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Types of Food Additives Needed in a Wholesale Bakery
Bakeries may rely on many of the same additives as other food industries, but several are specific to baking. You can find the majority of these additives in the warehouse of your food ingredient supplier, Bell Chem. Below is a sampling of the most prevalent bakery food additives.
Artificial sweeteners
With the push toward weight loss, many bakeries offer low-sugar or no-sugar products, which require artificial sweeteners, such as aspartame, saccharin, and sucralose. These artificial sweeteners give the same flavor as full-sugar products without an influx of calories.
Emulsifiers
Many baked goods contain water (or a liquid containing a large percentage of water) and oil. Under normal circumstances these two liquids are immiscible. Adding an emulsifier such as carrageenan, a di- or mono-glyceride, or lecithin, quickly combines these within the other ingredients by breaking the surface tension of the liquid ingredients, creating a mixture with improved texture.
Enzymes
Amylase, lipase, and protease are all enzymes that break complex carbohydrates into simple sugars, which expedites the fermentation process while baking. As enzymes break down carbohydrates, the remaining simple sugars feed yeast, an extremely important ingredient in the majority of baked goods. Yeast gives bread the light, fluffy texture and tantalizing odor commonly associated with baked goods.
Food colorings and flavorings
From titanium dioxide to salt, the appearance and taste of baked goods is vitally important. While many colors and flavors were originally natural, many are now produced artificially at a more economical price. Another consideration is the addition of on-trend ingredients, such as caffeine or vitamins, which may impact the overall flavor of baked goods. Flavor enhancers such as bitter blockers and flavor extenders, maskers, and potentiators can recall the original flavor while maintaining the on-trend ingredients.
Preservatives
As the name suggests, preservatives such as calcium and sodium propionate, potassium sorbate, and potassium and sodium benzoate prolong shelf life of baked goods by creating an unstable environment for microorganisms.
For more information on baked goods additives, visit Bell Chem’s News page.
Bell Chem is your food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including bakery food additives. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Safflower Oil Uses Across Industries
Safflower has been a crop for humans longer than almost any other. Initially, safflower’s petals were used as a dye (its Latin name is Carthamus tinctoris), but the oil is today’s safflower star attraction. Bell Chem, your food ingredient supplier, has information pertaining to safflower oil in more than foods, though. This versatile oil has uses across industries.
Food manufacturing
Many salad oils, cooking oils, and margarines rely on safflower oil since it has a neutral taste and a pale yellow coloring that does not detract from the overall color of the products in which it is an ingredient. Chefs appreciate its high smoke point, which gives it use in deep frying where other oils fail.
Cosmetic industry
Safflower oil works extremely well as a moisturizer, with natural vitamin E acting as an antioxidant to protect the surface of the skin from cell-damaging free radicals. In hair care products, lotions, and creams, safflower oil helps maintain elasticity in skin and impedes inflammation with its Omega-6 fatty acid content and tocopherols.
Pharmaceutical uses of safflower
Safflower oil contains an important compound known as conjugated linoleic acid, which may have a role in both weight management and the reduction of adipose. Safflower oil is naturally low in saturated fat and abundant in mono- and polyunsaturated fatty acids, specifically the Omega-6 fatty acid linoleic acid. Its moisturizing properties, including the highly beneficial tocopherol, give safflower oil uses for patients with acne.
Industrial uses
Many oils can be used as the basis of paints, but safflower oil’s ability to maintain a clear, protective coating without yellowing over time gives it top billing. Safflower oil also dries quickly, which is perfect for varnishes and paints.
Petroleum replacement?
In Australia, a private company has created a super-high oleic (SHO) safflower oil with 92% oleic acid. With this level of purity, the product could revolutionize many industries since it creates a superior lubricant with reduced friction, low emissions, and a recyclability for reuse. This SHO safflower oil has the potential to be used in specialty chemicals, fuels, lubricants, and plastics.
Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including safflower oil. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Exploring the Uses of Sodium Acetate in Food Preservation
Sodium acetate is compounded from sodium salt and acetic acid with the formula CH3COONa (or NaC2H3O2). Because both salt and bases play an important role in food preservation, sodium acetate packs a double punch. Food additive supplier Bell Chem presents the following information on food preservation with sodium acetate.
