Cocoa Is Bigger Than You Think
Ask most people what cocoa is used for, and they’ll say chocolate. Ask a commodity trader, a cosmetic chemist, or a pharmaceutical buyer, and you’ll get a very different answer.
Cocoa, derived from the Theobroma cacao tree, whose name literally means “food of the gods” is one of the most chemically rich and commercially versatile agricultural products in existence. Every single part of the cocoa plant and its bean has a use: the fat, the solids, the shell, the pod, the pulp, and even the husks. Nothing is wasted.
For buyers and manufacturers, this matters enormously. Understanding the full range of cocoa applications is not just academic knowledge, it’s competitive intelligence. It tells you which cocoa by-products to source, which grades to specify, and how to extract maximum commercial value from every kilogram you purchase.
Cocoa Demand by Industry Sector
Share of total global cocoa usage by industry (2024)
Cocoa Derivative Market Growth
Annual market size projections for key cocoa derivatives (USD Billion)
The Anatomy of Cocoa
Before we get into the 25+ uses, it’s important to understand what parts of the cocoa plant we’re talking about. Each part has its own set of commercial applications, and buyers need to know which specific product they need for their particular application.
Food & Baking Applications
The largest and most well-known category, but there’s more to it than just chocolate bars
Food and confectionery accounts for roughly 62% of all global cocoa consumption. But within that broad category, the specific applications go far beyond the standard milk chocolate bar. Here is a breakdown of how cocoa is used across the food industry.
Dark, Milk & White Chocolate
Cocoa mass and cocoa butter are the core ingredients in all chocolate formulations. Dark chocolate uses the highest proportion of cocoa mass; white chocolate uses pure cocoa butter with no solids.
Food & ConfectioneryBaked Goods & Pastry
Cocoa powder is used extensively in cakes, brownies, cookies, muffins, and pastry products. Dutch-process cocoa gives a darker colour and less acidic flavour preferred in professional baking.
BakingConfectionery Coatings & Fillings
Compound chocolate (using cocoa powder and vegetable fat) and couverture (real cocoa butter) are used to coat and fill truffles, pralines, bars, wafers, and confectionery products globally.
ConfectioneryIce Cream & Frozen Desserts
Cocoa powder and cocoa mass are used in chocolate ice cream, gelato, and frozen desserts. Cocoa butter is used in chocolate coatings (magic shell) that solidify upon contact with cold ice cream.
Dairy & FrozenSpreads & Pastes
Cocoa is a foundational ingredient in hazelnut-cocoa spreads, nut butters with cocoa, and chocolate spreads consumed globally. These products are among the highest-volume cocoa powder end-users.
SpreadsCocoa Nibs: Superfood Ingredient
Roasted and crushed cocoa nibs are used as a topping in granola, acai bowls, yoghurt, trail mix, and health bars. Rich in magnesium, iron, and flavanols, they command a significant premium in the health food market.
Health FoodsSavoury Cooking & Mole Sauces
In Mexican and Central American cuisine, cocoa mass and cocoa powder are used in mole sauces, rich, complex savoury preparations used with chicken, pork, and vegetables. A growing gourmet trend globally.
Culinary / GourmetInfant Formula & Baby Nutrition
Cocoa butter, due to its precise melting profile and digestibility, is used as a fat source in premium infant formula and specialised baby nutrition products requiring specific lipid structures.
NutritionFunctional & Protein Foods
Cocoa powder is a primary ingredient in chocolate-flavoured protein powders, meal replacement shakes, nutrition bars, and sports nutrition products, one of the fastest growing segments in the food industry.
Sports NutritionCocoa Usage in Food: Volume Share by Sub-Category
Estimated percentage of cocoa consumed across food sub-categories globally
Beverage Applications
From ancient ceremonial drinks to modern functional beverages, cocoa has been drunk for over 3,000 years
Before cocoa was ever turned into solid chocolate, it was consumed as a drink. The ancient Mesoamerican civilisations drank a bitter, spiced cocoa beverage as far back as 1900 BCE. Today, the beverage applications of cocoa have evolved into a multi-billion dollar global segment.
