For bakers, cocoa powder is far more than a flavouring. It plays a critical role in colour, crumb, moisture balance, rise and cost-in-use. The cocoa powder you choose can affect everything from the depth of chocolate flavour in a brownie to the visual appeal of a chocolate sponge on the shelf.
by Lucie Winship
17th April 2026
Unlike chocolatiers, bakers are often working with longer bake times, larger batch sizes and tighter margins. That means selecting a cocoa powder that delivers consistent results, reliable colour and flavour, and commercial efficiency is essential.
Key considerations for bakers include:
Fat content influences both flavour delivery and texture in baked goods.
| Low Fat Cocoa Powder (10–12%) | Medium Fat Cocoa Powder (20–22%) |
|---|---|
|
|
| This is the workhorse choice for most bakeries. | Often used selectively for signature or premium lines, rather than across the full range. |
This is one of the most important technical decisions for bakers.
| Natural Cocoa Powder | Alkalised (Dutch-Processed) Cocoa Powder |
|---|---|
|
|
| Many professional bakers choose alkalised cocoa powders for their reliability and visual appeal, particularly in retail-facing products. | |
Low fat, alkalised cocoa powders give even colour and balanced chocolate flavour without weighing down the crumb.
Medium fat cocoa powders enhance richness and mouthfeel, especially when paired with chocolate chips or chunks.
Low fat cocoa powders deliver bold flavour and deep colour without spreading or softening the dough excessively.
Low fat cocoa powders are ideal where cocoa is used for colour and flavour rather than indulgence.
Different cocoa powders bring different advantages depending on your product mix.
Favorich cocoa powders are a dependable choice for high-volume bakery production, offering consistent colour, flavour and value.
Callebaut cocoa powders offer a broad range of colours and fat contents, making them ideal for bakeries with both everyday and premium lines.
Valrhona cocoa powders are perfect for pâtisserie and dessert-led bakeries looking for intensity and refined flavour.
Luker Chocolate cocoa powders, made from Fino de Aroma beans, suit bakers wanting a more expressive cocoa flavour for speciality or origin-led bakes.
For visually striking products, black cocoa powders from Callebaut or Favorich are increasingly popular for cookies, sandwich biscuits and modern bakery styles, delivering dramatic colour and a distinctive cocoa bitterness.
Choosing the right cocoa powder can make a measurable difference to flavour, appearance and profitability in bakery. By understanding how fat content, processing method and colour affect baked goods, bakers can make confident choices that deliver consistent results at scale.
If you haven’t already explored our guide to cocoa powders for chocolatiers, head over there first to discover how different cocoa powders perform in confectionery applications.
Lucie is a marketing executive with a love for cats, baking, board games and trading card games.
Her favourite bake is an Almond croissant.