Good flavor, little odor
Sodium acetate imparts a salty taste to foods, which is to be expected since it contains sodium. However, its odor is close to discernible when added as an ingredient, giving the foods in which they are an ingredient a more recognizable odor. The flavor is positive for taste as well as preservation; salt has been recognized as a food preservative for millennia.
pH adjustment
Many foods may waver on the acidic side of the pH scale, which can lead to problems in processing, taste, and/or stability. The addition of a buffer such as sodium acetate will stabilize the pH into the correct range for the food or beverage in which it is an ingredient.
Bacteria prevention
Foods and beverages with bacterial cultivation have extremely short shelf lives. Sodium acetate prevents the formation of bacteria and other microorganisms on edibles. In fact, sodium acetate has proven vital for the prevention of bacteria such as dihydrogen sulfate populations, Enterobacteriaceae, lactic acid bacteria, and Pseudomonas species.
Good value for your money
Sodium acetate is an inexpensive answer to extending shelf life. Studies have proven the addition of this ingredient extends shelf life 4-7 days longer than products not containing sodium acetate because it disturbs both the enzymatic and chemical reactions that lead to microbial growth.
Bell Chem is a food additive supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including sodium acetate. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Exploring the Role of Microcrystalline Cellulose in Food Technology
If you take cellulose and remove one segment of the molecule chemically, you create microcrystalline cellulose (MCC). Crushed into an extremely fine powder of differing grain size, MCC gathers numbers to its initials: 101, 102, 103, et cetera. These numbers signify varying grades of crystallinity, density, capacity to hold water, and other factors.
MCC is added to products from vegetarian burgers to the buns that cover them. Food ingredient supplier Bell Chem wants to give you a better idea of how microcrystalline cellulose can become part of your food technology.
MCC as a texturizer
Unlike other fibers added as an ingredient, MCC does not impart a “grit” many consumers find unpalatable in their foods such as frozen yogurt and beverages such as protein shakes.
So many foods are pre-packaged now, and the struggle to maintain those foods for extended shelf lives have led to many positive changes. Microcrystalline cellulose answers the pressing question of how to absorb excess water in packaged foods since it quickly captures water molecules, keeping them from caking the foods they infiltrate. Packages purchased on the 75th day maintain the same texture as on the first day.
MCC as a fat replacer
In whipped products, such as cream or yogurt, MCC adds volume. This usually comes at the expense of increased fat, which manufacturers appreciate since their products are able to be labeled as “low fat” or “reduced fat.”
As a rule, fat adds bulk and satisfaction to many foods. MCC fills this role by replacing fat with no caloric increase, aerating the foods in the same manner as fats. Unlike fats, MCC naturally passes through the body undigested leaving no caloric trace. MCC has a starring role in diet and low-calorie foods and beverages for this reason, maintaining the overall volume of a product while reducing fat consumption by up to 50%.
MCC as a bulking agent
Cellulose is a natural plant fiber that supplements the bulk of products without altering their flavor. MCC is frequently added to sauces and other products where increased viscosity is necessary. When added to water, MCC expands greatly, stabilizing the surrounding ingredients as the overall food or beverage is thickened. Liquids are quickly emulsified, stabilizing them in the mix rather than separating and floating to the surface.
Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including microcrystalline cellulose. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Tackling Food Waste: Solutions for Extending Shelf Life
Food waste and climate change are more intricately connected than you might imagine. In fact, the United Nations has listed lowering the amount of food waste as one of its 17 Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, noting that approximately 17% to 33% of all food is wasted. This leads to more than landfill fodder. Decaying food produces methane, which contributes between 10% and 17% of the overall total of greenhouse gas emissions. Bell Chem recognizes the role food additives play in prolonging shelf life, which leads to less food wasted. Your food additive supplier has the following inventory to sustain our foods – and our planet.
How can oxygen be harmful?
Think about an old car left to the elements. Your brain probably immediately noted the rust on the car. Rust is the transformation of iron in the presence of oxygen, which produces iron oxide. Oxygen has this same negative effect on many food items as well. However, vitamins C and E, as well as beta carotene, are natural antioxidants that keep oxygen from discoloring and removing flavor from foods.
Meat and poultry are positively influenced by green tea extracts and rosemary, which enhance the appearance, quality, and taste of meats through their high percentage of phenolic compounds. These compounds double as powerful antioxidants.