Hot Chocolate & Cocoa Drinks
Cocoa powder is the base of hot chocolate mixes, instant cocoa drinks, and drinking chocolate products consumed globally, from children’s beverages to artisan drinking chocolate made with high-percentage cocoa mass.
BeveragesCocoa Husk Tea
The husks/shells of cocoa beans are brewed into a naturally caffeinated herbal tea. Common in West Africa and gaining global popularity as a sustainable, low-waste cocoa by-product beverage. Contains theobromine, a mild stimulant.
Herbal TeaCocoa Pulp Juice & Fermented Drinks
The sweet white pulp surrounding cocoa beans (sweatings) is pressed into a tropical juice with a flavour like lychee and citrus. It is also fermented into cocoa wine and spirits. A fast-growing category in specialty beverages.
Specialty DrinksFunctional & Wellness Drinks
Cocoa extract rich in flavanols (especially epicatechin) is added to functional health drinks targeting cardiovascular health, cognitive performance, and athletic recovery. One of the fastest-growing categories in nutraceutical beverages.
NutraceuticalCosmetics & Personal Care Applications
Cocoa is one of the most treasured ingredients in the beauty industry, loved for its skin benefits and sensory appeal
The global cosmetic cocoa butter market alone is valued at over USD 1.4 billion and growing at 5.2% annually. But cocoa’s contribution to beauty and personal care goes far beyond just the butter. Cocoa powder, cocoa extract, and even cocoa shell particles are finding their way into sophisticated formulations.
Body Butters & Moisturisers
Cocoa butter is the primary base for body butter products. Its high fat content, stable emollient properties, and natural texture make it the preferred ingredient in premium lotions, creams, and body moisturisers for dry and sensitive skin.
SkincareLip Balms, Lipsticks & Lip Gloss
Cocoa butter’s precise melting point and skin-softening properties make it essential in lip care. It’s used as a base in lip balms, provides structure to lipstick formulations, and gives lip gloss its smooth, rich consistency.
Lip CareStretch Mark & Scar Creams
Cocoa butter is one of the most widely marketed ingredients for stretch mark prevention and reduction. Its deep moisturising action improves skin elasticity and is recommended during pregnancy and postpartum recovery.
Body CareSoap & Cleansers
Cocoa butter is used in cold-process and hot-process soap making to add hardness, a creamy lather, and moisturising properties. It is highly prized in artisan and luxury soap formulations globally.
Soap MakingMassage Bars & Oils
Solid massage bars, used extensively in spa and wellness products, are made primarily from cocoa butter. It melts from the warmth of the hands, leaving a smooth, non-greasy emollient layer on the skin.
WellnessAnti-Ageing & Facial Formulations
Cocoa polyphenols (particularly epicatechin and catechin) are powerful antioxidants used in premium anti-ageing serums, facial creams, and eye treatments. These bioactives protect skin cells from oxidative stress and improve elasticity.
Anti-AgeingHair Care Products
Cocoa butter is used in deep conditioning hair masks, leave-in treatments, and heat protection products. It coats and smooths the hair cuticle, reducing frizz and improving shine. Particularly effective for coarse and textured hair types.
Hair CareCocoa in Cosmetics: Application Breakdown
Estimated share of cocoa butter used across personal care & cosmetic categories
Pharmaceutical & Nutraceutical Applications
Cocoa’s bioactive compounds make it one of the most studied natural ingredients in medicine and health science
Cocoa is not just a flavour ingredient — it is a pharmacologically significant natural product. The cocoa bean contains over 300 naturally occurring chemical compounds, including alkaloids, polyphenols, flavanols, and methylxanthines. This has made it a subject of intense scientific study and commercial pharmaceutical interest.
