AGRIS

Data provider:

Icon data provider

CSIRO is Australia's premier science agency with more than 50 sites throughout Australia and overseas. CSIRO's information resources are an essential element of CSIRO's research effort, and an important national resource. Library resources support research work across the organisation as well as providing information for the wider Australian and overseas scientific communities. Library Services manages the library collection, which comprises print and electronic resources.  

Interrupted (Data provider is temporarily inactive and did not submit metadata for at least last calendar year)
Journal Article

Journal Article

Sweeteners for frozen [desserts] success - a review  [1994]

Jana, A.H.; Joshi, N.S.S.; Sharma, A.M. (Gujarat Agricultural Univ., Anand (India). S.M.C. College of Dairy Science);

Access the full text

  • NOT AVAILABLE
Sweeteners have always been an important ingredient in frozen desserts. Their manifold functions include imparting a sweet taste and thus palatability, contribute to the nutritive value, balance the fattiness, provide bulk and body, control ice crystallisation, enable the mix to be whipped and frozen simultaneously by bringing about suitable depression in the freezing point of the mix, enhance the flavour and improve the shelf life of the product. Traditionally sucrose, 36 or 42 DE corn sugar, invert sugar, dextrose and honey have been used extensively. However, increased sucrose prices coupled with quantity limitations in the use of corn sugar plus new technology breakthroughs in corn sugar refining have promoted the frozen dessert manufacturers to consider modifying the sweetener combinations as a cost savings exercise. Nowadays, we find high maltose corn sugar (HMCS), high fructose corn sugar (HFCS) and polyols steadily replacing sucrose in ice cream formulations. Further, the sweetening substitutes are gaining prominence in the formulation of dietetic and diabetic ice creams. The technological properties, sweetness and physiological effects of sugars commonly used in frozen desserts are reviewed in comparison with newer sweeteners such as glucose-fructose syrup, HMCS, HFCS, whey-derived sweeteners, polyols, glycerol, inulin and a few intense sweeteners.
From the journal
Australian Journal of Dairy Technology (Australia)
ISSN : 0004-9433

Bibliographic information

Language:
English
Type:
Summary
In AGRIS since:
1995
Volume:
49
Issue:
2
Start Page:
98
End Page:
109
All titles:
"Sweeteners for frozen [desserts] success - a review"@eng
Other:
"Summary (En)"
"7 tables, 118 ref."
Loading...

Bibliographic information

Language:
English
Type:
Summary
In AGRIS since:
1995
Volume:
49
Issue:
2
Start Page:
98
End Page:
109
All titles:
"Sweeteners for frozen [desserts] success - a review"@eng
Other:
"Summary (En)"
"7 tables, 118 ref."