Fermentation
Centuries of fermented foods have proven how well vinegar (acetic acid) maintains food’s shelf life. Acetic acid is inexpensive, well studied, and used worldwide.
Simple salts
Sodium chloride, or table salt, is more than a flavor enhancer. It acts as a preserver, changing the environment so drastically via a change in osmotic pressure that microbes lose water through their thin membranes until they are completely desiccated.
Potassium chloride performs the same role, and these salts are often used concurrently as a brine solution. Salts are often added to meat where they preserve, improve the mouthfeel of the food, and lock in water.
Organic acid salts
Organic acids, such as propionic acid, lactic acid, and acetic acid, inhibit microbe and pathogen growth by lowering the overall pH of food products. While foods can exist in this environment, pathogens cannot.
Bell Chem is a food additive supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including CSANTM sanitation products. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Food Additives: Debunking Myths and Exploring Benefits for Food Producers
Unless your main source of food is your backyard garden, chances are that your food contains food additives. Food ingredient supplier Bell Chem wishes to shed light on food additives, since the vast majority enhance food and beverage flavor, safety, stability, shelf life, and so many other factors we find make foods palatable. Let’s examine different categories of food additives to learn how they improve what we consume.
Antioxidants
Oxidation of many foods causes spoilage. Fats and oils are especially prone to becoming rancid when exposed to oxygen. The addition of antioxidants hinders this reaction, which prolongs shelf life.
Colorings
Would you eat butter if it was white? Butter produced with a high milk fat content has a naturally yellow color, but commercial dairy cows generally have a lower milkfat and higher output of milk. One batch of milk may differ in color from another, which leads many manufacturers to add a colorant to the butter so all their product appears one shade of yellow.
Flavorings
A major food additive that enhances flavor is salt. This spice increases the amount of other flavors in a mix, which is why cakes and cookies contain a small amount of salt in every mix.
Many health-conscious individuals, as well as those who suffer from diabetes, must watch their sugar intake closely. Artificial sweeteners satisfy sweet cravings without the unwanted sugar spike of granulated sugar.
Flavorings that occur naturally in some foods may be added to other foods to enhance the flavor. For instance, a natural fruit flavoring may be added to organic cereal. This flavoring is organic and natural while still being a food additive.
Preservatives
Imagine a store shelf full of fresh bread. Imagine running out of bread in the middle of the day because you did not want to overstock or, on the other hand, the next day throwing out half your inventory. Preservatives inhibit the growth of mold, bacteria, and other dangerous microorganisms that consume your products before the end-user does. Without preservatives, most of the food in grocery stores would be inedible.
Stabilizers
During manufacture, ingredients must be carefully measured and mixed so one bite tastes distinctly like the next. Stabilizers, such as emulsifiers, maintain a steady amount of mixture without separation into individual ingredients. Anti-caking additives absorb liquid to keep mixes from becoming lumpy while foaming agents maintain the fluffiness of whipped cream.
Remember, foods and beverages in grocery stores face careful scrutiny by the Food and Drug Administration. All food additives are tested, monitored, and controlled. Another thought to keep in mind is the word chemical. Most people associate this word with danger, but everything you see, touch, smell, and taste is composed of chemicals. Very few chemical combinations are truly life-threatening, and the FDA would prohibit their use in foods.
Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including chemical additives. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
What You Need to Know About Monosodium Phosphate
Monosodium phosphate (MSP) has a variety of aliases, including monosodium orthophosphate, sodium acid phosphate, sodium biphosphate, sodium dihydrogen phosphate, sodium phosphate monobasic, NaH2PO4, and H2NaO4P. Generally packaged as a white granular solid or powder, MSP acts as an acid regulator, nutrient supplement, and sequestrant. Read more about monosodium phosphate from your food ingredient supplier, Bell Chem.
Monosodium phosphate is a water soluble white powder derived from phosphoric acid as a sodium salt. Its main uses include as an emulsifier and a buffering agent. In these capacities, it is often utilized in the following industries.
Agriculture
Animal feed often contains MSP as an ingredient because it provides large and domestic animals an inexpensive source of sodium and phosphorus, two important chemicals that regulate the body. Granular monosodium phosphate acts as a crop fertilizer proving plants need these ingredients as much as animals.
Chemical industry
With its superior buffering ability, monosodium phosphate is found in millions of labs as a biological, biochemical, and chromatographic reagent.
