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Level 0 · First Steps · Ingredient

Cocoa Powder

Cocoa powder is what remains when most of the fat, cocoa butter, is pressed out of roasted cocoa beans and the dry solids are ground fine. It carries the deep, bitter chocolate flavour without the richness of the butter, and comes in two main styles: natural and Dutch-process.

A mound of dark cocoa powder with chocolate truffles
Photo: HONG SON · Pexels

What it is

Cocoa beans are roughly half fat. When that fat is pressed away, a dense cake of solids is left behind and milled into powder. Natural cocoa is lightly acidic and fruity; Dutch-process cocoa has been treated with an alkali to mellow the acidity, deepen the colour, and give a smoother, rounder taste.

Why it matters

Because it is nearly all flavour and no fat, cocoa powder concentrates chocolate character into cakes, biscuits, and dustings. Its acidity also matters for lift: natural cocoa can react with baking soda, while Dutch cocoa usually cannot. Good cocoa is what makes a dusting over tiramisu taste of chocolate rather than dust.

Common mistakes

Swapping natural and Dutch cocoa without adjusting the leavening can leave a cake flat or bitter. Cocoa also clumps and scorches easily, so it is best sifted and never cooked over fierce heat. Cheap, thin cocoa gives a pale, chalky result no amount of sugar can rescue.

At Love Made Edible

We reach for a well-flavoured cocoa in our decadent chocolate cake and our brownies, and the same care shows in the fine, bittersweet dusting that finishes a tiramisu.

Related terms

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Dutch-process and natural cocoa?

Natural cocoa is untreated, acidic, and fruity, and can react with baking soda for lift. Dutch-process cocoa is treated with alkali, so it is darker, smoother, and less acidic, and usually pairs with baking powder instead. The two are not always swappable in a recipe.

Is cocoa powder the same as drinking chocolate?

No. Pure cocoa powder is unsweetened and intensely bitter, meant for baking. Drinking chocolate and cocoa mixes are usually sweetened and often contain milk powder, so using them in a recipe will throw off both the sweetness and the texture.

Tastethetechnique

Everything in our kitchen is baked fresh to order — eggless and vegan variants available.