5 Easter chocolate brands to skip. 5 that are actually worth your money. 10 total, ranked by what's actually inside the wrapper. Some of these brands replace cocoa butter with vegetable oil, swap real chocolate for "chocolate flavored" coatings, and charge five dollars for a hollow bunny with walls thinner than a credit card. None of that is on the front of the package. All of it changes what you're putting in your Easter basket. In this video, I break down 10 Easter chocolate brands sold at Walmart, Target, Costco, and grocery stores across the US. Every brand gets the same treatment: ingredients, cocoa butter position on the label, corporate ownership, and a simple melt test you can do at home with any chocolate in your Easter basket tonight. You'll learn why "chocolate flavored" and "chocolate" are two legally different products, where cocoa butter sits on the ingredient list and why that single position tells you everything, how a two-dollar Target bunny beats a five-dollar Hershey's bunny on ingredients, why the Reese's Egg shape gives you less chocolate than a regular Reese's Cup, and which brand puts cocoa butter second on the list — higher than every other brand on the shelf. Every brand gets a fair breakdown. Some are budget-friendly treats that do exactly what they promise. Some charge a premium for a name that doesn't match what's inside. And one brand has been making chocolate the same way since 1852 — and you can taste the difference from the first melt. 🔔 Subscribe for more food intelligence — same depth, same honesty, every video. #easterchocolate #eastereggs #foodscience #ingredientlabels #thefoodtell