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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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no race should have rules that favour the strongest competitors. but unless the capabilities and interests of smes are taken into consideration before the starting gun is fired for new food regulations, they will struggle to keep up and may have to drop out altogether. small and medium enterprises (smes) are the lifeblood of the european food scene. a massive 99.1 per cent of food companies have fewer than 250 employees, according to the confederation of the food and drink industries of the eu’s (ciaa) 2008 figures.
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social and health concerns relating to obesity is driving market growth for the global artificial sweetener market. according to a new report. published by global industry analysts, artificial sweeteners: a global strategic business report reveals that a worldwide weight reduction effort is stimulating the $3.5bn global artificial sweeteners market, of which the us and europe currently make up 65 per cent.
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consumers should stick to the facts and look beyond the hype in terms of the salt and sugar content of cereals, claims kellogg’s as uk cereal manufacturers are taken to task in a channel 4 programme. researchers for the dispatches television programme, which was broadcast yesterday, said that a tesco jam doughnut contained 8.6g of sugar while 30g of kellogg’s frosties includes 11.
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the uk’s food standards agency (fsa) yesterday confirmed the implementation of a protein cap that limits products such as cereals being advertised to children. the nation’s food industry has said it “rejects” the fsa board decision, which it says “raises serious questions about the agency’s commitment to better regulation”. the protein cap is part of the fsa’s nutrient profiling model which differentiates foods on the basis of their nutrient composition to help regulators apply tv advertising controls to improve the balance of foods being advertised to children.
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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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