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Wikipedia

Sugar

Sugar is the generic name for sweet-tasting, soluble carbohydrates, many of which are used in food. Simple sugars, also called monosaccharides, include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Compound sugars, also called disaccharides or double sugars, are molecules made of two bonded monosaccharides; common examples are sucrose (glucose + fructose), lactose (glucose + galactose), and maltose (two molecules of glucose). White sugar is a refined form of sucrose. In the body, compound sugars are hydrolysed into simple sugars.

Sugars (clockwise from top-left): white refined, unrefined, unprocessed cane, brown
German sugar sculpture, 1880

Longer chains of monosaccharides (>2) are not regarded as sugars, and are called oligosaccharides or polysaccharides. Starch is a glucose polymer found in plants, the most abundant source of energy in human food. Some other chemical substances, such as glycerol and sugar alcohols, may have a sweet taste, but are not classified as sugar.

Sugars are found in the tissues of most plants. Honey and fruits are abundant natural sources of simple sugars. Sucrose is especially concentrated in sugarcane and sugar beet, making them ideal for efficient commercial extraction to make refined sugar. In 2016, the combined world production of those two crops was about two billion tonnes. Maltose may be produced by malting grain. Lactose is the only sugar that cannot be extracted from plants. It can only be found in milk, including human breast milk, and in some dairy products. A cheap source of sugar is corn syrup, industrially produced by converting corn starch into sugars, such as maltose, fructose and glucose.

Sucrose is used in prepared foods (e.g. cookies and cakes), is sometimes added to commercially available processed food and beverages, and may be used by people as a sweetener for foods (e.g. toast and cereal) and beverages (e.g. coffee and tea). The average person consumes about 24 kilograms (53 pounds) of sugar each year, with North and South Americans consuming up to 50 kg (110 lb) and Africans consuming under 20 kg (44 lb).[1]

As sugar consumption grew in the latter part of the 20th century, researchers began to examine whether a diet high in sugar, especially refined sugar, was damaging to human health. Excessive consumption of sugar has been implicated in the onset of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and tooth decay. Numerous studies have tried to clarify those implications, but with varying results, mainly because of the difficulty of finding populations for use as controls that consume little or no sugar. In 2015, the World Health Organization strongly recommended that adults and children reduce their intake of free sugars to less than 10%, and encouraged a reduction to below 5%, of their total energy intake.[2]

Etymology

The etymology reflects the spread of the commodity. From Sanskrit (śarkarā), meaning "ground or candied sugar", came Persian shakar, then to 12th century French sucre and the English sugar.[3]

The English word jaggery, a coarse brown sugar made from date palm sap or sugarcane juice, has a similar etymological origin: Portuguese jágara from the Malayalam cakkarā, which is from the Sanskrit śarkarā.[4]

History

Ancient world to Renaissance

 
Sugar cane plantation

Asia

Sugar has been produced in the Indian subcontinent[5] since ancient times and its cultivation spread from there into modern-day Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass.[6] It was not plentiful or cheap in early times, and in most parts of the world, honey was more often used for sweetening.[7] Originally, people chewed raw sugarcane to extract its sweetness. Even after refined sugarcane became more widely available during the European colonial era,[8] palm sugar was preferred in Java and other sugar producing parts of southeast Asia, and along with coconut sugar, is still used locally to make desserts today.[9][10]

Sugarcane is native of tropical areas such as the Indian subcontinent (South Asia) and Southeast Asia.[5][11] Different species seem to have originated from different locations with Saccharum barberi originating in India and S. edule and S. officinarum coming from New Guinea.[11][12] One of the earliest historical references to sugarcane is in Chinese manuscripts dating to 8th century BCE, which state that the use of sugarcane originated in India.[13]

