Cacao Project, Raw Materials Guide

How to Make Cacao-Free Chocolate: Zero-Cacao Recipes Recreated With Alternative Ingredients and Tips for Commercial Product Development

April 30, 2026

Table of Contents

"Could we make chocolate without using cacao?"—this is a theme that confectionery and chocolate manufacturers have started to consider seriously in the wake of the cacao shock (a historic price surge) from 2024 onward. In 2025, cacao-bean-free materials such as Fuji Oil's "Anoza M" appeared in the commercial market, and the zero-cacao path is beginning to spread as a realistic option. This article is a guide that organizes that information from a professional standpoint.

In this article, we explain how to make cacao-free chocolate from the standpoint of commercial product development, from the perspective of Minoyo, which has handled Kyoto confectionery raw materials for 120 years. We cover everything from how to choose alternative ingredients, basic recipes, and industry cases to food labeling rules. The structure is also useful for those who want to make it at home.

Why "Cacao-Free Chocolate" Is Drawing Attention Now

Behind the attention on cacao-free chocolate are three trends: price surges, sustainability, and demand for special-purpose foods.

The Cacao Price Surge from 2024 Onward

The international price of cacao beans hit a record high of 10,709 dollars per ton in January 2025, and as of April 2026 it remains in a high range of around 8,000 dollars. Raw material costs, which have swelled to roughly 4 to 5 times the 2022 level, directly hit product prices and cost ratios. The move to substitute some or all of the raw materials with non-cacao alternatives has accelerated. For detailed background, see"Five reasons cacao beans are soaring in price".

Responding to Sustainability and Production-Area Risks

About 70% of the world's cacao production is concentrated in four West African countries, and child labor, deforestation, and poor harvests due to climate change remain ongoing issues. The "zero-cacao" path of completely replacing cacao beans is being increasingly adopted in CSR-context product development as an option that puts some distance from production-area risks.

The Market as a Special-Purpose Food

In product development that addresses specific dietary habits and health needs—such as cacao allergy accommodation, caffeine restriction, vegan, and halal certification—cacao-free chocolate has become an important category. "Chocolate-style sweets that contain no cacao" have until now been a minor market, but demand as a subcategory has steadily grown.

The Basic Structure of Cacao-Free Chocolate | What to Substitute With

To recreate the color, flavor, and mouthfeel of chocolate without using cacao beans, you need a design that replaces three components with other materials.

(1) The Flavor Base: Materials That Create a Chocolate Feel

Recreate the toastiness, bitterness, and richness of cacao with other materials. Representative options include carob powder (from the carob bean), roasted soybean materials (such as Minoyo's "Wa no Cacao"), chicory, roasted sunflower seeds, and roasted pea powder. Rather than using one alone, combining 2 to 3 types gives a richer flavor profile.

(2) The Mouthfeel Base: Fats to Replace Cocoa Butter

The smooth mouthfeel of chocolate comes from the property of cocoa butter (a cacao-derived fat) melting at body temperature. To recreate this, use chocolate alternative fats such as palm stearin, coconut oil, shea butter, hazelnut butter, and hybrid vegetable fats. The key is to choose a fat with the right melting-point profile (melting at 28 to 33°C).

(3) The Structure Base: Sugar and Dairy Components

Sugar (sucrose) and dairy components (milk powder, whey) have the same structure as in ordinary chocolate. To make it vegan, replace them with plant-based milk (oat milk powder, coconut milk powder). Even when the flavor and mouthfeel are set, if the ratio of sugar to dairy is off, the texture breaks down, so adjusting the blending balance is necessary.

The 5 Main Alternative Materials and How to Choose

Here we organize five types of alternative ingredients that serve as the "flavor base" of cacao-free chocolate. Choose based on the characteristics and uses of each.

MaterialRaw materialFlavor characteristicsMain uses
Carob PowderFruit of the carob bean (Mediterranean-grown)Natural sweetness / caffeine-freeVegan chocolate / health-appeal products
Roasted soybean material (Wa no Cacao, etc.)Roasted residue of domestic soybeans (upcycled)Toasty aroma / deep colorDomestic-appeal / sustainable products
Chicory PowderRoasted chicory rootBitterness, richnessFor adults / authentic chocolate-style
Roasted sunflower / peaRoasted sunflower seeds / peasA nutty, toasty aromaCraft baked goods / new category
Cacao-bean-free material (Anoza M, etc.)Blend of pea + carob + fatRecreating milk chocolate flavorCommercial baked goods / Western confectionery

If you want the "flavor closest to cacao," a cacao-bean-free material (such as Anoza M) or a blend of 2 to 3 types is a realistic option. If you want to appeal to "healthy / naturally derived," carob or roasted soybean materials pair well; for "domestic / sustainable" appeal, roasted soybean materials are a good match.

