white chocolate
Noun: A sweet, ivory-colored confectionery product made primarily from cocoa butter, milk solids, and sugar, often flavored with vanilla. It is characterized by its creamy texture and absence of cocoa solids (chocolate liquor), which differentiates it from milk or dark chocolate.
Noun: - The recipe calls for white chocolate, not dark chocolate. - She prefers the sweetness of white chocolate in cookies. - This dessert is garnished with shavings of white chocolate.
- "to be a white chocolate": Used informally to describe something that is pale or creamy in color.
- The paint color is a perfect white chocolate for the bedroom.
- In a metaphorical sense, it can describe something that is an imitation or a milder version of the standard.
- His version of the philosophy is the white chocolate of the original complex ideas.
- White chocolate chip (n): Small pieces of white chocolate used as an ingredient, especially in baking.
- The cookies are full of white chocolate chips.
- White chocolate bar (n): A solid, typically rectangular piece of white chocolate sold for consumption.
- I bought a white chocolate bar as a treat.
- Confectionery coating: A term often used in baking for products that may be similar to white chocolate but have different legal standards for ingredients.
- Cocoa butter confection: A more technical term emphasizing the primary fat component.
While commonly called "chocolate," in many regions (such as the United States and the European Union), the legal definition of "chocolate" requires the presence of cocoa solids. Therefore, "white chocolate" is a distinct product category. Its primary characteristic is the use of cocoa butter, which gives it a smooth mouthfeel and a subtle cocoa aroma without the brown color or bitter notes of traditional chocolate.
- a blend of cocoa butter and milk solids and sugar and vanilla; used in candy bars and baking and coatings; not technically chocolate because it contains no chocolate liquor