Hershey's Quietly Changes Recipes After Facing Backlash
Climate change is affecting cocoa production—and candy makers are adjusting. How could these changes impact chocolate products and the global supply chain?
Share
April 7, 2026
Climate change is affecting cocoa production—and candy makers are adjusting. How could these changes impact chocolate products and the global supply chain?
Share
Earlier this week, The Hershey Company announced that it is returning all of its classic brands to earlier milk and dark chocolate recipes. The move comes amid a growing backlash over the recipe changes and the use of chocolate alternatives in some of its candies.
View the transcript of the story.
NOTE: If you are short on time, watch the video and complete this See, Think, Wonder activity: What did you notice? What did the story make you think about? What would you want to learn more about?
In the PBS News Hour segment, Deema Zein explained that a New York Times investigation found major chocolate brands were using less cocoa in their products and that popular candies like Rolo's, Almond Joy and Mr. Goodbar had quietly dropped the term milk chocolate from their labels. Under FDA guidelines, candy labeled "milk chocolate" must be at least 10 percent chocolate liquor, a liquid made from cocoa beans that contains cocoa butter. When it drops below 10 percent, companies have swapped in terms like "chocolate candy" and "chocolatey," a subtle shift that most consumers won't notice.
Richard Hartel, a food science professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, who has studied chocolate for 35 years, reveals that the industry-standard replacement for cocoa butter is palm kernel oil.
Go to the Hershey's website linked here and check out the nutritional facts and ingredient lists for their products.
What observations can you make? Were there any ingredients that surprised you? Was there information about their products that made you want to ask more questions? If so, provide an example or two.
Want to see more stories like this one? Subscribe to the SML e-newsletter!
Republished with permission from PBS News Hour Classroom.