Can chocolate fight ageing and make your skin glow?

 ZURICH,  (Reuters Life!) – The world’s largest  chocolate maker says it may have come up with a chocolate bar  that could fight wrinkles and slow the ageing process, making it  the latest food group to tap the appetite for healthier living. 
 
Eating 20 g (0.755 oz) of specially developed chocolate  packed with antioxidants, or flavanols, each day may help  prevent wrinkles and make skin more radiant by boosting  elasticity and improving hydration, studies carried out by Barry  Callebaut showed.
  
Consumers are becoming increasingly aware of the nutritional  value of what they eat, and Barry Callebaut’s <BARN.S> claims  come as food giants such as Nestle <NESN.VX> and Danone  <DANO.PA> also push into the healthy eating arena.  

Dark chocolate has already been linked with certain health  benefits, such as helping to lower blood pressure and reducing  the risk of strokes thanks to its high content of antioxidants. 
 
The Swiss group has developed a way of preserving the  flavanols found in cocoa beans during the chocolate-making  process, allowing them to produce a bar that is richer in  flavanols, Barry Callebaut Chief Innovation Officer Hans Vriens  said in an interview.
  
“Chocolate and health do not seem to fit together but it is  a very interesting proposition: if I can eat something I like  and it is good for me, that is great,” Vriens said. “Chocolate  is probably at the bottom of the list when you think about  making food healthier.”  

Smoking, pollution, caffeine and a lack of sleep contribute  to the creation of free radicals that can damage healthy cells  in the body and accelerate the ageing process. 
 
“There is a huge body of evidence that shows flavanols slow  down damage caused by free radicals,” said Kepler Capital  Markets analyst Jon Cox. 

“Food manufacturing companies are leveraging health and  wellness into various products and there is definitely a market  for chocolate in health and wellness. We have already seen how  this has worked in dairy products, with products like Danone’s  Actimel and Unilever’s <ULVR.L> Benecol,” Cox said. 
 
The functional chocolate market, which includes organic and  diet chocolate, is seeing double-digit growth, easily outpacing  the 1-2 percent growth currently seen in the rest of the  chocolate market, Cox said.
  
But some experts are doubtful about the positive effects  flavanols have on skin.