Have you ever had European style hot chocolate? Spain makes it dippable, Italy edges toward pudding, and France keeps it silky and rich. In our kitchen studio we cooked all three side by side, then did a churro dunk test to pick a favorite. Below you’ll find our scaled recipes, notes from the cook, and verified native-language sources so you can check the ratios we used.
Link to the Full Hot Chocolate Video on YouTube
Batch size for every style: 500 mL milk
US approximation: about 2 cups plus 2 tablespoons
Niko PSA… chocolate is not safe for pups, so our studio assistant cheered from the other room.
What makes European hot chocolate different
- Spain… chocolate a la taza uses a little starch for that classic churro-dipping body.
- Italy… cioccolata calda often blends cocoa with a touch of starch, then finishes with real chocolate for a glossy spoonable cup.
- France… chocolat chaud usually skips starch entirely and relies on real melted chocolate, sometimes with a short simmer for natural viscosity.
Historically, chocolate arrived in Europe through Spain in the 1500s and spread through cafés in the 1600s, where each country developed its own texture tradition.
Gear checklist
3 small saucepans, whisks, kitchen scale, heatproof spatula, small bowls, demitasse or small mugs, sheet pan for warming churros.
Spain: Chocolate a la Taza (very thick and dippable)
Authentic baseline
El Mundo Cocina’s Spanish recipe uses 500 mL milk, 200 g dark chocolate, 15 g maicena. We follow that ratio and sweeten to taste.
Spanish Hot Chocolate… Chocolate a la taza
Ingredients
- 500 mL Whole Milk
- 200 g Dark Chocolate 60–70% finely chopped (about 1.25 cups if using chips)
- 15 g Cornstarch maicena, whisked into 2 Tbsp cold milk to make a slurry
- 25 g Granulated Sugar 1 to 2 Tbsp, to taste
- Pinch Salt
Instructions
- Finely chop the chocolate so it melts quickly. In a small bowl, whisk cornstarch into 2 Tbsp cold milk to make a smooth slurry.
- Heat the remaining milk in a saucepan over medium heat until steaming. Whisk in the cornstarch slurry and cook, whisking, until the milk thickens slightly.
- Add the chopped chocolate and a pinch of salt. Whisk constantly until fully melted and glossy. Sweeten to taste with 12.5 g to 25 g sugar.
- Simmer gently 1 to 2 minutes to reach a thick, dippable consistency. If too thick, adjust with a splash of milk. Rest 1 minute before serving.
- Serve hot with churros.
Video
Notes
Studio notes
This reads like warm pudding and absolutely coats a churro. It was our unanimous winner in the dunk test.

Italy: Cioccolata Calda (creamy, almost spoonable)
Authentic baseline
GialloZafferano lists Latte 500 g, Cioccolato 120 g, Cacao amaro 20 g, Amido 20 g, Zucchero 20 g. Technique is confirmed by Il Cucchiaio d’Argento and La Cucina Italiana.
Italian Hot Chocolate… Cioccolata calda
Ingredients
- 500 mL Whole Milk
- 120 g Dark Chocolate 60–70% finely chopped (about 3/4 cup if using chips)
- 20 g Unsweetened Cocoa Powder about 1/4 cup
- 20 g Cornstarch about 2 1/2 Tbsp
- 20 g Sugar about 1 1/2 Tbsp
- Pinch Salt
Instructions
- In a saucepan off heat, whisk cocoa powder, starch, sugar, and a pinch of salt. Gradually whisk in cold milk to form a smooth mixture with no lumps.
- Set over medium heat and cook, whisking constantly, until the mixture thickens and turns glossy.
- Remove from heat and whisk in the finely chopped chocolate until completely melted and silky.
- Adjust thickness with a splash of milk if needed. Serve in small cups, warm and spoonable.
Video
Notes
Studio notes
Not as thick as Spain without resting, but glossy and rich. The cocoa adds depth. With churros it surprised us in a good way.
France: Chocolat Chaud (silky, chocolate-forward)
Authentic baseline
750g’s classic ratio is 1 L milk to 200 g dark chocolate. We use a straight half-scale for 500 mL milk to 100 g chocolate. Académie du Goût shows a French cocoa-plus-starch variant if you want extra body without adding more chocolate.
French Hot Chocolate… Chocolat chaud
Ingredients
- 500 mL Whole Milk
- 100 g Bittersweet Chocolate finely chopped (about 2/3 cup if using chips)
- 8.5 g Granulated Sugar 1 to 2 tsp
- Pinch Salt
Instructions
- Heat milk in a saucepan over medium heat until steaming. Remove from heat and add the finely chopped chocolate.
- Whisk until melted and smooth. Return to low heat briefly to fully dissolve and warm through without boiling
- Sweeten to taste with 1 to 2 tsp sugar or a sachet of sucre vanillé. Add a pinch of salt to balance
- For extra velvety texture, blend briefly with an immersion blender. Serve immediately.
Video
Notes
Studio notes
Smoother and lighter on the palate. We liked it best with a buttery pastry. A croissant is the move.
Churro pairing
We used freezer-aisle, theme park style churros baked hot and tossed in cinnamon sugar. Keep the heat around 400 F and follow your box directions. Coat while hot so the sugar sticks.
Taste test and verdict
We poured all three and did a dunk test. Spain coated the churro like a chocolate shell. Italy clung nicely with a glossy finish. France sipped beautifully and still left a nice coat on the spoon after the simmer. Our on-camera pick was Spain. All three were delicious for different moods.
Chocolate sidenote… semisweet, bittersweet, and blending bars
In US labeling both semisweet and bittersweet fall under sweet chocolate and must contain at least 35 percent chocolate liquor. In practice bittersweet skews higher cacao and lower sugar than semisweet.
Can you blend bars
Yes. If you want something around 60 percent, mix a 70 percent dark bar with a 40 percent milk bar at roughly 70 to 30. Taste and adjust sugar by a teaspoon if needed.
Pro tips from the cook
- Keep milk hot but below a boil to avoid scalding.
- Always make a cold-milk slurry for starch. Directly adding dry starch to hot milk makes lumps.
- For a thicker Spain or Italy cup, add 2 to 3 g more starch per 500 mL.
- For a thicker France cup without starch, simmer 1 to 2 minutes longer.
- Grams are your friend. If you use chips, treat all cup measures as rough.
Printable cards
We made printable one-pagers for Spain, Italy, and France, each scaled to 500 mL with US approximations. Add those to the Resources section on this page so readers can download and take them to the stove.
Sources… native-language and in-country
- Spain
El Mundo Cocina — “Chocolate a la taza”
Recetas de Rechupete — “Chocolate a la taza casero” - Italy
GialloZafferano — “Cioccolata calda”
Il Cucchiaio d’Argento — “Cioccolata calda”
La Cucina Italiana — “Come fare la cioccolata calda” - France
750g — “Chocolat chaud à l’ancienne”
Académie du Goût — “Chocolat chaud” - US chocolate definition reference
21 CFR 163.123 — Sweet Chocolate
FAQ
Why 500 mL for every test
Two solid servings, easy side-by-side comparison, and it maps directly to the Spanish and Italian sources that already specify 500 mL.
Can I use milk chocolate only
You can, but expect a sweeter, lighter cup. If you go mostly milk chocolate, reduce the added sugar.