Suppository Base
Cocoa butter has been the gold standard suppository base in pharmaceuticals for over 150 years. Its sharp, precise melting point (just below body temperature at 34–35°C) makes it ideal for rectal and vaginal suppositories. When inserted, it melts reliably to release active pharmaceutical ingredients.
PharmaceuticalTablet Coating & Excipient
Cocoa butter is used as an excipient (inactive ingredient) in pharmaceutical tablet manufacturing. It provides a smooth coating, helps mask bitter active ingredients, and improves swallowability of tablets and capsules.
Drug DeliveryCardiovascular Health Supplements
Cocoa flavanols — particularly epicatechin — have been clinically shown to improve blood vessel function, lower blood pressure, and reduce LDL oxidation. Standardised cocoa flavanol extracts are now marketed as cardiovascular supplements, with clinical backing from major nutrition research institutions.
NutraceuticalCognitive & Mood Supplements
Cocoa contains theobromine (a gentle stimulant), phenylethylamine (associated with mood elevation), and anandamide (the “bliss molecule”). These compounds are extracted and used in nootropic and mood-support supplements. Clinical research also links cocoa flavanol consumption with improved cognitive performance and memory.
Nootropics🔬 Key Bioactive Compounds in Cocoa and Their Pharmaceutical Significance
| Compound | Type | Health Benefit | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Epicatechin | Flavanol | Cardiovascular, anti-inflammatory, blood flow | Heart health supplements |
| Theobromine | Methylxanthine | Mild stimulant, bronchodilator, diuretic | Respiratory, energy products |
| Catechin | Flavanol | Antioxidant, anti-cancer research | Antioxidant supplements |
| Anandamide | Endocannabinoid | Mood elevation, bliss response | Mood/wellness products |
| Phenylethylamine | Alkaloid | Mood, focus, energy | Nootropics, mental focus |
| Magnesium | Mineral | Muscle, nerve, bone function | Mineral supplementation |
| Polyphenols (total) | Polyphenol complex | Antioxidant, anti-ageing, immune support | Broad wellness, cosmetics |
Agricultural & Environmental Applications
Cocoa by-products are transforming sustainable farming and horticulture practices
This is one of the most underrated applications of cocoa, and it’s increasingly important in a world focused on sustainable agriculture and circular economies. Cocoa shells, pods, and husks — once considered waste — are now commercially valuable inputs for farming, horticulture, and soil science.
Garden Mulch & Soil Amendment
Cocoa shells are one of the most popular premium garden mulches available. They have a pleasant chocolatey aroma when fresh, suppress weeds effectively, retain soil moisture, and slowly decompose to enrich soil with organic matter and potassium. Widely sold in garden centres across Europe and North America.
HorticultureOrganic Fertiliser & Compost
Cocoa pod husks are rich in potassium (K), magnesium, phosphorus, and nitrogen. When composted or applied directly, they improve soil fertility and structure. Multiple agricultural studies confirm their effectiveness as a partial replacement for synthetic fertilisers in tropical farming systems.
AgricultureAnimal Feed
Cocoa pod husks and defatted cocoa cake (the residue after butter extraction) are used as feed for cattle, goats, and other livestock. High in fibre and with moderate protein content, they serve as a cost-effective feed supplement in cocoa-growing regions — reducing feed costs while eliminating agricultural waste.
Animal FeedIndustrial & Speciality Applications
Cocoa derivatives are quietly present in industries most people would never expect
Beyond food, beauty, and health, cocoa derivatives have found their way into some surprising industrial and speciality applications. These are smaller volume uses, but they represent important niche markets for traders and processors.
Candles & Specialty Waxes
Cocoa butter, due to its natural stability and pleasant aroma, is used in artisan candle-making and as a blending component in specialty natural waxes. It is favoured in the premium scented candle market as a base that carries fragrance oils effectively while burning cleanly.
