Yes. When the ingredients of chocolate are being transported, (no, America gets the ingredients from the jungle) insects land on the ingredients. Since there must be some sticky part, they get stuck and die or just are killed and thrown out onto the pile. Plus, it's a jungle, people! There must be no insects in the jungle (not). So, there are too many insects to throw out, so there are still bodies and parts in the ingredients. When they mix up all the ingredients all together, they splatter all into the whole batch. When the chocolate is sold, there are still pieces in the chocolate. Then people like you eat it, you get insect parts floating in your body! Good for you!
No, insects legs are not intentionally added to chocolate. However, there is a possibility of unintentional inclusion of insect parts due to the complexities of food production processes. Regulatory bodies set limits on acceptable levels of insect contamination in food products.
No. --Actually it does. The average chocolate bar has 8 insect legs. Disgusting but true.
Very few chocolate bars have any incsect parts in them. And any "true" vegetarain bar would not have any insects in it, either.
possible in minute quantities but no more then anything else
During summer,don"t buy chocolate with nuts.
Depends what insect it is.
Grasshopper
Chocolate bedding actually refers to foods such as chocolate cake, chocolate ice cream, chocolate candy bars, chocolate icing, chocolate muffins and more.
Head, thorax and abdomen are the parts of an insect. The order in which the parts are listed also is the order of their occurrence on the insect's body, from head to bottom. Other insect characteristics include two antennae, three sets of jointed legs, and compound eyes.
The insect that resembles a tick in appearance but is not actually a tick is a spider beetle.
Two antennae; three sets of jointed legs; three parts identifiable and recognizable as head, thorax and abdomen; hard skeleton on the outside of the body; and compound eyes are the basic parts that make an insect an insect.
humbug