Erythritol
© Copyright 2010. Do not copy. All rights reserved and enforced.Erythritol is a naturally occurring sweetener that is 70% as sweet as sucrose.
It is present in foods such as fruits, mushrooms and fermented foods (beer, cheese, soy sauce, wine.) Through food sources such as these, you already consume somewhere between 30 and 100mg a day.
Commercially, it is extracted from glucose. A yeast ("Moniliella pollinis") is added to glucose and allowed to ferment, which breaks the glucose down into compounds which include Erythritol. Then it is purified to be 99.5% pure.
It is sold as white crystals with no smell, that won't clump.
It is used commercially in calorie-reduced foods.
For diabetics, it has a glycemic ranking of 0.
90% of it passes right through you without being metabolized, but doesn't cause any diarrhea problems - it comes out in urine.
It does not promote tooth decay.
Erythritol was accepted as safe by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on 15 January 1997.
It has been accepted in Japan since 1990.
The FDA allows the claim "does not promote tooth decay."
Other entries for: Sugar
Aspartame, Brown Sugar, Chinese Sugar, Date Sugar, Dextrose, Erythritol, Frosting, Fructose, Gelling Sugar, Granulated Sugar, Icing Sugar, Invert Sugar, Lavender Sugar, Malt Sugar, Raw Sugar, Rosemary Sugar, Sanding Sugar, Snow White Sugar, Sparkling Sugar
Other entries for: Sweeteners
Amasake, Honey, Sorbitol, Stevia, Syrups, Xylitol
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