SpecialtyBiofuel & Biomass Energy
Cocoa pod husks have significant potential as a biomass fuel. Research in West Africa and Brazil has demonstrated that cocoa pod husk combustion and pyrolysis can generate usable biochar and bioenergy, offering cocoa-producing communities a renewable energy source from what was previously agricultural waste.
EnergyThe Complete Cocoa Application Map
Below is a consolidated view of all 29 documented cocoa applications across every industry, mapped by cocoa derivative used and commercial maturity.
Cocoa Applications: Distribution Across Industries
Number of documented commercial applications per industry sector
| # | Application | Primary Derivative Used | Sector | Commercial Maturity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chocolate (dark, milk, white) | Cocoa mass, Cocoa butter | Food | ★★★ Established |
| 2 | Baked goods & pastry | Cocoa powder | Food | ★★★ Established |
| 3 | Confectionery coatings & fillings | Cocoa butter, cocoa mass | Food | ★★★ Established |
| 4 | Ice cream & frozen desserts | Cocoa powder, cocoa butter | Food | ★★★ Established |
| 5 | Spreads & pastes | Cocoa powder | Food | ★★★ Established |
| 6 | Cocoa nibs — superfood | Cocoa nibs | Food / Health | ★★☆ Growing |
| 7 | Savoury cooking & mole | Cocoa mass, cocoa powder | Culinary | ★★☆ Growing |
| 8 | Infant formula | Cocoa butter | Food / Nutrition | ★★☆ Growing |
| 9 | Protein bars & sports nutrition | Cocoa powder | Food / Sports | ★★★ Established |
| 10 | Hot chocolate & cocoa drinks | Cocoa powder | Beverage | ★★★ Established |
| 11 | Cocoa husk tea | Cocoa husks | Beverage | ★★☆ Emerging |
| 12 | Cocoa pulp juice & wine | Cocoa pulp | Beverage | ★☆☆ Emerging |
| 13 | Functional wellness drinks | Cocoa extract / flavanols | Beverage / Nutri | ★★☆ Growing |
| 14 | Body butters & moisturisers | Cocoa butter | Cosmetics | ★★★ Established |
| 15 | Lip balms, lipsticks, gloss | Cocoa butter | Cosmetics | ★★★ Established |
| 16 | Stretch mark & scar creams | Cocoa butter | Cosmetics | ★★★ Established |
| 17 | Soap & cleansers | Cocoa butter | Cosmetics | ★★★ Established |
| 18 | Massage bars & oils | Cocoa butter | Cosmetics / Wellness | ★★★ Established |
| 19 | Anti-ageing & facial serums | Cocoa polyphenols | Cosmetics | ★★☆ Growing |
| 20 | Hair care products | Cocoa butter | Cosmetics | ★★☆ Growing |
| 21 | Pharmaceutical suppositories | Cocoa butter | Pharma | ★★★ Established |
| 22 | Tablet coating & excipients | Cocoa butter | Pharma | ★★★ Established |
| 23 | Cardiovascular supplements | Cocoa flavanol extract | Nutraceutical | ★★☆ Growing |
| 24 | Cognitive / mood supplements | Cocoa extract, theobromine | Nutraceutical | ★★☆ Growing |
| 25 | Garden mulch | Cocoa shells / husks | Agriculture | ★★★ Established |
| 26 | Organic fertiliser & compost | Cocoa pod husks | Agriculture | ★★☆ Growing |
| 27 | Animal feed | Cocoa cake, husks | Agriculture | ★★☆ Growing |
| 28 | Candles & specialty waxes | Cocoa butter | Industrial | ★★☆ Niche |
| 29 | Biofuel & biomass energy | Cocoa pod husks | Industrial | ★☆☆ Emerging |
Sourcing the Right Cocoa Product for Your Application
Now that you understand the full scope of cocoa’s applications, the next question is practical: which specific cocoa derivative do you need, and where do you source it? Here is a clear cross-reference guide for buyers.