In the tradition of Indian medicine (āyurveda), the sugarcane is known by the name Ikṣu and the sugarcane juice is known as Phāṇita. Its varieties, synonyms and characteristics are defined in nighaṇṭus such as the Bhāvaprakāśa (1.6.23, group of sugarcanes).[14] Sugar remained relatively unimportant until the Indians discovered methods of turning sugarcane juice into granulated crystals that were easier to store and to transport.[15] Crystallized sugar was discovered by the time of the Imperial Guptas, around the 5th century CE.[15] In the local Indian language, these crystals were called khanda (Devanagari: खण्ड, Khaṇḍa), which is the source of the word candy.[16] Indian sailors, who carried clarified butter and sugar as supplies, introduced knowledge of sugar along the various trade routes they travelled.[15] Traveling Buddhist monks took sugar crystallization methods to China.[17] During the reign of Harsha (r. 606–647) in North India, Indian envoys in Tang China taught methods of cultivating sugarcane after Emperor Taizong of Tang (r. 626–649) made known his interest in sugar. China established its first sugarcane plantations in the seventh century.[18] Chinese documents confirm at least two missions to India, initiated in 647 CE, to obtain technology for sugar refining.[19] In the Indian subcontinent,[5] the Middle East and China, sugar became a staple of cooking and desserts.

Europe

 
Two elaborate sugar triomfi of goddesses for a dinner given by the Earl of Castlemaine, British Ambassador in Rome, 1687

Nearchus, admiral of Alexander of Macedonia, knew of sugar during the year 325 BC, because of his participation in the campaign of India led by Alexander (Arrian, Anabasis).[20][21] The Greek physician Pedanius Dioscorides in the 1st century CE described sugar in his medical treatise De Materia Medica,[22] and Pliny the Elder, a 1st-century CE Roman, described sugar in his Natural History: "Sugar is made in Arabia as well, but Indian sugar is better. It is a kind of honey found in cane, white as gum, and it crunches between the teeth. It comes in lumps the size of a hazelnut. Sugar is used only for medical purposes."[23] Crusaders brought sugar back to Europe after their campaigns in the Holy Land, where they encountered caravans carrying "sweet salt". Early in the 12th century, Venice acquired some villages near Tyre and set up estates to produce sugar for export to Europe. It supplemented the use of honey, which had previously been the only available sweetener.[24] Crusade chronicler William of Tyre, writing in the late 12th century, described sugar as "very necessary for the use and health of mankind".[25] In the 15th century, Venice was the chief sugar refining and distribution center in Europe.[13]

There was a drastic change in the mid-15th century, when Madeira and the Canary Islands were settled from Europe and sugar introduced there.[26][27] After this an "all-consuming passion for sugar ... swept through society" as it became far more easily available, though initially still very expensive.[28] By 1492, Madeira was producing over 1,400,000 kilograms (3,000,000 lb) of sugar annually.[29] Genoa, one of the centers of distribution, became known for candied fruit, while Venice specialized in pastries, sweets (candies), and sugar sculptures. Sugar was considered to have "valuable medicinal properties" as a "warm" food under prevailing categories, being "helpful to the stomach, to cure cold diseases, and sooth lung complaints".[30]

A feast given in Tours in 1457 by Gaston de Foix, which is "probably the best and most complete account we have of a late medieval banquet" includes the first mention of sugar sculptures, as the final food brought in was "a heraldic menagerie sculpted in sugar: lions, stags, monkeys ... each holding in paw or beak the arms of the Hungarian king".[31] Other recorded grand feasts in the decades following included similar pieces.[32] Originally the sculptures seem to have been eaten in the meal, but later they become merely table decorations, the most elaborate called triomfi. Several significant sculptors are known to have produced them; in some cases their preliminary drawings survive. Early ones were in brown sugar, partly cast in molds, with the final touches carved. They continued to be used until at least the Coronation Banquet for Edward VII of the United Kingdom in 1903; among other sculptures every guest was given a sugar crown to take away.[33]

Modern history

 
Close-up image of sugar cane; demand for sugar contributed to creating colonial systems in areas where cultivation of sugar cane was profitable.
 
