DID YOU EAT YOUR HEAVY METALS.... SORRY... YOUR CHOCOLATE TODAY?
WARNING: CHOCOLATE MAY CONTAIN HEAVY METALS.
Two new pieces of chocolate news may have us reaching for candy hearts instead this Valentine’s Day.
Allergic to milk, or know someone who is? A recent study by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)  found that 59 percent of dark chocolate products in the U.S. contain trace amounts of milk. 
And, you can’t always tell that’s the case simply by reading the food label.
“This
 can be a problem, since even one small bite of a product containing 
milk can cause a dangerous reaction in some individuals,” researcher 
Binaifer Bedford, M.S., an Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education fellow, said in an FDA statement.
Dark
 chocolate has long been heralded as a lactose-free way to enjoy 
delicious chocolate flavor sans milk. But the FDA test of more than 100 
dark chocolate bars revealed that many of them contained undeclared 
milk. While it’s probably not on purpose, this contamination could 
happen when a dark chocolate product shares equipment with a milk or 
white chocolate product. 
Milk
 is a major food allergen (one of the top eight in America) and U.S. law
 requires foods that contain it to name it on the label. 
While
 dark chocolate bars labeled “dairy-free” or “allergen-free” were the 
least likely to contain milk, 2 out of 17 of these products were found 
to contain milk. Fifty five or 93 bars without any clear indication of 
the presence of milk also were found to contain milk — that’s 59 
percent. And 6 out of the 11 chocolate products labeled “traces of milk”
 contained milk at detectable levels high enough to potentially cause 
severe reactions in some individuals. 
“First
 of all, milk-allergic consumers should be aware that a high proportion 
of the dark chocolates we tested contained milk, even when the label 
failed to list milk as an ingredient,” Bedford says. 
If you’re allergic to milk, be wary of dark chocolate. 
“And
 because consumers can’t be sure that a statement about milk is 
completely accurate, they may want to contact the manufacturer to find 
out how it controls for allergens such as milk during production,” says 
Bedford. Information about the manufacturer, packer, or distributor is 
required to appear on the label of packaged foods.
In other chocolate (bad) news, some popular chocolate brands may toxic.
Consumer health watchdog As You Sow filed notices of legal action on Wednesday against Hershey’s, See’s Candies, and Mars, alleging violation of California’s Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act for failure to warn consumers of the toxic chemical cadmium in the companies’ chocolate products.
Chronic exposure to cadmium has been linked to kidney, liver, and bone damage in humans — and kids are especially susceptible.
The organization previously initiated legal action against an additional 13 chocolate manufacturers, including Godiva, Ghirardelli, Lindt, Green and Black’s, Kroger, Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, Earth Circle Organics, Moonstruck, Theo, and Vosges,
 for failure to warn of lead and/or cadmium in their chocolate products.
  Lead exposure has been a significant public health issue for decades 
and is associated with neurological impairment, such as learning 
disabilities and lower IQ, even at low levels.