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Nestle Creates New Chocolate—With No Added Sugar

Nestle will rely on leftover material from cocoa plants for sweetening as consumers look for natural and healthier fare.

Nestle Creates New Chocolate—With No Added Sugar
Scotch flavored chocolate are covered in melted chocolate in the confection kitchen at the Theo Chocolate factory in Seattle, Washington, U.S. (Photographer: David Ryder/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Nestle SA has found a way to create chocolate without adding any sugar, relying on leftover material from cocoa plants for sweetening as consumers look for natural and healthier fare.

The food company is using a patented technique to turn the white pulp that covers cocoa beans into a powder that naturally contains sugar. This fall in Japan, Nestle will start selling KitKat bars with 70% dark chocolate under the new recipe, which doesn’t include any added sugar, the Vevey, Switzerland-based firm said. Until now, the pulp has never been used as a sweetener for chocolate, and usually it’s mostly thrown out.

Nestle Creates New Chocolate—With No Added Sugar

Nestle could use the same process to make milk or white chocolate in the future, Alexander von Maillot, head of Nestle’s confectionery business, said in a phone interview.

The food and beverage industry is under pressure from consumers and governments alike to make healthier products amid rising obesity and diabetes rates. Nestle’s move may bolster its position as a leader in the industry, and it comes three years after finding a way to alter the structure of sugar to boost its sweetening power.

The world’s largest food company plans to use the pulp technique for other confectionery brands in additional countries next year.

“Using pulp makes it a more premium chocolate,” von Maillot said. “Sugar is a cheap ingredient.”

Nestle’s new 70% dark chocolate will have as much as 40% less sugar than most equivalent bars with added sugar. Nestle’s existing dark chocolate KitKats have 12.3 grams of sugar per serving.

“The sugar reduction is incidental, not a focus,” von Maillot said. “It’s more about a novel way to produce chocolate and use the best of the cocoa pod.”

(A previous version of this story corrected a misspelled name.)

To contact the reporter on this story: Corinne Gretler in Zurich at cgretler1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Eric Pfanner at epfanner1@bloomberg.net, Thomas Mulier, Marthe Fourcade

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.