Food and beverage
When the pH levels in food are too basic or acidic, chemical processes do not perform as intended. This can lead to idiosyncrasies ranging from odd tastes to microbial growth. Monosodium phosphate adjusts the pH of products by acting as a buffer, which increases shelf life. In dairy products, monosodium phosphate increases the solubility of proteins, sequesters calcium ions to capture water molecules, and increases fat emulsification.
Many dry mixes contain monosodium phosphate as a thickener, adding viscosity to stews and instant potatoes. As a salt, MSP is used as a cure for dried meats; surprisingly, it also sequesters water to maintain moisture within the meats as it deters spoilage through microbial growth. Much like baking soda or yeast, monosodium phosphate is a leavening agent, producing a gas inside baked goods to make dough rise.
Industrial cleaning
Monosodium phosphate acts as a cleaning detergent in many industrial chemical cleaners.
Textile manufacturing
In textiles, monosodium phosphate buffers acidic conditions to increase reactions of acid dyeing of fibers as well as dye printing.
Metal surfaces coated with monosodium phosphate form an insoluble metal phosphate which deters corrosion, protects the finish, improves metal hardness, and increases electrical properties. If a metal surface is to be painted, monosodium phosphate increases the adhesion of paint.
Water treatment
Its ability to buffer gives monosodium phosphate a starring role in water treatment as a corrosion controller. When it is paired with polyphosphates, it also obstructs scale formation. Other water treatment chemicals are based directly from monosodium phosphate.
Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including monosodium phosphate. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Where Sorbitol Comes from and How It’s Used
Sorbitol, also known as glucitol, naturally occurs in many stone fruits, such as apricots, peaches, and nectarines. It can also be extracted from apples and berries. Laboratories synthesize glucose to produce sorbitol, and manufacturers find glucose from corn, which contains almost 100% glucose, to be the ultimate source for sorbitol.
What exactly is sorbitol, then, and why would manufacturers go through the trouble of converting corn glucose to sorbitol? Food ingredient supplier Bell Chem can answer that question and tell you how this important sweetener is used across industries.
Health and wellness
Patients with diabetes find sorbitol gives them the taste they crave without sugar alcohol being fully absorbed in the digestive system. In fact, only 50%-80% of sorbitol is absorbed independent of insulin to be converted to glycogen in the liver, and over 100 years of studies on sorbitol prove its efficiency for diabetic patients. Sorbitol does not spike blood sugar levels since lower levels of insulin are secreted by the liver.
Sorbitol can also be used topically. The surfactant power of sorbitol loosens debris from the scalp while its water solubility wicks that debris away. As a humectant, sorbitol can also maintain a proper level of moisture when added to shampoo, conditioner, or other hair care products.
Pharmaceuticals
The majority of pharmaceutical tablets contain sorbitol as an ingredient, and many over-the-counter medications rely on sorbitol’s sweet flavor.
Table sugar causes dental cavities. The Food and Drug Administration has deemed sorbitol beneficial since it is not metabolized by oral bacteria; therefore, bacteria are unable to survive and form cavities. When added to toothpaste and other oral pharmaceuticals, sorbitol leaves the mouth feeling fresh.
The epidermis is a physical barrier, protecting our internal organs from environmental harm. When sorbitol is applied externally, skin is more quickly repaired as moisture is maintained.
Foods and beverages
As a sugar alcohol, sorbitol’s lower caloric value (approximately 2.6 calories per gram) gives it a starring role in low-calorie and sugar-free foods, specifically chewing gum.
In packaged foods and confections, sorbitol acts as a humectant and preservative, retaining moisture as it repels bacterial growth. As an ingredient, sorbitol balances the varied flavors within foods, giving a much more harmonized flavor.
Polyurethane manufacturing
As a polyol alcohol with multiple hydroxyl groups, sorbitol is one of polyurethane’s raw materials. In fact, sorbitol is considered a green product since it is a sustainable biological resource. Its rigidity and high performance are prized in the polyurethane industry and sorbitol is used in imitation wood products, heat insulators, packaging, and flotation devices.
