04/12/2009
A method developed by the JRC's Institute for Reference Materials and
Measurements to measure vegetable fats in milk chocolate has become the first
such method to be adopted as an international standard by the International
Organisation for Standardisation (ISO). It has been developed to enable the
enforcement of the so-called Chocolate Directive, which stipulates that
European chocolate must not contain more than 5% vegetable fats, other than
cocoa butter.
"The adoption of the JRC's testing method at international level confirms the
EU's leading role in the worldwide fight against food fraud", said Krzysztof
Maruszewski, Director of the JRC's Institute for Reference Materials and
Measurements (IRMM).
Protecting consumers' right to know
The Chocolate Directive (Directive 2000/36/EC) allows the addition of up to 5%
of vegetable fats other than cocoa butter in chocolate products. When these
fats are added to chocolate, European legislation requires that consumers be
informed by appropriate labelling of the product. The threshold of 5% is also
an essential requirement for these products to move freely within the internal
market.
Prior to the development of the JRC method, no validated methodology existed
in this field. It was therefore not straightforward to check whether
manufacturers were correctly reporting the amount of vegetable fats other than
cocoa butter in milk chocolate, as their chemical composition and physical
properties resemble those of cocoa butter very closely, thus making them
extremely difficult to quantify or even detect. This left the door open for
disputes and uncertainty as to whether or not milk chocolate products
fulfilled legal requirements.
Scientists at the JRC have been working on the problem since the entry into
force of the Chocolate Directive in 2003, in close contact with the European
Commission’s Directorate-General for Agriculture and Rural Development.
As a result, reliable analytical methods were successfully developed to detect
and quantify so-called cocoa-butter equivalents (CBEs) in milk chocolate.
International recognition of EU standard methods for chocolate
The JRC submitted its milk chocolate testing methods to the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) – the world's largest developer and
publisher of international standards - in 2007. After a 2-year independent
peer review process, the method has been adopted by ISO as standard
ISO 11053:2009.
Two other JRC methods to determine foreign fats in dark chocolate were
previously adopted as international standards in 2007. This new method for
milk chocolate took longer to develop because of the increased complexity of
the measurement, as the milk fats in milk chocolate interfere with vegetable
fats.
The international adoption of the JRC method for determining CBEs in milk
chocolate marks the satisfactory completion of the JRC's work on foreign fats
in chocolate.
Toolboxes available from JRC-IRMM for cocoa butter and CBEs calculation
To help analytical chemists implement the testing methods for chocolate
products correctly, JRC-IRMM has also developed a set of so-called toolboxes,
which can be freely downloaded from the JRC-IRMM website. The
toolbox comprises the method descriptions, electronic evaluation sheets,
and links to the appropriate cocoa butter reference materials which can be
ordered via JRC-IRMM's online catalogue.