Rating the Most Toxic Chocolate Brands

Via Mercola

Story at-a-glance

  • Testing by Consumer Reports found one-third of chocolate products tested were high in heavy metals, and the percentage of contaminated products rose when it was dark chocolate
  • Of the 28 dark chocolate bars tested in 2022, only five had levels below 100% of the maximum allowable dose and only two had levels below 50%. In the 46 products tested in 2023, they found detectable levels in every product and 539% of the maximum allowed dose of lead in Perugina 85% premium dark chocolate
  • Chocolate is not the only source of heavy metal and it bioaccumulates, so it’s important to be aware of your overall intake. Cadmium can be absorbed from the soil and is found in the highest levels in grains and vegetables
  • Exposure to lead and cadmium poses the highest risk to the brains and neurological systems of infants and children. Since cadmium crosses the placental barrier, exposure during pregnancy can have serious health consequences, including increased mortality from heart and kidney disease and cancer
  • Dark chocolate has many health benefits, but your source should be chosen wisely to avoid exposure to heavy metals. Consider incorporating strategies for heavy metal detox to protect your mitochondrial function

Testing in 2023 by Consumer Reports1 found one-third of the chocolate products they tested were high in heavy metals. These are naturally occurring elements in the environment that are five times denser than water and have multiple applications in industry, agriculture, medicine and technology.2

However, wide usage has raised concerns over the health effects heavy metals have on humans and the environment. Lead, chromium, cadmium, arsenic, and mercury are among the metals identified as having public health significance since they are known to trigger organ damage even at low levels of exposure. These same heavy metals are also “known” or “probable” human carcinogens.

According to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA),3 heavy metals are toxic metals that are known to negatively affect human health. They can bioaccumulate to become a significant health hazard. Cadmium is an extremely toxic metal used in industrial workplaces. Several deaths have been attributed to acute exposure in welders who unsuspectingly used cadmium-containing alloys.

However, lead is one of the most prevalent overexposures in occupational health as it’s found in construction work, radiator repair shops, firing ranges and most smelter operations to name a few. Other heavy metals identified as toxic include arsenic, beryllium, hexavalent chromium and mercury.4

Several Types of Chocolate High in Lead and Cadmium

Consumer Reports5 tested a variety of chocolate candies and powders, including dark chocolate, milk chocolate, chocolate chips, cocoa powder and brownie, cake and hot chocolate mixes. This was a follow-up from testing in 2022 on dark chocolate,6 in which they tested 28 bars from different companies for lead and cadmium.

In the 2022 and 2023 tests, researchers used California’s maximum allowable dose level for heavy metal tested since as Consumer Reports noted there are no federal limits for lead or cadmium in food and the researchers believed that California’s standards are currently the most protective available.7 The California standards limit consumption to 0.5 micrograms per day of lead and 4.1 micrograms per day of cadmium.

Consumer Reports notes that the tests were not an assessment of whether a particular chocolate exceeded California’s legal standards, but the California standards were used to indicate products that had a comparatively higher level of heavy metals.

Of the 28 dark chocolate bars tested in 2022 for lead and cadmium, only five had levels that were below 100% of the maximum allowable dose level for lead and cadmium assuming a 1-ounce serving size.8 There were eight that were high in cadmium, 10 that were high in lead and five that were high and lead and cadmium.

There are two main components in chocolate from the cacao bean. These are cocoa solids and cocoa butter, which together are called cacao or cocoa. Dark chocolate tends to be higher in heavy metal contamination than milk chocolate because it has a higher cacao content, which is more likely to be contaminated with cadmium and lead.

In 2023, Consumer Reports sought to determine whether other cacao-containing foods had the same risk. They tested 48 different chocolate products across seven categories and added several dark chocolate bars to confirm their previous results. They used products from name brands like Nestle, Ghirardelli, and Hershey’s and bought them from national retailers like Whole Foods, Target, Costco and Trader Joe’s.9

As in the previous tests, the dark chocolate had higher levels of heavy metal than the milk chocolate. However, James E Rogers, Ph.D., director and acting head of product safety testing also noted that every product had detectable amounts of lead and cadmium and 16 had concerning levels of at least one metal, and in some cases, more than twice the limit.

The results of the testing revealed high levels of lead and cadmium in several of the dark chocolate bars, including 539% of the maximum allowed dose of lead in Perugina Extra Dark Chocolate Premium 85%. None of the milk chocolate bars were over 100% of the levels for lead or cadmium and only two of the dark chocolate chips were over 100% of the allowed levels for lead.10

Heavy Metal Can Accumulate From Several Sources

As Consumer Reports noted,11 high levels of cadmium get into the chocolate as the plant absorbs it from the soil. Lead also may be deposited on the beans after harvest as they dry outdoors. However, chocolate is not the only food or beverage that contains heavy metals and since the metals can bioaccumulate, it’s important to be aware of your overall intake.