Hacienda La Fortuna. A sugar mill complex in Puerto Rico, painted by Francisco Oller in 1885, Brooklyn Museum

In August 1492, Christopher Columbus collected sugar cane samples in La Gomera in the Canary Islands, and introduced it to the New World.[34] The cuttings were planted and the first sugar-cane harvest in Hispaniola took place in 1501. Many sugar mills had been constructed in Cuba and Jamaica by the 1520s.[35] The Portuguese took sugar cane to Brazil. By 1540, there were 800 cane-sugar mills in Santa Catarina Island and another 2,000 on the north coast of Brazil, Demarara, and Surinam. It took until 1600 for Brazilian sugar production to exceed that of São Tomé, which was the main center of sugar production in sixteenth century.[27]

 
 
German chemists Andreas Sigismund Marggraf (left) and Franz Karl Achard (right) both laid the foundation of the modern sugar industry.

Sugar was a luxury in Europe until the early 19th century, when it became more widely available, due to the rise of beet sugar in Prussia, and later in France under Napoleon.[36] Beet sugar was a German invention, since, in 1747, Andreas Sigismund Marggraf announced the discovery of sugar in beets and devised a method using alcohol to extract it.[37] Marggraf's student, Franz Karl Achard, devised an economical industrial method to extract the sugar in its pure form in the late 18th century.[38][39] Achard first produced beet sugar in 1783 in Kaulsdorf, and in 1801, the world's first beet sugar production facility was established in Cunern, Silesia (then part of Prussia, now Poland).[40] The works of Marggraf and Achard were the starting point for the sugar industry in Europe,[41] and for the modern sugar industry in general, since sugar was no longer a luxury product and a product almost only produced in warmer climates.[42]

Sugar became highly popular and by the 19th century, was found in every household. This evolution of taste and demand for sugar as an essential food ingredient resulted in major economic and social changes.[43] Demand drove, in part, the colonization of tropical islands and areas where labor-intensive sugarcane plantations and sugar manufacturing facilities could be successful.[43] World consumption increased more than 100 times from 1850 to 2000, led by Britain, where it increased from about 2 pounds per head per year in 1650 to 90 pounds by the early 20th century. In the late 18th century Britain consumed about half the sugar which reached Europe.[44]

After slavery was abolished, the demand for workers in European colonies in the Caribbean was filled by indentured laborers from the Indian subcontinent.[45][46][47] Millions of enslaved or indentured laborers were brought to various European colonies in the Americas, Africa and Asia (as a result of demand in Europe for among other commodities, sugar), influencing the ethnic mixture of numerous nations around the globe.[48][49][50]

Sugar also led to some industrialization of areas where sugar cane was grown. For example, in the 1790s Lieutenant J. Paterson, of the Bengal Presidency promoted to the British parliament the idea that sugar cane could grow in British India, where it had started, with many advantages and at less expense than in the West Indies. As a result, sugar factories were established in Bihar in eastern India.[51][52] During the Napoleonic Wars, sugar-beet production increased in continental Europe because of the difficulty of importing sugar when shipping was subject to blockade. By 1880 the sugar beet was the main source of sugar in Europe. It was also cultivated in Lincolnshire and other parts of England, although the United Kingdom continued to import the main part of its sugar from its colonies.[53]

Until the late nineteenth century, sugar was purchased in loaves, which had to be cut using implements called sugar nips.[54] In later years, granulated sugar was more usually sold in bags. Sugar cubes were produced in the nineteenth century. The first inventor of a process to produce sugar in cube form was Jakob Christof Rad, director of a sugar refinery in Dačice. In 1841, he produced the first sugar cube in the world.[55] He began sugar-cube production after being granted a five-year patent for the process on 23 January 1843. Henry Tate of Tate & Lyle was another early manufacturer of sugar cubes at his refineries in Liverpool and London. Tate purchased a patent for sugar-cube manufacture from German Eugen Langen, who in 1872 had invented a different method of processing of sugar cubes.[56]

Sugar was rationed during World War I, though it was said that "No previous war in history has been fought so largely on sugar and so little on alcohol",[57] and more sharply during World War II.[58][59][60][61][62] Rationing led to the development and use of various artificial sweeteners.[58][63]

Chemistry

 
Sucrose: a disaccharide of glucose (left) and fructose (right), important molecules in the body.

