The combination of sugar and fats.
In a chocolate-covered doughnut there's about 200 calories so you shouldn't eat them that much.
Caliente is Spanish for "hot" so chocolate caliente is hot chocolate.
Usually around 200 calories or so.
Yes. About 80 cals less per 100g though so not *that* much difference.
The heat from the hot chocolate transfers to the spoon, so the spoon heats up.
Calories listed on food labels are really kilocalories, so a chocolate bar with 323 'Calories' would have the energy equivalent of 323000 calories.
You can get any type of hot drink. So that's a yes to the hot chocolate
Hot Chocolate is a liquid drink, so it would probably make a sloshing sound.
ok. what you do is this: drink half a cup of hot chocolate then eat half a doughnut. then once you start feeling guilty for eating so much sugar calories and fat you will have to run a mile. studies show that if you eat one donut and one cup of hot chocolate you will have to run almost 3 miles to burn it off. so eat and drink only hslf of it then go run a mile.
i dont think so. especailly if you get hot chocolates from cafes, they make it from milk chocolate power. Hot chocolate mixes are usually a combination of powdered milk chocolate, sugar, and powdered milk, so it would not have the same health benefits as dark chocolate. The benefit of dark chocolate is from it's high cocoa content, which most hot chocolate mixes don't have. If you were to make your own hot chocolate from mostly straight cocoa powder and little sugar or milkfat, you'd have something just as beneficial as dark chocolate per calorie.
About 6 calories each or so (if you mean M&M the chocolate candy). If you meant millimeter, there is no relationship between calories and millimeters.
It depends on the exact brand and ingredients, but one serving of most chocolate spreads is usually around 200 calories or so.