A 2021 study12 published in Scientific Reports also evaluated the presence of cadmium and lead in a selected number of fruits and vegetables. The foods evaluated were fresh, frozen, dried or processed. The study evaluated 370 samples of a variety including apples, pears, grapes, strawberries, carrots and tomatoes.

The tests show that the concentration of cadmium and lead was present in all types of fruits and vegetables, but the amount varied substantially. The highest concentrations were found in dried products, and several samples exceeded the maximum permissible concentrations. Another 2022 analysis13 looked at major food groups for the presence of cadmium, lead, mercury and nickel.

The data showed that cereals and vegetables were the major contributors of cadmium, nickel and mercury while water and other beverages were a major source of lead. By contrast, eggs, milk and dairy products, fats and oils had the lowest number of heavy metals tested. Despite the common association between mercury and fish, this analysis showed fish was not an important source of mercury.

This was not the case in a 2016 evaluation by the Environmental Working Group (EWG). The EWG14 reported the results of testing from 254 women who reportedly ate at least two meals of some type of fish every week. They measured mercury in the women’s hair to establish how much was absorbed from the fish and found 30% of the participants had too much exposure according to Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for pregnant women.

However, these are not the only foods that increase your exposure to heavy metals. Eat This, Not That!15 reported that a 2021 study revealed that popular baby food brands had well above the recommended limits for arsenic, lead, cadmium and mercury.

Fruit juice can also exceed levels of lead, and rice is a well-known source of inorganic arsenic. Just as the cocoa bean can absorb cadmium from the soil, so can green leafy vegetables and root vegetables like carrots and potatoes.

Exposure in Childhood Can Damage the Nervous System

Exposure to cadmium and lead in infants and children pose a higher risk to their brains and neurological system than in adults. Unfortunately, these heavy metals can make their way into the food supply as contaminants. For example, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned parents October 30, 2023, that after testing food pouches by Wanabana, “extremely high” concentrations of lead were found that could lead to “acute toxicity.”16

Testing was done after four children in North Carolina tested for high lead levels that were linked to the puree. A 2019 study17 evaluated children’s dietary exposure to lead and cadmium using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Study. The estimated mean lead exposure range was far higher than the California standard, ranging from 1 to 3.4 micrograms per day.

Most of the exposure came from grains, fruit, dairy and mixtures, such as lasagna, soups, hamburgers and pizza. The estimated mean cadmium exposure was estimated at 0.38 to 0.44 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day. Lead exposure is known18 to slow a child’s growth and development and impair learning, hearing and speech.

Damage to the brain and nervous system can also trigger behavior problems and cause lower IQ with a decreased ability to pay attention and poor performance in school. Exposure at younger ages is more harmful because children’s bodies and brains are still developing and growing.

Data show19 that exposure to cadmium can have an adverse effect on the kidneys, heart, liver and nervous system. Exposure in utero and early life can result in serious health issues related to developmental disabilities since cadmium crosses the placental barrier. Exposure during pregnancy can have serious health consequences, including an increased risk of mortality related to cancer, heart disease, kidney disease and neurological problems.

In a 2012 study20 by Harvard researchers, they found children who had the highest levels of cadmium were 3.21 times more likely to have learning disabilities and three times more likely to participate in special education than those with the lowest levels.

“One of the important points of the study is that we didn’t study a population of kids who had very high exposures. We studied a population representative of the U.S. That we found any [effect] suggests this is occurring at relatively low levels,” said Robert Wright, an associate professor of pediatrics and environmental health at Harvard.21

Use Dark Chocolate Judiciously

The health benefits of eating dark chocolate are well-established. It is the cacao content that makes a difference in terms of benefit as it contains large amounts of polyphenols, including epicatechin, resveratrol, phenylethylamine and theobromine. However, as the Consumer Reports studies demonstrated, chocolate with higher levels of cacao also has higher levels of cadmium and lead.

Human data from Loma Linda University, presented at the Experimental Biology 2018 annual meeting in San Diego, revealed chocolate with high levels of cacao helps improve stress levels, inflammation, mood, memory and immune function. The caveat? It must contain at least 70% cacao and be sweetened with organic cane sugar. According to Loma Linda University:22

“While it is well-known that cacao is a major source of flavonoids, this is the first time the effect has been studied in human subjects to determine how it can support cognitive, endocrine and cardiovascular health … These studies show us that the higher the concentration of cacao, the more positive the impact on cognition, memory, mood, immunity and other beneficial effects.”

