 100% natural ingredients could arguably be considered 'clean', in which case it would depend on the dark chocolate.

    In my world, there are varying degrees of 'clean'.

    So, I have a whole organic well fed and massaged chicken from the local co-op. I also have some salt, some lemons, and some thai chili pepper seeds. All of these things are 100% found in nature (well, except domestic chickens, really. We kind of made those from chickens we found in nature). I then put it in a bowl and mix it up and cook it. Is it as clean as it was before, or less clean? The final product (lemon and pepper cooked chicken) is not found in nature.
    Of course that's still clean. It has "5 or less" ingredients. :huh:

    gunpowder is clean then by this definition

    sulphur, saltpetre and charcoal .... all found in nature and less than 3 ingredients. Even charcoal can occur naturally after a naturally occurring forest fire.

    Does that mean I can eat gunpowder? I hear it creates an explosion of flavours on the tastebuds.....


    (although I prefer this kind:)

    Twinings_Gunpowder_tin_of_tea.jpg

    You realize you've taken this argument to the absurd right? No one's saying that anything with less than 5 ingredients all found in nature is going to food or healthy. None of the ingredients in gunpowder are food nor safe for human consumption, so OBVIOUSLY you can't eat it. The argument for 'clean' eating still requires the natural ingredients to be FOOD. That really shouldn't need to be said....
  • jofjltncb6
    jofjltncb6 Posts: 34,415 Member
    Green & Black's 85% or GTFO.
  • Gidzmo
    Gidzmo Posts: 905 Member
    If it started out as white chocolate, then no. Otherwise, yes.

    White chocolate is only white because it has no cocoa solids. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_chocolate#Classification

    Also, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate#Blending

    Dark chocolate: sugar, cocoa butter, cocoa liquor, and (sometimes) vanilla;
    Milk chocolate: sugar, cocoa butter, cocoa liquor, milk or milk powder, and vanilla;
    White chocolate: sugar, cocoa butter, milk or milk powder, and vanilla.

    I don't care much for dark chocolate, but I hear that it is good for you.