If it has a form of cacao seeds then by definition it's chocolate.
Its not privilege, mate. I didnt grow up privileged. But that doesnt mean I cant have standards. If you consider Hersheys to be chocolate then you shouldnt be engaging with other human beings in conversations about chocolate.https://youtu.be/J44svaQc5WY?si=rAn20Ib-s85DjGrl
https://youtu.be/J44svaQc5WY?si=rAn20Ib-s85DjGrl
Maybe this will explain better. This is pushing and then the other way would be pulling. I guess you could just bite it tooYeah...this didn't help. I'm still confused.
https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/a/forum/a/a5976f26.jpg
Thats a shit definition. Luckily, some countries dont use it.
That's the only definition.
Its literally not though, which is why Hersheys isnt considered chocolate in the UK and has to be sold as chocolate flavoured candy bars.
chocolate
noun
choc o late ch-k(-)lt ch-
Synonyms of chocolate
1
: a beverage made by mixing chocolate with water or milk
The boy stirred the chocolate before drinking it.
2
: a food prepared from ground roasted cacao beans
Useless first definition but you would have bitched if I took it out.
That doesnt support your argument. You said its the only definition. Finding an instance of it being used as a definition doesnt in any way make you right.
It is literally the only definition. There is no other definition saying that chocolate isn't made from cacao.There is also the legal definition. If you'd watched the video in #54, you'd have seen that each country will generally have a law defining the minimum cacao content necessary for something to legally be called "chocolate". Something that is only 5% cacao cannot legally be called chocolate despite technically being prepared from ground roasted cacao beans.
It is literally the only definition. There is no other definition saying that chocolate isn't made from cacao.
There is also the legal definition. If you'd watched the video in #54, you'd have seen that each country will generally have a law defining the minimum cacao content necessary for something to legally be called "chocolate". Something that is only 5% cacao cannot legally be called chocolate despite technically being prepared from ground roasted cacao beans.
Nobody is suggesting that it isnt made from cacao. However, not all things made from cacao are necessarily considered chocolate. As has been stated repeatedly, your definition literally isnt the only definition.
Legal definitions are not the same as dictionary definitions either.