How to Make Cacao-Free Chocolate (Basic Recipe)

We introduce a basic formula that can be used for both commercial and home use. Adjust the formula according to the intended use, sweetness, and mouthfeel of the finished product.

Basic Formula (per 100g finished, as a guide)

  • Alternative material (carob + roasted soybean material, etc.): 30 to 40g
  • Chocolate alternative fat (palm stearin, etc.): 30 to 35g
  • Sugar: 20 to 25g
  • Milk powder or plant-based milk powder: 10 to 15g
  • Lecithin (emulsifier): 0.5g
  • Vanilla / salt: a small amount

Preparation Steps

  1. Melt the alternative fat completely in a hot-water bath at around 45°C
  2. Combine the alternative material (powder), sugar, and milk powder in a bowl
  3. Add the melted fat to the powder little by little, stirring until uniform
  4. Add the lecithin, vanilla, and salt, and stir again
  5. Tempering (a tempering machine for commercial use, or the bowl-temperature-adjustment method at home)
  6. Pour into molds and lightly vibrate to remove air bubbles
  7. Chill and set in a 10 to 15°C refrigerator for 30 minutes or more
  8. Remove from the molds to finish

Points and Adjustments for the Finish

Compared with authentic cacao chocolate, cacao-free chocolate can be somewhat inferior in mouthfeel smoothness and luster. This can be improved through the selection of the alternative fat, but the standard practice in the field is not to rely on a complete recreation of cacao and instead to combine it with added value on a separate axis (healthy, vegan, caffeine-free, upcycled). Tempering basically follows the same temperature profile as ordinary chocolate (45°C → 27°C → 30°C), but adjust by 1 to 2°C according to the melting point of the alternative fat.

Development for Commercial Use | Industry Cases Such as Fuji Oil's "Anoza M"

In the commercial market, finished-product-level cacao-free materials have already appeared. Let's take a look at some representative cases.

Fuji Oil's "Anoza M" | A Commercial Cacao-Bean-Free Material Launched in 2025

Fuji Oil, a long-established plant-based food ingredient maker, launched "Anoza M"—a milk-chocolate-type commercial ingredient made without any cacao-bean-derived raw materials—in March 2025. By combining peas, carob, and chocolate-use fats and oils, it achieves a melt-in-the-mouth texture and flavor that rival those of milk chocolate. Rolled out for baked goods and Western confectionery, it is a symbolic move by a major manufacturer stepping into the zero-cacao arena (source:Fuji Oil press release, March 12, 2025)。

Overseas startups | Voyage Foods, WNWN Food, and others

Startups developing chocolate-flavored ingredients without cacao beans—such as Voyage Foods in the US and WNWN Food in the UK—are emerging around the world. Their approaches are diverse, spanning peas, sunflower seeds, fermentation technology, and cell culture, and in overseas B2B markets, major ingredient makers such as Cargill are moving to adopt them. Full-scale entry into the Japanese market is still limited, but it is a move that signals the direction of an industry trend.

The arrival of domestic upcycled ingredients

In Japan, too, there is a movement to turn waste materials into cacao alternatives. Minoyo's "Japanese cacao" project in Kyoto is a cacao alternative that makes use of the roasting residue left over from the soybean coffee manufacturing process, and inquiries are increasing as an option that simultaneously supports cost, domestic sourcing, and sustainability.

Food labeling rules and points to note

When developing cacao-free chocolate products, the most important thing to watch out for is food labeling rules. Incorrect labeling carries the risk of recalls and product retrievals.

Rules for the "chocolate" label

Under the Fair Competition Code Concerning the Labeling of Chocolate-Utilizing Foods, three labels—"chocolate," "quasi-chocolate," and "chocolate-utilizing food"—are used depending on the content ratios of cacao solids, cacao butter, and milk solids. When no cacao-bean-derived raw materials are used at all, in principle the "chocolate" label cannot be applied, and labels such as "chocolate-flavored food" or "chocolate-style sweets" are used instead.

Allergen and ingredient labeling

Depending on the alternative ingredient, allergen handling changes. Individual labeling is required for each alternative ingredient—"soybeans" for soy-based ingredients, "peas" for pea-based ingredients, and the specific nut for nut-based ingredients. On both the front and back of the packaging, you can achieve both consumer-friendly wording—such as "cacao-free," "non-cacao," or "cacao-free"—and compliance with the Fair Competition Code.

Additional requirements for "vegan" and "halal" claims

When making a vegan claim, the product must be designed without any animal-derived ingredients such as milk components or honey. To obtain halal certification, all of the raw materials, manufacturing process, and facilities must meet the standards of the certifying body. Coordinating with a food-labeling and certification specialist early in the product design stage helps prevent having to redo the design.

