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global food use of bulk and high intensity sweeteners
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some 70.4 million tonnes of sweeteners were used by the global food and beverage industry in 2008, including sugars. but which sweeteners are most used, in volume terms? humans are predisposed to like sweet foods, and sugar (sucrose) is far and away the most popular sweetener added to foods. but rising obesity rates are causing more attention to be paid to products' sugar content, and the development of ‘light’ foods, with fewer calories, is a major driver for new product development. this means that there is massive interest in low or zero calorie ingredients that can provide the same or similar sweetness in a healthier product. but reducing sugar is rarely so simple as to just remove the sugar and replace it directly with a sweetener. sugar performs other technical functions in formulations as well as giving it the sweet edge, such as bulking it out or giving it the right texture. moreover, different sweeteners have different taste profiles, so to meet consumer taste expectations for a particular product several sweeteners are often blended. and just to complicate matters even more, consumers in different countries and regions have slightly different ideas about what the most pleasant sweet taste is. there are two main categories of sweeteners used in foods and beverages: bulk sweeteners and polyols; and high intensity sweeteners. bulk sweeteners, including sugars, are also known as nutritive sweeteners, have a technical role in the food as well as sweetening it. they contribute to the bulk, the texture and the viscosity of foods. high intensity sweeteners, also called non-nutritive, do not have a technical role in addition to their sweetening capacity. this means that if any of the attributes normally provided by sugars is required, the chosen high intensity sweetener will need to be blended with a bulk sweetener or some other bulking agent. high intensity sweetener tend to be more expensive than bulk, but are used in a far smaller quantities. euromonitor international data put world use of high intensity sweeteners at 77183.4 tonnes in 2008 – of which the most popular five, saccharin, aspartame, acesulfame k, sucralose and cyclamate – make up the lion’s share. euromonitor found that 70336474.9 tonnes of sugars and bulk sweeteners were used. the top non-sugarbulk sweeteners made up 700579 tonnes.
Source :foodanddrinkeurope.com
Date :
24
September
2009
Category :
Codiments,Desserts,food additi
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the word is out about the dangers of high fructose corn syrup. this sticky sweet substance shows up in nearly all processed foods and headlines in soft drinks. studies have linked hfcs to obesity. caution should be practiced though as sugar in general has gotten a bad rep in the past years. diets like atkins and south beach shun all sugar, natural or not, and have led everyone to question what sugars they eat and where they come from.
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in recent years carob has been known solely as a chocolate substitute, but this seductively sweet food has both the substance and the flavor to earn its own merit. the history of carob is as rich as its flavor. native to the rocky terrain of the mediterranean, carob pods have been used in food preparation for thousands of years. from ancient egyptians to mohammed's army to spanish conquistadors, carob found its way into a variety of cultures to serve many purposes.
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dried baobab pulp, which gained novel foods approval for the eu in june, could be the headline superfruit of 2009, according to mintel. boabab is the fruit of the adansonia di gitata, (or 'upside-down') tree, which grows primarily in south africa, botswana, namibia, mozambique and zimbabwe. the fruit, which has a long history of use in africa, is understood to have a high antioxidant content.
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neotame has moved a step closer to being approved for use in the european union as a sweetener and flavour enhancer, following a positive safety opinion from efsa. neotame, which was developed by the nutrasweet company in the us, is a derivative of aspartame. it is said to be around 7,000 to 13,000 times sweeter than sugar, but to have a sugar-like taste and no calories.
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nutrinova, german based supplier of speciality ingredients, claimed this week that the recent uk approval of sucralose for use in food and beverages has opened up new opportunities for developing blends with the high-intensity sweetener, sunett (acesulfame k), produced by nutrinova. the company claims to have developed formulations and conducted several studies which demonstrate that, when combined in the sunett multi-sweetener concept, sunett and sucralose can deliver good tasting, stable sweetening systems without the calories.
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Coca.Cola
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PEPSI
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Mcdonald
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Nestle
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Mars
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Baskin & Robins
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Nutrika
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Mumika
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Chika
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