| If You Make… | You Need… | Grade Required | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chocolate / confectionery | Cocoa butter + cocoa mass/powder | Food grade | $17,000/MT (butter) |
| Skincare / body butters | Cocoa butter (deodorized or natural) | Cosmetic grade | $11,000–13,500/MT |
| Lip balms / lipstick | Cocoa butter (refined) | Cosmetic grade | $11,000–13,500/MT |
| Protein bars / health foods | Cocoa powder + cocoa nibs | Food grade | $2,500–4,500/MT (powder) |
| Pharmaceutical suppositories | Cocoa butter (pharma grade) | Pharma grade | $15,000–18,000/MT |
| Soap / artisan cosmetics | Cocoa butter (raw/natural) | Cosmetic grade | $11,000–14,000/MT |
| Functional supplements | Cocoa flavanol extract | Standardised extract | Varies (premium) |
| Herbal teas / beverages | Cocoa husks / shells | Food-safe | $300–800/MT |
| Garden mulch / horticulture | Cocoa shells | Agricultural grade | $200–600/MT |
| Animal feed | Cocoa cake / husk | Feed grade | $150–400/MT |
Need Cocoa Products for Your Business?
Talk to Radad International. We supply food-grade and cosmetic-grade cocoa butter, cocoa powder, nibs, and husks to manufacturers and traders across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and beyond.
Minimum order: 1 MT. Full documentation provided. Typical response: 24 hours.
Uses of Cocoa: FAQs for Buyers and Manufacturers
Cocoa has a remarkably wide range of uses beyond chocolate. In cosmetics and personal care, cocoa butter is one of the most widely used ingredients in the world — found in body lotions, lip balms, soap, hair care, and anti-ageing creams. In pharmaceuticals, cocoa butter has been the gold standard base for suppositories for over 150 years and is used as an excipient in tablet manufacturing.
In health and nutrition, cocoa flavanol extracts are increasingly used in cardiovascular and cognitive health supplements, while cocoa powder goes into protein bars, meal replacement shakes, and functional beverages. In agriculture, cocoa shells make excellent garden mulch and organic fertiliser, and cocoa husks can be brewed into tea. Cocoa is also used in candles, biofuel, and animal feed. In short — nearly every part of the cocoa plant has a valuable commercial application across multiple industries.
Cocoa butter and cocoa powder come from the same cocoa mass but serve very different functions. Cocoa butter is the fat extracted from cocoa mass — it is pale yellow, has a mild cocoa scent, and melts at body temperature. Its primary uses are in chocolate manufacturing (where it provides snap and gloss), cosmetics (where it moisturises and emulsifies), and pharmaceuticals (where it acts as a suppository base and tablet excipient).
Cocoa powder is the dry, defatted solid that remains after the butter is pressed out. It is dark brown, intensely flavoured, and rich in cocoa polyphenols, flavanols, and fibre. Its primary uses are in baked goods, hot chocolate beverages, confectionery coatings, protein bars, ice cream flavouring, and nutraceutical supplements. The two products serve complementary but distinct roles — most chocolate manufacturers need both.
Cocoa nibs are roasted cocoa beans that have been cracked and separated from their outer shell, leaving small pieces of pure cocoa. They are the most minimally processed form of cocoa available commercially, essentially raw chocolate without any added sugar, milk, or fat.
Cocoa nibs are used in: granola and muesli as a topping, trail mixes and health snack bars, acai bowls and smoothie bowls, artisan chocolate making (as an alternative to cocoa mass), baked goods for texture and flavour, and as a direct eating snack in the health food market. They are exceptionally rich in antioxidants, magnesium, iron, and dietary fibre, which makes them a highly sought-after superfood ingredient. For buyers, cocoa nibs are typically sold in 25 kg bags and command a significant price premium over bulk cocoa powder.