Several studies have also confirmed cacao can benefit your heart, blood vessels, brain and nervous system, and help combat diabetes and other conditions rooted in inflammation. As noted in a paper23 published in the journal Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity:

“Cocoa contains about 380 known chemicals, 10 of which are psychoactive compounds … Cocoa has more phenolics and higher antioxidant capacity than green tea, black tea, or red wine … The phenolics from cocoa may thus protect against diseases in which oxidative stress is implicated as a causal or contributing factor, such as cancer.

They also have antiproliferative, antimutagenic, and chemoprotective effects, in addition to their anticariogenic effects.”

There is significant evidence that dark chocolate has health benefits, but it’s important to realize that these benefits are not transferred to milk chocolate and it’s important to judiciously choose your source of dark chocolate.

According to the 2022 Consumer Reports study,24 the safer choices of dark chocolate include Ghirardelli’s Intense Dark Chocolate 86% cacao and Mast Organic Dark Chocolate 80% cacao. These two bars were the only ones where the levels of lead and cadmium were less than 50% of the California maximum allowable dose level.

Heavy Metal Detoxification

As Dr. Frank Shallenberger, author of “Bursting With Energy: The Breakthrough Method to Renew Youthful Energy and Restore Health,” and a natural medicine physician for nearly five decades, discussed in our 2022 interview,25 a decrease in mitochondrial function is a hallmark of the aging process and many chronic diseases.

Even asymptomatic people in their 30s can have a significant decline in mitochondrial function, which is indicative of premature aging and future health problems.

Heavy metal toxicity can take a toll on your mitochondrial function, and to address this, Shallenberger typically combines chelation therapy with colonics and sauna use. While many people use far-infrared saunas, I prefer near-infrared saunas for several reasons.

For starters, near-infrared penetrates much deeper into your tissues, releasing toxins. Importantly, 95% of melatonin is also produced in your mitochondria in response to near-infrared light. Melatonin is a very powerful antioxidant that helps mop up ROS in the mitochondria. Melatonin also helps increase glutathione, which is a major detoxification agent. For tips on how to create an EMF-free sauna, listen to our interview, as we go into more detail than what I’ve summarized here.

As an Amazon Associate I Earn from Qualifying Purchases
-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
28 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
November 16, 2023 7:25 am

Interesting.
Disappointing in that only 2 brand types were advised.

Bob
Bob
November 16, 2023 7:58 am

The “Maximum Allowable” values have changed over time, not the chocolate. This is more pure bullshit from Nanny State agencies and hand wringing assholes. A person needs to consider how much actual chocolate you consume in a year verses the amount of potatoes, or rice, or bread. If you are subsisting on chocolate you have a far greater problem than what ever heavy metals are in the stuff.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
November 16, 2023 8:25 am

So where is the list of test results? Kinda makes this article useless.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  ILuvCO2
November 16, 2023 9:08 am

I just posted links to heavy metal toxicity symptoms and how they compare to covid symptoms, it was disappeared.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
November 16, 2023 9:09 am
Bob
Bob
  ILuvCO2
November 16, 2023 9:10 am

Article is useless with or without test results.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Bob
November 16, 2023 11:46 am

Me “Well bob? A lot of awkward situations can be avoided by pretending to be on the phone.”

Bob “How does that work!”

Me [pretending to take a call] “Excuse me, I gotta take this.”

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  ILuvCO2
November 16, 2023 10:07 am

I’ve mentioned several times how somehow TBP doesn’t include the footnotes to the Mercola articles, even though other sites that carry his work have no trouble doing so … not sure how this happens here but not anywhere else.

Here is the link to the Consumer Reports article …

https://www.consumerreports.org/health/food-safety/lead-and-cadmium-in-dark-chocolate-a8480295550/

… here is the list from As You Sow … the group that originally brought suit against candy manufacturers over this problem …

https://www.asyousow.org/environmental-health/toxic-enforcement/toxic-chocolate

Bon Appétit …

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Anthony Aaron
November 16, 2023 11:59 am

thank you sir.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  ILuvCO2
November 16, 2023 10:56 am

So, according to this article, all food is deadly.

Lucretius
Lucretius
  ILuvCO2
November 16, 2023 12:51 pm

The article states that the testing was performed by Consumer Reports.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 16, 2023 9:06 am

Good thing no one will ever make the connection of mass poisoning events and pandemics.
D’oh!

anon a moos
anon a moos
November 16, 2023 9:17 am

mercury are among the metals identified as having public health significance since they are known to trigger organ damage even at low levels of exposure.

But putting mercury into vaccines is perfectly ok. psyience

Looks to me like eating any foods is deadly. We should rethink what we eat, maybe bugs would be better because fruits, veggies, chocolates, will all kill us.

