Crockpot Hot Chocolate

Crockpot Hot Chocolate takes approximately 45 minutes from beginning to end. This recipe serves 9 and costs 35 cents per serving. This side dish has 135 calories, 4g of protein, and 4g of fat per serving. It is brought to you by Somethings Wanky. 6898 people were glad they tried this recipe. It is a good option if you're following a gluten free and lacto ovo vegetarian diet. Head to the store and pick up baking cocoa, salt, water, and a few other things to make it today. Overall, this recipe earns a good spoonacular score of 44%. Similar recipes are Crockpot Hot Chocolate, Crockpot Hot Chocolate, and Crockpot Hot Chocolate — easy and homemade.

Servings: 9

 

Ingredients:

1/2 cup dry baking cocoa

1/8 teaspoon salt

12 oz can sweetened condensed milk

2 teaspoons vanilla

7 1/2 cups water

Equipment:

slow cooker

whisk

Cooking instruction summary:

Add all ingredients to a crockpot and whisk until smooth.Cook on low for up to 4 hours or on high for up to 2 hours.Serve when hot!

 

Step by step:


1. Add all ingredients to a crockpot and whisk until smooth.Cook on low for up to 4 hours or on high for up to 2 hours.

2. Serve when hot!


Nutrition Information:

Quickview
134k Calories
3g Protein
3g Total Fat
23g Carbs
3% Health Score
Limit These
Calories
134k
7%

Fat
3g
6%

  Saturated Fat
2g
15%

Carbohydrates
23g
8%

  Sugar
20g
23%

Cholesterol
12mg
4%

Sodium
91mg
4%

Alcohol
0.31g
2%

Caffeine
10mg
4%

Get Enough Of These
Protein
3g
8%

Phosphorus
130mg
13%

Calcium
119mg
12%

Copper
0.22mg
11%

Vitamin B2
0.17mg
10%

Manganese
0.19mg
9%

Selenium
6µg
9%

Magnesium
35mg
9%

Fiber
1g
6%

Potassium
214mg
6%

Zinc
0.7mg
5%

Iron
0.74mg
4%

Vitamin B5
0.3mg
3%

Vitamin B12
0.17µg
3%

Vitamin B1
0.04mg
3%

Vitamin A
100IU
2%

Folate
5µg
1%

Vitamin B6
0.03mg
1%

Vitamin C
0.98mg
1%

covered percent of daily need
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Food Joke

How to Handle the IRS By Dave Barry It is time once again for our annual feature "Tax Advice for Humans," the column that explains our complex federal tax laws to you in simple, everyday terms that have virtually nothing to do with reality. This is the only tax-advice column that has the courage to give you the following written guarantee in writing: "If, as a result of following the advice in this column, you are for any reason whatsoever confined to a federal prison, we will personally come and live in your house, until your refrigerator is out of beer." So let's get started! Most likely the foremost question in your mind, as you prepare to fill out your federal tax forms, is: "Can I cheat?" A lot of taxpayers are thinking that this is a good year to take advantage of the Internal Revenue Service, because of the way it got hammered in those congressional hearings last September. Remember? One by one, taxpayers went before the Senate Finance Committee and told alarming stories like this: "I got a letter from the IRS computer stating that I owed taxes back to the year 427 B.C., which seemed like a mistake, plus the letter addressed me as `The Dionne Quintuplets,' so I went down to the IRS office to straighten things out, and the next thing I knew I was being dangled from a helicopter by one leg." When the nation heard these stories, everybody was outraged. The IRS formally apologized to the taxpayers and ordered the dismantling of the agency's primary guillotine. So a lot of people are thinking that this year, while the IRS is under fire, is a good time to "play fast and loose" with their tax returns, and maybe even get revenge for the years of abuse by yanking the IRS' chain a little bit. One leading tax-preparation firm, which I will not identify here except by its initials, "H" and "R," has gone so far as to write taunting remarks in the margins of its clients' tax returns, such as: -- "Hey Audit Breath! If you don't believe I spent a 100 percent deductible total of $224,123 on Pez, perhaps you would like me to complain to the Senate Finance Committee?" -- "No I shall NOT enclose Form 10448275-J! I shall use Form 10448275-J for INTIMATE HYGIENE PURPOSES HAHAHAHA!" This kind of thing is of course a lot of fun, but we are not recommending it. What many people do not realize is that, after the IRS finished publicly apologizing to the taxpayers who testified against it last September, it quietly tracked them down and relieved them of all of their worldly possessions including corneas. So we are not recommending that you cheat. You should heed the words of IRS commissioner Charles Rossotti, who, in this year's Letter to Taxpayers, states: "Every citizen owes it to the nation to pay his or her fair share of taxes, unless of course he or she has made a whopping cash contribution to a key congressperson or President Bill `Mr. Coffee' Clinton or Vice President Al `I Honestly Thought That They Were Just A Bunch Of Very Wealthy Buddhist Nuns!' Gore." Here are some questions that you are likely to ask in preparing your tax returns this year: Q: Did the government change the tax laws again? A: Ha ha! That is the stupidest question we have ever heard! Of COURSE the government changed the tax laws! The government had no choice! The government found out that, despite the fact that the U.S. Tax Code is larger than the entire state of Connecticut, there was still one U.S. taxpayer, Norbridge K. Trongle Jr., who was able to correctly prepare his own tax return. The government considered handling this threat to the national security by sending a B-2 "Stealth" bomber to destroy Mr. Trongle's house and financial records, but the Air Force vetoed this plan because of the risk that the $2 billion plane would be brought down by Mr. Trongle's lawn sprinkler. So the House and Senate Joint Tax Mutation Committee swung into action and made a number of significant changes to the Tax Code, which you need to know about. Q: What, specifically, are these changes? A: Nobody knows. Q: How many taxpayers w.

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