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Why can a mostly sugar-and-milk white candy with only a trace of cacao fat fail white-chocolate label standards in both the U.S. and EU?

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Answer: It misses the fat floor

It is too pale to countPaleness is not the problem; white chocolate is supposed to be pale because it lacks nonfat cocoa solids. The independently repeated line in U.S. and EU rules is compositional: a real white-chocolate product needs a meaningful cocoa-butter floor, not just a white color. A product can be perfectly ivory-colored and still fail if it skimps on cacao fat. The odd part is that color is almost irrelevant to the legal test for the white thing.

It misses the fat floorRight. Both the U.S. and EU standards prevent a manufacturer from using a token amount of cacao fat while letting sugar and milk do almost all the work. FDA's plain-language guide sets a 20% cocoa-butter minimum, and the EU independently uses the same cocoa-butter floor for white chocolate. The exact rulebooks have other dairy and sweetener details, but the core surprise is simpler: trace cacao fat is not enough. The label is a recipe boundary, not a vibe.

It has no vanilla smellVanilla can be added, but it is not required in the way cocoa butter is. FDA guidance discusses permitted flavorings separately from the core composition, and the EU definition names cocoa butter, milk products, and sugars. A white candy could smell strongly of vanilla and still fail the standard if the cacao-fat percentage is too low. Flavor cues are easier for shoppers to notice, but regulators measure the formula.

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