If you want to be healthy, quit eating processed foods for a start. Either grow your own or buy foods from a farmer you know, or local farmers market. But as usual, another article that promotes fear with ‘studies show’ and if you stick a garden hose up ur arse for a flush, then you’ll be much safer and live decades longer. Maybe even forever, studies show.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  anon a moos
November 16, 2023 12:08 pm

You sound like a fanatic. Moderation, my dear.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 16, 2023 9:31 am

Questions:
●What happens when cadmium toxicity reaches a critical threshold over time?
●What happens with cadmium toxicity if it happens very quickly?

●Does it trigger a physical detox phase?

●What does cadmium toxicity do in a biome that already carries other heavy metal burdens?
●Is the effect symbiotic in any way?
●What if the subject is placed under extended mental duress, what observable effects would there be?
●What effects would diet have?

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Anonymous
November 16, 2023 7:18 pm

It not might not be so healthy for you to ask such questions, comrade.

m
m
November 16, 2023 10:01 am

Give us our daily fear porn… and lead us not into relaxation.

todd
todd
November 16, 2023 10:02 am

they can have my chocolate when they pry it from my cold dead hands…

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 16, 2023 11:42 am

Do you have a heavy metals deficiency?
Try vaping.

Vaping pens:

The authors detected boron (mean emission rate, ng/h: 964), cadmium (0.480), chromium (28.1), lanthanum (3.21), lead (96.2), nickel (131), potassium (7,765), silver (20.9), titanium (50.2), and zinc (1,142), but did not identify aluminum, copper, iron, or tin. 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK507184/

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Anonymous
November 16, 2023 7:19 pm

Vaping sucks.

overthecliff
overthecliff
November 16, 2023 11:56 am

Studies and university research?? Check who is financing the university and scientist. Remember that 97% of climate scientists agree with the people who give them grants.

BL
BL
November 16, 2023 11:59 am

Hershey’s adds butric acid to their chocolate, need I say more? If you go down the rabbit hole deep enough it’s the phosphoric acid in cola drinks that did most of the damage to humans, not cholesterol in the burgers.

I only buy German or Belgian chocolate.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  BL
November 16, 2023 12:03 pm

Ooohhh! German or Belgian chocolate, huh? Fancy. Can’t wait for my Christmas gift from you.

BL
BL
  Abigail Adams
November 16, 2023 12:06 pm

Aldis is silly with the stuff at cheap prices, super high quality.

PSBindy
PSBindy
November 16, 2023 3:36 pm

We all gotta go sometime, somehow.

Death by chocolate seems to be one of the better ways.

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  PSBindy
November 16, 2023 7:21 pm

Certainly better than death by Ugga Bugga or via Arkanc1de.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 16, 2023 6:37 pm

Chocolate consumption is highest in fall/winter…during flu season, with flu symptoms that are the same as cadmium poisoning symptoms.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 17, 2023 5:56 am

a far bigger health concern with chocolate than heavy metals (Seriously, how many hundreds of pounds of chocolate does one have to eat to get even a trace amount of heavy metals?) is the almost universal use of powdered milk in the production of all but the very dark chocolates. powdered milk is a wonderful material from a manufacturer’s point of view- it’s cheap, lasts forever on the shelf, has almost completely neutral taste, mixes well with almost anything, and can be used to precisely control the consistency, thickness, hardness, melting characteristics, etc, basically a lot of mechanical properties, of whatever it is you wanna make. you want milk chocolate that’s nice and soft? you want it more chewy? you want it more brittle? and so on and so forth. Powdered milk makes this easy and controllable, and so everyone uses it. even in expensive swiss chocolates (not just the lindts and toblerones that get exported, but stuff like spruengli’s domestic-swiss-market stuff!) is made with milk powder. the only commercially produced milk chocolate ive ever seen that is made using evaporated milk instead of powder, is the swiss cailler, which i have also never seen for sale _outside_ of switzerland.

aaaand the problem with milk powder is that the process of turning liquid milk into dry powder necessarily involves bringing as much of the milk into contact with air as much as possible – accomplished industrially by spraying a fine mist of milk down into basically a big box with a gentle upward counterflow of air so that it’s powder byt he time it settles on the bottom – and all the fats and cholsterols in the milk get oxidized , incidentally, by the air. One supposes one could do it with vacuum or inert gases or something but such processes would be far more expensive.

youll find milk powder in almost any manufactured food product, and it’s up there right behind hydrogenated fats as a huge health problem. when studies starting 40-50 years ago made connections between fat and cholesterol and cardio problems, they failed to make the connection that those problems were linked to oxidized cholesterols and fets, and hydrogenated fats.