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sweetener
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sweetener

Any chemical that gives sweetness to food. Caloric sweeteners are various forms of sugar; noncaloric, or artificial, sweeteners are used by dieters and diabetics and provide neither energy nor bulk. Questions have been raised about the long-term health effects from several artificial sweeteners.

Sweeteners are used to make highly processed foods attractive, whether sweet or savoury. Most of the noncaloric sweeteners do not have E numbers. Some are banned for baby foods and for young children: thaumatin, aspartame, acesulfame-K, sorbitol, and mannitol. Cyclamate is banned in the UK and the USA; acesulfame-K is banned in the USA.

In 1997, Japanese geneticists engineered a strain of yeast that produces a protein, called monellin, which is 3,000 times as sweet as sugar and 15 times sweeter than aspartame. Monellin occurs naturally in the berries of a West African plant, Dioscoreophyllum cumminisii and, as a protein, it contains only 4 kilocalories per gram.



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In 2007, the total retail sales of sugar and food sweeteners in the US In 2007, the total retail sales of sugar and food sweeteners in the U.
Researchers at the Water Technology Center in Karlsruhe, Germany, found artificial sweeteners in water even after it had gone through sewage treatment.
Byline: ANI Washington, June 18 (ANI): Scientists, using a new analytical method, have been able to demonstrate the presence of several artificial sweeteners in waste water in Germany.
 
 
 
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