Nesquik is 99.9% caffeine free. I believe Ovaltine is caffeine free.
There are small amounts, yes.
Milk chocolate has very little caffeine. Generally only dark chocolate has any appreciable amount of caffeine. Nhs guidelines suggest a 50g bar of milk choc would have approximately 25mg. The amount of actual chocolate in a Mars bar is small so caffeine will be slight. Won't bring you anywhere near the 200mg recommended daily limit. A Mars bar will have almost no caffeine. A mars bar is 58g total, milk chocolate makes up ~ 40%. So 23g of milk chocolate would be about 5mg of caffeine. To put that in perspective the average cup of coffee has 95mg of caffeine.
Yes dark chocolate does in fact contain milk. Dark Chocolate does not have any milk in it. Many products that call themselves dark chocolate put milk in them, but dark chocolate doesnt have milk. It is pure cocoa.
There shouldn't be any, but depending on the brand there may be small amounts. There is a significant amount of sugar though.
Hershey's claims 7mg per 2Tbsp.
Yes, it would. Caffeine is a component of any portion of chocolate, unless explicitly stated that the bar is a non-caffeineated bar.
Chocolate does not contain any caffeine. This is an urban legend. Caffeine is often confused with another alkaloid that has similar effects. The alkaloid is Theobromine, which is the active ingredient in chocolate and is toxic to dogs.
White chocolate contains only cocoa butter, not cocoa solids. Caffeine is only in the solids so white chocolate does not have any.
No, there is not any clear chance of fever with chocolate and milk...infact chocolate milkshake is good for health
There is an ongoing petition to convince manufacturers to produce a caffeine-free chocolate: http://www.petitiononline.com/cfreecho/petition.html
White chocolate is not really chocolate. It contains cocoa fat, and sugar, I think some type of shortening and artificial flavors. That's about it.White chocolate is made from sugar, cocoa butter, and milk. It is based on cocoa butter instead of cocoa solids, which gives it the "ivory" or "pale yellow" appearance it has. White chocolate doesn't taste like milk chocolate or dark chocolate because it does not contain caffeine.
Technically a fast is no food or drinks, except for water. Chocolate can fall under either category (food or drink). During a liquid fast, it can be drunk, most likely in the form of chocolate milk or hot chocolate.