When you’re ready to order sorbitol for your business, give us a call and we will fill your order rapidly and accurately. Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including sorbitol. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
Understanding the Uses of Dextrose in Food Production
For quick energy, manufacturers turn to dextrose, a monosaccharide often found in performance bars and energy beverages. Dextrose can be derived from many plants, but is primarily pulled from grains, and most specifically corn starch where it is abundant. Once it is dried and/or crystallized, it is generally sold as a powder of liquid. Learn more about dextrose’s many uses in food production and order yours from your food ingredient supplier, Bell Chem, today.
Blood sugar and dextrose
With a glycemic index of 100, dextrose rapidly increases blood sugar levels and, because it is a type of glucose produced outside the body, it can be utilized to produce ATP, the most abundant form of energy within the body’s cells. In the liver glucose is regularly produced when hormones determine levels of blood sugar have dropped. Being chemically identical to glucose, dextrose fills that role when the liver is unable to do so. This rapid blood sugar boost stimulates muscles in short bursts, giving sprinters and power lifters the quick energy necessary to perform. Dextrose is also a go-to ingredient in energy gels, which are popular in endurance running, cycling, or training.
High energy, low sweetening
Most consumers believe sugar has an extremely sweet flavor, but dextrose has a naturally low level of sweetness, giving it a starring role in protein shakes, power bars, desserts, and baked products.
The preservative power of dextrose
Along with its quick energy boost, dextrose has another use: it extends the shelf-life of packaged foods, such as jams and jellies, by deterring the growth of yeast, mold, bacteria, and other microbes.
When added to candy, ice cream, and syrup, dextrose impedes crystallization and caking. Producers appreciate this reaction since foods last longer on the shelf in stores and in consumers’ homes. Consumers enjoy the mouthfeel of products containing dextrose since it imparts the same texture and taste with every bite.
The invisible sugar
When added to water, dextrose quickly and evenly dissolves, becoming virtually invisible due to its low turbidity while only imparting a hint of sugary taste. Savory foods often have a high salt content, and dextrose balances the salt with a hint of sweet.
Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including dextrose. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.
How Different Oils are Used in the Food Industry
Many professional chefs and food industry experts recognize the importance of using a specific oil to bring out the best flavor in their foods. Bell Chem, your food ingredient supplier, has the inside scoop on how oils are utilized within the food industry.
CANOLA OIL
Manufacturers find canola oil is more often listed as an ingredient on packaged margarines and shortenings than any other oil. Look for canola oil in salad dressings and baked goods. Since it has a reputation as being heart healthy, many manufacturers reach for canola oil with the aim of enticing today’s more health-conscious consumer into purchasing their products. Engineered and primarily generated in Canada, it is the most popular oil utilized in Canada and the second most popular oil in the United States.
FLAXSEED OIL
A perennial with blue flowers, flaxseed grows in the Great Plains in North America and is one of the primary grains consumed by humanity throughout history. In modern times, flaxseed’s mild taste can be added to viscous beverages to add Omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, and fiber. Add vinegar to flaxseed oil for a great salad dressing, or use flaxseed oil as a marinade while processing meat into sandwich ham or beef jerky.
SUNFLOWER OIL
The benefits of sunflower oil include a high smoke point, making it perfect for frying; an extended shelf life when added as an ingredient in foods compared to other oils; and a good base for salad dressings and marinades. Because sunflower oil is a monounsaturated fat, it is often added to high-protein foods, such as protein bars and meal replacement foods, to extend shelf life. Consumers appreciate sunflower oil’s heart healthy benefits due to its elevated amount of linoleic acid.
WHITE MINERAL OIL
Highly refined white mineral oil is colorless, odorless, and tasteless. Even better, it is antibacterial. Used in the process of frying foods, white mineral oil is also a component in the wrapping paper of perishable foods to keep them crisp. It also controls foaming during the production of vinegar.
White mineral oil also has uses outside of foods. The lubricant of choice in the food and beverage industry contains white mineral oil since it is compatible with greases and oils in machinery as well as food. White mineral oil has another important quality as well. It oxidizes very slowly, which makes it ideal for seasoning wood and metal cutting utensils and cutting boards.
Bell Chem is a food ingredient supplier based in Longwood, FL (just north of Orlando) with hundreds of products stocked in their 50,000+ square-foot warehouse, including a variety of high-quality food-grade oils. You can expect the highest quality products, expedited shipping options for maximum efficiency, and unrivaled personalized customer service. Let our knowledgeable and friendly customer service representatives and accounting staff personalize all your needs by either calling 407-339-BELL (2355) or by sending us an online message.