Scientifically, sugar loosely refers to a number of carbohydrates, such as monosaccharides, disaccharides, or oligosaccharides. Monosaccharides are also called "simple sugars", the most important being glucose. Most monosaccharides have a formula that conforms to C
n
H
2n
O
n
with n between 3 and 7 (deoxyribose being an exception). Glucose has the molecular formula C
6
H
12
O
6
. The names of typical sugars end with -ose, as in "glucose" and "fructose". Sometimes such words may also refer to any types of carbohydrates soluble in water. The acyclic mono- and disaccharides contain either aldehyde groups or ketone groups. These carbon-oxygen double bonds (C=O) are the reactive centers. All saccharides with more than one ring in their structure result from two or more monosaccharides joined by glycosidic bonds with the resultant loss of a molecule of water (H
2
O
) per bond.[64]

Monosaccharides in a closed-chain form can form glycosidic bonds with other monosaccharides, creating disaccharides (such as sucrose) and polysaccharides (such as starch or cellulose). Enzymes must hydrolyze or otherwise break these glycosidic bonds before such compounds become metabolized. After digestion and absorption the principal monosaccharides present in the blood and internal tissues include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Many pentoses and hexoses can form ring structures. In these closed-chain forms, the aldehyde or ketone group remains non-free, so many of the reactions typical of these groups cannot occur. Glucose in solution exists mostly in the ring form at equilibrium, with less than 0.1% of the molecules in the open-chain form.[64]

In November 2019, scientists reported detecting, for the first time, sugar molecules, including ribose, in meteorites, suggesting that chemical processes on asteroids can produce some fundamentally essential bio-ingredients important to life, and supporting the notion of an RNA World prior to a DNA-based origin of life on Earth, and possibly, as well, the notion of panspermia.[65][66]

Natural polymers

Biopolymers of sugars are common in nature. Through photosynthesis, plants produce glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P), a phosphated 3-carbon sugar that is used by the cell to make monosaccharides such as glucose (C
6
H
12
O
6
) or (as in cane and beet) sucrose (C
12
H
22
O
11
). Monosaccharides may be further converted into structural polysaccharides such as cellulose and pectin for cell wall construction or into energy reserves in the form of storage polysaccharides such as starch or inulin. Starch, consisting of two different polymers of glucose, is a readily degradable form of chemical energy stored by cells, and can be converted to other types of energy.[64] Another polymer of glucose is cellulose, which is a linear chain composed of several hundred or thousand glucose units. It is used by plants as a structural component in their cell walls. Humans can digest cellulose only to a very limited extent, though ruminants can do so with the help of symbiotic bacteria in their gut.[67] DNA and RNA are built up of the monosaccharides deoxyribose and ribose, respectively. Deoxyribose has the formula C
5
H
10
O
4
and ribose the formula C
5
H
10
O
5
.[68]

Flammability and heat response

 
Magnification of grains of refined sucrose, the most common free sugar.

