TCHO, which vowed late last year to make its entire product line animal-free by 2023, has completed its transition to 100% plant-based.

TCHO reached this milestone by enlisting a network of chefs and baking professionals to personally evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each new product. Only when the formulas exceeded expectations did TCHO launch its two new alternative baking chocolates: Oat My Gawd 46%, an oat-milk baking chocolate, and Choco Blanco 35%, an oat-milk white baking chocolate. 

Oat My Gawd possesses the melting characteristics and rich flavor profile that professional users came to expect from TCHO’s previous dark milk formulation. Choco Blanco is TCHO’s first white chocolate offering. 

The professional baking line is used in restaurant kitchens and bakeries nationwide. It comprises a dozen types of chocolate baking ingredients including Crush This (roasted cacao nibs), Hawt Chocolate, Dark & Bitter 100%, Hella Dark 81%, Real Fudgy 70%, Real Fruity 68%, Sweet & Sassy 66%, Oat My Gawd 46%, Choco Blanco 35% and more. All of TCHO’s professional chocolates are sold in bulk (1.5- to 3-kilogram bags) containing individual baking pieces in the company’s signature hexagon shape.

“During our intensive R&D process, we worked with chefs like David Rodriquez and Erin Kanagy-Loux, as well as partners like Salt & Straw and Humphrey Slocombe to perfect TCHO’s professional baking line,” said Josh Mohr, senior vice president of marketing at TCHO. “Their help was invaluable in fine tuning the formula and ensuring that the oat milk chocolate was just as delicious and reliable in professional kitchens as our conventional chocolate has been. Once we knew we could make a tasty oat milk chocolate, it was clear that TCHO should discontinue all of our dairy production and move to 100% plant-based. We were able to complete the transition ahead of schedule because of TCHO’s acceptance at Whole Foods and Safeway in Northern California this fall and the creation of our oat milk-based professional line.”

“This chocolate is a game changer for any chefs or bakers wanting to expand their vegan offerings,” added Saloni Mehra, head pastry chef at Millennium, a Michelin-rated vegan restaurant in Oakland, California. Mehra has already added TCHO’s new chocolate to the menu, using Oat My Gawd in an Earl Grey ganache and Choco Blanco in a mousse.

The professional line joins six entirely reformulated and redesigned retail chocolate bars that were launched in late 2021 and five retail-sized bags of chocolate for home baking use. All products are produced under the umbrella of TCHO’s pioneering TCHO Source program, which invests in infrastructure, training and higher wages at the source.

Additionally, all TCHO products are Certified Fair Trade, USDA Organic, vegan, gluten-free, kosher and made from 100% plants. TCHO is a Certified B Corp company. In keeping with TCHO’s long history of making award-winning chocolate, Toffee Time and Choco Latté were recently awarded Bronze and Gold, respectively, at the International Chocolate Awards, beating out traditional milk chocolate bars in the prestigious tasting competition. 

As a Certified B Corp company, TCHO's switch to plant-based chocolate production is about making a positive environmental impact and giving consumers and food professionals access to sustainable options. Mohr said the greenhouse gas emissions associated with TCHO's dairy-free chocolate is more than three-quarters lower compared to the company’s original dairy milk bars.  

The TCHO professional baking line is available through local distribution channels and online at tcho.com. Oat My Gawd is available for $99 per 3-kilogram bag and Choco Blanco retails for $119 per 3-kilogram bag.