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Bad Effects of Chocolate

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Bad effects of chocolate Chapter One — Introduction to the Problem Introduction to the Problem In today's society, chocolate is everywhere. It seems that people have developed a love-hate relationship with chocolate. According to the US Department of Commerce, the average American ate 11.7 pounds of chocolate in the year 2000. American adults ranked chocolate as the most-craved food and as their favorite flavor by a three-to-one margin. Throughout the world exists a society of chocolate lovers. While Americans consume an average of nearly 12 pounds of chocolate per year, we are not the biggest fans. The British eat 16 pounds each and the Swiss, inventors of milk chocolate, consume the most yearly at 22 pounds per person. …show more content…

Flavanoids: a grouping of micro-nutrients are 12 classes that individually total over 20,000. One plant or herb may contain hundreds of flavonoids. The more well researched flavonoid classes are flavones, flavonols, isoflavones, quercetin, anthocyanidins, and catechins. Flavonoids therefore make up the largest group of anti-oxidants. Hyperactive: highly or excessively active. Magnesium: a light, silvery-white, moderately hard metallic element that in ribbon or powder form burns with a brilliant white flame. It is used in structural alloys, pyrotechnics, flash photography, and incendiary bombs. Nutrient: any substance that provides essential nourishment for the maintenance of life. Obesity: the condition of being obese; increased body weight caused by excessive accumulation of fat. Oleic Acid: an oily liquid, C17H33COOH, occurring in animal and vegetable oils and used in making soap. Palmitic Acid: a fatty acid, C15H31COOH, occurring in many natural oils and fats and used in making soaps. Phenylethlamine: a chemical that speeds up the flow of information between nerve cells. Chapter Two — Review of Related Literature and Research Review of Related Literature and Research Despite the fact that chocolate has gotten a bad rap over the years, many studies show that, in many ways, it is a healthy food. Particularly over the past decade, scientists, professors, nutritionists and researchers have

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