Because sugars burn easily when exposed to flame, the handling of sugars risks dust explosion. The risk of explosion is higher when the sugar has been milled to superfine texture, such as for use in chewing gum.[69] The 2008 Georgia sugar refinery explosion, which killed 14 people and injured 36, and destroyed most of the refinery, was caused by the ignition of sugar dust.[70]

In its culinary use, exposing sugar to heat causes caramelization. As the process occurs, volatile chemicals such as diacetyl are released, producing the characteristic caramel flavor.[71]

Types

Monosaccharides

Fructose, galactose, and glucose are all simple sugars, monosaccharides, with the general formula C6H12O6. They have five hydroxyl groups (−OH) and a carbonyl group (C=O) and are cyclic when dissolved in water. They each exist as several isomers with dextro- and laevo-rotatory forms that cause polarized light to diverge to the right or the left.[72]

  • Fructose, or fruit sugar, occurs naturally in fruits, some root vegetables, cane sugar and honey and is the sweetest of the sugars. It is one of the components of sucrose or table sugar. It is used as a high-fructose syrup, which is manufactured from hydrolyzed corn starch that has been processed to yield corn syrup, with enzymes then added to convert part of the glucose into fructose.[73]
  • Galactose generally does not occur in the free state but is a constituent with glucose of the disaccharide lactose or milk sugar. It is less sweet than glucose. It is a component of the antigens found on the surface of red blood cells that determine blood groups.[74]
  • Glucose occurs naturally in fruits and plant juices and is the primary product of photosynthesis. Starch is converted into glucose during digestion, and glucose is the form of sugar that is transported around the bodies of animals in the bloodstream. Although in principle there are two enantiomers of glucose (mirror images one of the other), naturally occurring glucose is D-glucose. This is also called dextrose, or grape sugar because drying grape juice produces crystals of dextrose that can be sieved from the other components.[75] Glucose syrup is a liquid form of glucose that is widely used in the manufacture of foodstuffs. It can be manufactured from starch by enzymatic hydrolysis.[76] For example, corn syrup, which is produced commercially by breaking down maize starch, is one common source of purified dextrose.[77] However, dextrose is naturally present in many unprocessed, whole foods, including honey and fruits such as grapes.[78]

Disaccharides

Lactose, maltose, and sucrose are all compound sugars, disaccharides, with the general formula C12H22O11. They are formed by the combination of two monosaccharide molecules with the exclusion of a molecule of water.[72]

  • Lactose is the naturally occurring sugar found in milk. A molecule of lactose is formed by the combination of a molecule of galactose with a molecule of glucose. It is broken down when consumed into its constituent parts by the enzyme lactase during digestion. Children have this enzyme but some adults no longer form it and they are unable to digest lactose.[79]
  • Maltose is formed during the germination of certain grains, the most notable being barley, which is converted into malt, the source of the sugar's name. A molecule of maltose is formed by the combination of two molecules of glucose. It is less sweet than glucose, fructose or sucrose.[72] It is formed in the body during the digestion of starch by the enzyme amylase and is itself broken down during digestion by the enzyme maltase.[80]
  • Sucrose is found in the stems of sugarcane and roots of sugar beet. It also occurs naturally alongside fructose and glucose in other plants, in particular fruits and some roots such as carrots. The different proportions of sugars found in these foods determines the range of sweetness experienced when eating them.[72] A molecule of sucrose is formed by the combination of a molecule of glucose with a molecule of fructose. After being eaten, sucrose is split into its constituent parts during digestion by a number of enzymes known as sucrases.[81]

Sources

The sugar contents of common fruits and vegetables are presented in Table 1.