Cocoa husks, also called cocoa shells or cocoa pod husks — are the outer shells of cocoa beans that are separated during the winnowing process. They are one of cocoa’s most abundant by-products and have several useful applications:
- Garden mulch: Cocoa shells are sold as a premium mulch in garden centres. They smell pleasantly of chocolate when fresh, suppress weeds, retain moisture, and enrich soil as they decompose.
- Herbal tea: Cocoa shells can be brewed like tea. They contain theobromine (a natural stimulant), flavanols, and minerals. The drink has a mild, earthy cocoa flavour and is popular in West Africa and the artisan beverage market.
- Animal feed: Cocoa husks are used as a feed supplement for cattle and other livestock, particularly in cocoa-producing regions where they are abundant and low-cost.
- Fertiliser / compost: High in potassium and organic matter, cocoa husks improve soil fertility when composted.
- Biofuel: Research indicates cocoa husks have potential as a biomass energy source.
For buyers, cocoa husks are among the most affordable cocoa by-products available, typically priced between USD 200–800 per metric ton depending on grade and intended use.
Yes, cocoa butter has a well-documented and long-established role in pharmaceutical manufacturing. Its most important pharmaceutical application is as a suppository base. A suppository needs to be solid at room temperature (for handling and storage) but melt quickly and reliably at body temperature to release its active ingredient. Cocoa butter has a melting point of approximately 34–35°C, just below normal body temperature, making it essentially purpose-built for this application. It has been the preferred suppository base in pharmaceutical compounding for well over a century.
Beyond suppositories, cocoa butter is used as a pharmaceutical excipient, an inactive ingredient that helps deliver or stabilise an active drug. It is used in tablet coatings to mask the taste of bitter active ingredients and improve swallowability. Food-grade or pharmaceutical-grade cocoa butter is required for these applications, and suppliers must provide full quality documentation including a Certificate of Analysis, HACCP certification, and compliance with pharmacopoeia standards.
Cocoa is one of the most versatile and widely used natural ingredients in skincare and cosmetics. The primary cosmetic ingredient derived from cocoa is cocoa butter, but cocoa polyphenol extracts and even finely milled cocoa shell particles are also used in formulations.
Cocoa butter is valued in cosmetics for several reasons: it melts at body temperature so it absorbs easily into skin, it is naturally rich in phytosterols and tocopherols (Vitamin E) which have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, it creates a protective barrier on the skin that reduces moisture loss, and its sensory profile, a gentle warmth and melt gives products a luxurious feel. Key cosmetic uses include body butters and moisturisers, lip balms and lipsticks, stretch mark and scar creams, soap bars, massage products, baby creams, and hair conditioning treatments. Cocoa polyphenol extracts are increasingly used in premium anti-ageing facial serums and eye treatments due to their proven ability to neutralise free radicals and support skin cell health.
Absolutely — cocoa powder has many applications beyond baking. In beverages, it is the primary ingredient in hot chocolate mixes, instant cocoa drinks, and is increasingly used in cold-brew cacao drinks and functional health beverages. In the health and nutrition sector, cocoa powder is a major ingredient in chocolate-flavoured protein powders, meal replacement products, and health bars — one of the fastest-growing food categories globally.
In pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals, standardised cocoa powder is used as a source of cocoa flavanols — bioactive compounds with documented cardiovascular and cognitive health benefits. In cosmetics, cocoa powder is sometimes used as a natural colorant in makeup formulations and DIY beauty products. In savoury cooking, cocoa powder is used in mole sauces, spice rubs for meat, and gourmet savoury applications. Its rich colour and intense flavour make it useful in food colouring and flavour enhancement in a wide range of food products.
Cocoa pulp — also known as cocoa sweatings — is the white, sweet, juicy mucilage that surrounds the cocoa beans inside the pod. When cocoa beans are extracted from the pod, this pulp drips off during fermentation. Traditionally, this liquid was discarded or used locally in West Africa. Today, it is increasingly recognised as a valuable commercial product in its own right.
