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Maillard sweeteners

Milk solids are normally used as either milk powder or sweetened condensed milk in food manufacturing. Skim milk solids are an essential part of toffees as well as contributing useful colour and Maillard reaction flavours to baked goods. [Pg.109]

Browning caused by Maillard-type reactions between carbohydrates and amino acids or caramelisation contribute to appearance, taste and flavour of many products. Carbohydrate sweeteners are important for these reactions, and other types of sweetening agents may not react in a similar way, therefore rendering products more pale. [Pg.231]

Maillard reactions - [FOODS, NONCONVENTIONAL] (Vol 11) -aspartame m [SWEETENERS] (Vol 23)... [Pg.589]

Trehalose, a disaccharide sweetener, 45-50 percent as sweet as sucrose, was given GRAS status in 2000. It is naturally found in mushrooms, honey, lobster, shrimp, and foods made with yeast. It has been used in Japan for decades, and is commercially produced from starch by bacterial enzymes.98 Besides its mild sweetening power, it maintains cell structure during freezing and dehydration of foods. It is a nonreducing sugar, so it does not participate in the Maillard reaction (will not brown) and helps to protect the color of processed foods.99... [Pg.1688]

The available information on the nutritional properties of individual DFA isomers is limited to those representatives that can be produced by biotechnological processes, that is compounds 1 (DFA III), 10 (DFA I), and 15 (DFA IV). While the potential of DFAs as functional foods was soon realized, the initial reports of otherwise relevant results on their nutritional properties were included only in patents or published in national Japanese journals which are not always accessible. In all cases they are rated as low-caloric sweeteners DAF III, for instance, has half the sweetness of sucrose and is chemically highly stable, with lower degradability and Maillard reactivity under acidic conditions than sucrose [93]. Anticariogenic and anti-tooth decaying effects have also been claimed. Moreover, these DFAs promote in vitro growth of bifidobacteria. [Pg.72]

In the advanced and late "Maillard reaction" the furosine method is not valuable since the Amadori products lead to further compounds. Therefore the amount of available lysine in severely damaged foods is underestimated. In the case of fructose rich food (e.g. special diets for diabetics or products which are sweetened with honey or concentrated fruit juice) similar false conclusions are possible since glucoselysine which is formed from fructose during the "Maillard reaction" is not a precursor for furosine. [Pg.48]


See other pages where Maillard sweeteners is mentioned: [Pg.18]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.844]    [Pg.846]    [Pg.849]    [Pg.693]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.421]    [Pg.663]    [Pg.877]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.334]    [Pg.298]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.31 , Pg.266 ]




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Maillard

Sweetening

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