To work this out you would need to decide on a price of chocolate-spread per square metre;
Let's say £1.46psm
And say that the total land surface of the Earth is 148,327,070 square kilometres:
Your answer would be roughly around:
£216,080,000,000,000.
Hopes this helps answer this bizarre question! :)
If there was chocolate spread around, it would have been rationed and not many people would have had it.
If you spread out the human brain it would cover about 4 square feet for a baby. It would cover slightly more than this for an adult.
icing sugar, glace icing, buttercream, chocolate spread, melted chocolate
That would depend on how thinly you spread it.
would be a sad world if you were denied Chocolate. Unless you have an allergy, there is no reason to avoid your chocolate!
Outdoor World would be a good place to buy a boat cover from. They have been in business for a long time and have many locations spread out on the USA east coast.
I would say Feodora dark chocolate. You can buy it in Epcot (Disney World) if that helps.
The best chocolate in the world is Hershey Chocolate. Its actually been proven: 9 out of 10 people like Hershey Chocolate then the leading brandFirstly, that will have been a survey in America. Secondly, many "chocolate officianados" would consider Belgian chocolate to be the best in the world.definatly dark
It would depend on how thick you want to spread it.
A wonderful gourmet dessert recipe would be the Chocolate Ganache cake recipe. The 2 basic ingredients in Chocolate Ganache are semi-sweet chocolate and heavy whipping cream. Bring cream to boil then pour over chocolate chunks and let stand. Cover to soften the chocolate then stir. The Ganache can be used to cover cakes or other desserts or made into truffles.
That Communism would spread all over the world.
The particles in a block of chocolate would be tightly packed together in a regular pattern, forming a solid structure. In contrast, the particles in liquid chocolate would have more freedom of movement and be less structured, flowing past each other. In the particle diagram of the block of chocolate, you would see closely packed particles arranged in a fixed position, while in the liquid chocolate diagram, the particles would be more spread out and moving freely.