Cocoa pulp has a distinctive tropical flavour — a cross between lychee, citrus, and white grape — making it appealing for premium beverage production. It is now used to produce cocoa pulp juice (a fresh tropical juice), cocoa wine and spirits (fermented beverages), and as a natural flavour ingredient in artisan chocolate making (where it adds fruit-like complexity). Some chocolate makers in the “bean-to-bar” segment use cocoa pulp as a natural sweetener within the chocolate itself, replacing refined sugar. This is a rapidly growing niche with significant innovation activity in the specialty food and beverage sectors.
Yes — cocoa is one of the most extensively studied functional food ingredients, and the research is highly encouraging. The key health-relevant compounds in cocoa are flavanols (particularly epicatechin and catechin), theobromine, and polyphenols. Clinical research has demonstrated several significant health benefits:
- Cardiovascular health: Cocoa flavanols improve endothelial function (blood vessel flexibility and blood flow), reduce blood pressure, and lower LDL cholesterol oxidation. This is backed by research from Harvard, UC San Diego, and several European academic institutions.
- Cognitive performance: Studies have shown that regular consumption of cocoa flavanols improves memory, processing speed, and cognitive function, particularly in older adults.
- Anti-inflammatory effects: Cocoa polyphenols reduce markers of systemic inflammation.
- Mood and wellbeing: Cocoa contains phenylethylamine and anandamide, which influence mood neurotransmitters positively.
- Antioxidant activity: Cocoa has a higher ORAC (antioxidant) score than blueberries or green tea by weight.
It is important to note that these benefits are most pronounced in minimally processed, high-cocoa products. Highly processed commercial chocolate with added sugar and dairy has a diluted cocoa content and therefore reduced health benefit. For therapeutic purposes, standardised cocoa flavanol extracts provide a more reliable and concentrated dose of the active compounds.
The right cocoa derivative depends entirely on your application, regulatory environment, and quality requirements. Here is a simple decision guide:
- Making chocolate or confectionery? You need food-grade cocoa butter (natural or deodorized depending on your flavour requirements) and food-grade cocoa mass or powder.
- Making skincare, body butters, or lip products? You need cosmetic-grade cocoa butter — deodorized is usually preferred to avoid the cocoa scent interfering with your fragrance system.
- Making pharmaceutical suppositories? You need pharmaceutical-grade cocoa butter with pharmacopoeia-compliant specifications and a full quality dossier.
- Making protein bars, health foods, or beverages? You need food-grade cocoa powder (natural or Dutch-processed depending on pH requirements) or cocoa nibs.
- Making herbal tea products? You need food-safe cocoa husks/shells from a supplier who can provide a Certificate of Analysis confirming absence of pesticides and compliance with food safety standards.
- Garden or agricultural use? Agricultural or horticultural grade cocoa shells are suitable and available at significantly lower cost than food-grade material.
If you’re unsure, contact Radad International. Our team can help you identify exactly which product, grade, and specification is right for your manufacturing or trading requirement.
While most cocoa beans are grown in West Africa (Ivory Coast and Ghana together account for over 55% of global supply), the primary processing of cocoa beans into butter and powder has historically taken place in Europe, particularly the Netherlands, Germany, and Belgium, which have the world’s most advanced cocoa grinding and processing infrastructure.
However, this is changing. Ghana and Ivory Coast have made significant government-level investments to process more cocoa domestically and export higher-value processed products (butter, powder, liquor) rather than raw beans. Malaysia has also emerged as a major cocoa butter processing hub. For buyers in the UAE and GCC, cocoa butter can be sourced from all these origins, with European and African processed butter being the most commonly available. Each origin has slightly different price and certification characteristics, and Radad International can advise on the best sourcing strategy for your specific needs.