Developing cacao-free chocolate products using Minoyo's "Wa no Cacao"

Minoyo, with 120 years in Kyoto confectionery raw materials, has developed "Wa no Cacao," a cacao alternative starting from soybeans, and can accommodate sample prototyping and small-lot supply.

An approach to material development supported by roasting technology

Minoyo was founded in 1902 (Meiji 35), and for 120 years has refined its roasting techniques for domestic soybeans through kinako (roasted soybean flour) making.Soybean Roasteryadjusts the heat according to the variety, humidity, and temperature to bring out aroma and umami. Drawing on this technique, we created "Wa no Cacao," a cacao alternative made from the roasting residue of soybean coffee.

Developed by application in powder, flake, and paste forms

"Wa no Cacao" is offered in three forms—powder, flake, and paste—to suit the intended use. There are examples of its use in baked goods, gelato, drinks, and vegan chocolate bars, and it is also possible to design products in which 30–100% of the formulation is made up of "Wa no Cacao." Centered on domestic soybeans grown by our own staff at our company field in Nantan, Kyoto, we also ensure transparency of origin and traceability.

Sample Consultations and Small-Lot Trial Production

If you are considering prototyping a cacao-free chocolate product, pleaseContactormaterial download. The initiatives across the entire business areOur Business & Why We Are Chosen, and the ordering process is summarized atOrdering Process & How to Order.

Frequently asked questions

Q1. Can cacao-free chocolate be called "chocolate"?

Under the Fair Competition Code Concerning the Labeling of Chocolate-Utilizing Foods, products that contain no cacao-bean-derived raw materials cannot use the "chocolate" label. Labels such as "chocolate-flavored food," "chocolate-style sweets," or "non-cacao chocolate" are used instead. Coordinate with a food-labeling specialist early in the product development stage.

Q2. Will the melt-in-the-mouth texture of cacao-free chocolate be the same as authentic chocolate?

It cannot be reproduced completely, but by selecting cocoa-butter-substitute fats and oils (palm stearin, coconut oil, hybrid vegetable fats, etc.), a fairly close melt-in-the-mouth texture can be achieved. Highly polished commercial ingredients such as Fuji Oil's "Anoza M" have also appeared, so it is efficient to start by comparing your own formulation with ready-made ingredients.

Q3. Can I make cacao-free chocolate at home?

Yes, you can make it by referring to the basic recipe in this article. Carob powder is available through home-use mail order, and by combining it with coconut oil or cocoa-butter-substitute vegetable fats, you can get close to an authentic finish even with a home oven and refrigerator. If tempering is difficult, starting with a nama-chocolate or truffle type is a choice that is less prone to failure.

Q4. What is the minimum lot for commercial cacao-free chocolate?

It varies by supplier. Fuji Oil's "Anoza M" is in units of several dozen kg, while Minoyo's "Wa no Cacao" can accommodate anything from a sample consultation to small-lot prototyping. When making finished products through OEM outsourcing, the manufacturing plant's minimum lot (several thousand units and up) is set separately. Plan on the assumption that the prototyping stage and the mass-production stage involve different ordering flows.

Q5. Can it also serve as a substitute for high-cacao chocolate?

Products with a high cacao content (high-cacao, 70% or more) are characterized by bitterness, richness, and complex aroma, and are a difficult area to reproduce completely with cacao-free ingredients alone. Rather than a "substitute for high-cacao," a realistic approach is intermediate design that lowers the cacao content (around 50% cacao + 30% roasted soybean ingredient + fats and oils, etc.) to reduce raw-material costs.

Summary | Design cacao-free chocolate as a "separate product category"

Cacao-free chocolate can be made by composing the "source of flavor," the "source of melt-in-the-mouth texture," and the "source of structure" from separate ingredients, without using cacao beans. Rather than aiming for a complete reproduction, a realistic approach is to design it as a product with added value on a different axis—such as "healthy," "vegan," "caffeine-free," "upcycled," or "domestic."

In commercial product development, you have two choices: either use highly polished ready-made ingredients such as Fuji Oil's "Anoza M," or combine carob, roasted soybean ingredients, and fats and oils to create your own formulation. For consultations on sample prototyping and ingredient selection, please feel free to contact Minoyo, with 120 years in Kyoto confectionery raw materials.Contactormaterial downloadYou can reach us via.

References and sources

  1. Fuji Oil "Anoza M" press release:Fuji Oil, March 12, 2025
  2. Food labeling and fair competition codes:Consumer Affairs Agency/ National Chocolate Industry Fair Trade Council
  3. The structure of soaring cacao prices:Minoyo blog "Five reasons cacao beans are soaring in price"
  4. Comparison of cacao substitute ingredients:Minoyo Blog: "A Thorough Comparison of Cacao Alternatives"
  5. The basics of carob:Minoyo blog "What is carob?"

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