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Posted (edited)

I have found droplets (of water, I assume) inside my chocolate wrappers. The wrappers hadn't been opened and didn't have holes in them, but they had been stored temporarily in a humid environment by mistake for maybe 30 minutes (they were at room temperature prior). Are the droplets likely to be condensation?

Edited by Eed
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Posted
11 minutes ago, TheVat said:

Chocolate contains water.  It will sweat if moved quickly to a warm environment.

Thank you. That makes sense then. I couldn't understand why still 3 days after the incident, there is liquid in every wrapper I've opened!

Posted
1 hour ago, iNow said:

This just reinforces my long held contention that chocolate is actually a vegetable. 

I haven't had the willpower to leave the M&Ms in the ground once I plant them, so I can't verify this.

Posted

Cacao beans are the seed of a cacao fruit.  Which makes them a nut.  Since it is part of a tree and contains the template for another tree, and a tree is a plant, one could say loosely that it's a vegetable.  Nutritional guilt problem solved!  There is the further question of whether or not chocolate rabbits count as meat.  

Posted
1 hour ago, TheVat said:

There is the further question of whether or not chocolate rabbits count as meat.  

For obligate cacaonivores, it's a question of whether they're red or dark meat. 

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