Transcript Additives.

Education
Phase 4
Food additives
Additives are substances used for a variety of reasons such as preservation,
colouring, sweetening, during the preparation of food.
The European Union legislation defines them as:
"any substance not normally consumed as a food in itself and not normally
used as a characteristic ingredient of food whether or not it has nutritive
value, the intentional addition of which to food for a technological purpose
results in it or its by-products becoming directly or indirectly a component of
such foods“.
The EU legislation states that food additives must have advantages and benefits for
the consumer. Therefore, they have to do one of the following:
• preserve the nutritional quality of the food;
• provide necessary ingredients or constituents for foods manufactured for
people with special dietary needs;
• enhance the keeping quality or stability of a food or improving its organoleptic
properties, provided that the consumer is not misled;
• aid the manufacture, processing, preparation, treatment, packing, transport or
storage of food, including food additives, food enzymes and food flavourings,
provided that the food additive is not used to disguise faulty raw materials or
cover up unhygienic practices.
• All additives are thoroughly assessed for safety before they can be used.
• They are only then permitted to be used in a limited range of products and in
certain amounts.
• These amounts are based on an Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) calculated by the
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) from the results of safety tests.
• The ADI represents an amount that can be ingested daily over a lifetime without
appreciable health risk.
• Approved additives are given a number and some are also awarded an ‘E’. An E
shows the additive has been accepted as safe for use within the European
Union.
• Even when an additive has been approved, regular repeat testing is required to
maintain its status as ‘approved’.
Food additives are:
• Sweeteners - to sweeten foods or in table-top sweeteners;
• Colours - adding or restoring colour in a food;
• Preservatives - prolonging shelf-life of foods by protecting them against
deterioration by micro-organisms;
• Antioxidants - prolonging shelf-life of foods by protecting them against oxidation
e.g. fat rancidity, colour changes;
• Stabilisers - to maintain the physical-chemical state of a foodstuff;
• Emulsifiers - to maintain the mixture of oil and water in a foodstuff.
Types of additives
Additives may be:
natural – found naturally, such as extracts from beetroot juice
(E162), used as a colouring agent;
manmade versions – synthetic identical copies of substances
found naturally, such as benzoic acid (E210), used as a
preservative;
artificial – produced synthetically and not found naturally,
such as nisin (E234), used as a preservative in some dairy
products.
Sweeteners
Sweeteners include:
• intense sweeteners, e.g. saccharin, have a sweetness many times that of sugar
and therefore are used in small amounts, e.g. in diet foods, soft drinks,
sweetening tablets.
Also known as artificial sweeteners, examples include aspartame, acesulfame K,
saccharin, sucralose and stevia.
• bulk sweeteners, e.g. sorbitol, Bulk sweeteners provide fewer calories weight
for weight compared to sugar, but have a similar bulk or volume.
These are useful, for example, when preparing low calorie confectionery products.
What are the potential benefits of
sweeteners?
The use of low calorie sweeteners may
offer benefits in relation to:
• weight management
• diabetes management
• dental health.
For example, in relation to weight
management, the use of sweeteners can
help people to control their energy
intake.
Food colours
Colours are used to make food look more appetizing. During
the processing of some food, colour can be lost so additives
are used to restore the original colour, for example canned
marrow fat peas.
Colour additives can also be used to make the existing food
colour brighter, for example, enhance the yellowness of
custard.
Colours are either natural (e.g. curcumin (E100) is a yellow
extract of turmeric roots), nature identical or artificial. Some
colours are also vitamins (e.g. riboflavin and beta-carotene)
and these are the only colours allowed in baby food.
Preservatives
Preservatives are used to help keep food
safe to eat for longer.
Any processed food with a long shelf-life is
likely to include preservatives, unless
another way of preservation has been
used, such as freezing, canning or drying.
Traditional methods using sugar, salt and
vinegar are still used to preserve foods.
Antioxidants
Decrease the chance of oils and fats in foods
from combining with oxygen and changing
colour or turning rancid.
Rancid fats smell and taste unpleasant and are
a health risk.
Antioxidants are also used to prevent the
browning of cut fruit, vegetables and fruit
juices (and so increase shelf life and
appearance).
For example, vitamin C, also known as ascorbic
acid, or E300, is one of the most widely used
antioxidants.
Emulsifiers, stabilisers, gelling agents, thickeners
Emulsifiers help mix ingredients together that would
normally separate, e.g. lecithins (E322).
Stabilisers prevent ingredients from separating again,
e.g. locust bean gum (E410).
Emulsifiers and stabilisers give food a consistent texture,
e.g. in low-fat spreads.
Gelling agents are used to change the consistency of a
food, e.g. pectin (E440), which is used to make jam.
Thickeners help give food body, e.g. can be found in
most sauces.
Anti-caking agents
Anti-caking agents ensure free movement or flow
of particles, e.g. in dried milk or table salt.
Anti-foaming agents
Anti-foaming agents prevent or disperse
frothing, e.g. in the production of fruit juices.