
Swiss Military chocolate
The Military chocolate (German language: Militärschokolade; French; Italian language: cioccolato militare ); (Romansh tschigulatta da militar ) is a food component of the Swiss Armed Forces.[1]
History[]

Military chocolate Napolitains
The military chocolate had the official designation "emergency rations" (Notportion or ration de secours or razione di soccorso or raziun da reserva) in the Swiss army. It was black dark chocolate. It was packed in two white cardboard boxes, these cardboard boxes were covered with a transparent plastic film. They were about the size of a cigarette box. The two cardboard boxes were connected but could easily be separated by a perforation. This military chocolate was produced by several companies, e.g. From Villars-Maitre-Chocolatier or Chocolat Stella. For decades the military chocolate has been part of the basic rations for Swiss soldiers. In addition to the Military Biscuit, it is popular for schoolchildren who receive them from soldiers. The military chocolate thus achieved a certain cult status.
In the course of time, a chocolate board of 50 g was introduced into a red paper package and a milk chocolate bar of 50 g in red plastic packaging. This was more popular than the emergency portions, but not available in the same quantity. This led to the rumor that this chocolate was only for officers. This gave rise to the unofficial designation "officer chocolate". The "Offiziersschokolade" has now replaced the emergency ration. The emergency rations are no longer part of the official military rations. As of May 1, 2005 Stella's earlier black chocolate was take out of service. The manufacturer in Ticino, however, continues to produce them in the original recipe and sells them to civilian customers. In the current military chocolate, it also has Rice Krispies or Corn flakes. In addition to the chocolate bars, the military chocolate is also available for promotion purposes in the form of a napolitain of 5 g. The Swiss army obtains their military chocolate from various manufacturers, which are UTZ Certified, among others from the Chocolat Stella or the Chocolat Frey.
Protected brand[]
Since 2013 the protection of the brand "Swiss Army" is to be enforced on behalf of Parliament. In April 2016 the Handelsgericht Bern prohibited a chocolate manufacturer from using the brand name "Swiss Army" without a corresponding license.[2]
Nutritional values and ingredients[]

Ingredient description on the back of the packing
Nutritional values for 100g
- Food energy 2160 kJ (516 kcal)
- Protein 9 g
- Carbohydrate e 57 g
- Fat 28 g
- Carbohydrate counting 4,8
Ingredients
- Sugar, cocoa butter, Powdered milk, cocoamass, cornflakes 7.5% (corn, sugar, salt, barley malt, emulsifier sunflower lecithin, cola extract caffeine with dye Caramel color, Emulsifier sunflower lecithin, flavor vaniline), Cocoa bean at least 35% (skimmed milk chocolate).[3]
See also[]
- United States military chocolate
- Military Biscuit
References[]
- ↑ Pädagogische Hochschule Luzern. "Themenpaket 3: Schweizer Schokoladepioniere" (in German) (PDF). verkehrshaus.ch – Schuldienst. pp. 3. https://www.verkehrshaus.ch/sites/default/files/documents/sb_schokoladen-pioniere_paket3.pdf. Retrieved 2016-09-08.
- ↑ Tagesanzeiger online vom 15. April 2016: «Swiss Army»-Schokolade muss sich umbenennen.
- ↑ http://fddb.info/db/de/lebensmittel/chocolat_frey_frey_militaer-schokolade/index.html
External links[]
- Judgment about the protected designation
- History of military chocolate
- Mediathek VBS
- External image Military chocolate in chocolatebar finish
- External picture Military chocolate / emergency ration in cardboard packaging
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The original article can be found at Military chocolate (Switzerland) and the edit history here.