Sugar versus sweeteners

Add to my library

FPR330 V1 Process sheet

Sugar versus sweeteners

Author : Jean-Luc BOUTONNIER

Publication date: May 10, 2024 | Lire en français

Add to my library Add to my library

Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur You do not have access to this resource.
Request your free trial access! Free trial

Already subscribed?

Overview

ABSTRACT

This process sheet compares two families of sweet-flavored products, traditional beet/cane sugar and sweeteners, some natural and the majority synthetic. Unlike alcohol, sugar does not cause addiction, and the sweet taste is innate because it is programmed, then predominant at birth and attenuated in adulthood. However, the excessive consumption of these products, particularly among young people, is a major and critical social phenomenon which must be addressed through a national policy of restriction from an early age.

Read this article from a comprehensive knowledge base, updated and supplemented with articles reviewed by scientific committees.

Read the article

AUTHOR

 INTRODUCTION

This process sheet explains the radical opposition between the two options of "sugar", a commonly used term, but more precisely "sucrose", and a family of compounds, sweeteners, which are supposed to replace it.

In the first case, sucrose is extracted from two very different plants, sugar beet and sugar cane, both of which have the common characteristic of containing this crystallizable sugar, making it easy to extract from the parent plant. Originally from Central Europe, sugar beet thrives in temperate climates, with both wet and dry periods prior to harvest. It was discovered at the end of the 17th century by a German chemist (A.G. Marggraf), for its high sucrose content in the roots of the plant. It is currently grown in northern and eastern France. Sugar cane began to be cultivated in the 16th century, and from then on, the real boom in the brandy produced can be attributed to the European settlers who arrived in the Caribbean. Sugar cane is mainly grown in tropical and subtropical regions such as Central and South America, East Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia and the Caribbean, and most often near oceans or warm seas.

In the second case, sweeteners are natural or synthetic substances designed to replace sugar, on the pretext of reducing the added sugar content and the associated kilojoules, while maintaining a sweet taste.

You do not have access to this resource.
Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource. Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed?


KEYWORDS

sugar   |   beetroot   |   cane   |   sweetener

Ongoing reading
Sugar versus sweeteners

Article included in this offer

"Food industry"

( 270 articles )

Complete knowledge base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

View offer details

Dans les ressources documentaires

Insectes dans l’alimentation humaine - Transformation et qualité

Pour répondre aux défis environnementaux et nutritionnels actuels et aux besoins en protéines croissants ...

Glucides et alimentation : aspects technologiques

Cet article a pour principal objectif de présenter la famille des glucides, sous forme d’une classificati...

Pâtes et nouilles

Si on cherche un aliment qui puise ses racines dans l’Antiquité, les céréales et plus particulièrement le...

Tous les livres blancs
Article Une veste pour prédire les risques cardiaques
21 December 2023
Une veste pour prédire les risques cardiaques

Quelle innovation biotechnologique ne doit-on pas rater en décembre ? Une veste réutilisable capable de cartographier les flux de signaux électriques au niveau ...

Toutes les actualités
Contact us