Table 1. Sugar content of selected common plant foods (g/100g)[82]
Food item Total
carbohydrateA
including
dietary fiber
Total
sugars
Free
fructose
Free
glucose
Sucrose Fructose/
(Fructose+Glucose)
ratioB
Sucrose
as a % of
total sugars
Fruits              
Apple 13.8 10.4 5.9 2.4 2.1 0.67 20
Apricot 11.1 9.2 0.9 2.4 5.9 0.42 64
Banana 22.8 12.2 4.9 5.0 2.4 0.5 20
Fig, dried 63.9 47.9 22.9 24.8 0.9 0.48 1.9
Grapes 18.1 15.5 8.1 7.2 0.2 0.53 1
Navel orange 12.5 8.5 2.25 2.0 4.3 0.51 51
Peach 9.5 8.4 1.5 2.0 4.8 0.47 57
Pear 15.5 9.8 6.2 2.8 0.8 0.67 8
Pineapple 13.1 9.9 2.1 1.7 6.0 0.52 61
Plum 11.4 9.9 3.1 5.1 1.6 0.40 16
Strawberry 7.68 4.89 2.441 1.99 0.47 0.55 10
Vegetables              
Beet, red 9.6 6.8 0.1 0.1 6.5 0.50 96
Carrot 9.6 4.7 0.6 0.6 3.6 0.50 77
Corn, sweet 19.0 6.2 1.9 3.4 0.9 0.38 15
Red pepper, sweet 6.0 4.2 2.3 1.9 0.0 0.55 0
Onion, sweet 7.6 5.0 2.0 2.3 0.7 0.47 14
Sweet potato 20.1 4.2 0.7 1.0 2.5 0.47 60
Yam 27.9 0.5 tr tr tr na tr
Sugar cane 13–18 0.2–1.0 0.2–1.0 11–16 0.50 high
Sugar beet 17–18 0.1–0.5 0.1–0.5 16–17 0.50 high
^A The carbohydrate figure is calculated in the USDA database and does not always correspond to the sum of the sugars, the starch, and the dietary fiber.
^B The fructose to fructose plus glucose ratio is calculated by including the fructose and glucose coming from the sucrose.

Production

Due to rising demand, sugar production in general increased some 14% over the period 2009 to 2018.[83] The largest importers were China, Indonesia, and the United States.[83]

Sugarcane

Sugarcane production – 2020
Country Millions of tonnes
  Brazil 757.1
  India 370.5
  China 108.1
  Thailand 75.0
World 1,870
Source: FAOSTAT, United Nations[84]

Global production of sugarcane in 2020 was 1.9 billion tonnes, with Brazil producing 40% of the world total and India 20% (table).

Sugarcane refers to any of several species, or their hybrids, of giant grasses in the genus Saccharum in the family Poaceae. They have been cultivated in tropical climates in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia over centuries for the sucrose found in their stems.[5] A great expansion in sugarcane production took place in the 18th century with the establishment of slave plantations in the Americas. The use of slavery for the labor-intensive process resulted in sugar production, enabling prices cheap enough for most people to buy. Mechanization reduced some labor needs, but in the 21st century, cultivation and production relied on low-wage laborers.

 
World production of raw sugar, main producers[85]

Sugar cane requires a frost-free climate with sufficient rainfall during the growing season to make full use of the plant's substantial growth potential. The crop is harvested mechanically or by hand, chopped into lengths and conveyed rapidly to the processing plant (commonly known as a sugar mill) where it is either milled and the juice extracted with water or extracted by diffusion.[86] The juice is clarified with lime and heated to destroy enzymes. The resulting thin syrup is concentrated in a series of evaporators, after which further water is removed. The resulting supersaturated solution is seeded with sugar crystals, facilitating crystal formation and drying.[86] Molasses is a by-product of the process and the fiber from the stems, known as bagasse,[86] is burned to provide energy for the sugar extraction process. The crystals of raw sugar have a sticky brown coating and either can be used as they are, can be bleached by sulfur dioxide, or can be treated in a carbonatation process to produce a whiter product.[86] About 2,500 litres (660 US gal) of irrigation water is needed for every one kilogram (2.2 pounds) of sugar produced.[87]

Sugar beet

Sugar beet production – 2020
Country Millions of tonnes
  Russia 33.9
  United States 30.5
  Germany 28.6
  France 26.2
World 253
Source: FAOSTAT, United Nations[88]

In 2020, global production of sugar beets was 253 million tonnes, led by Russia with 13% of the world total (table).

The sugar beet became a major source of sugar in the 19th century when methods for extracting the sugar became available. It is a biennial plant,[89] a cultivated variety of Beta vulgaris in the family Amaranthaceae, the tuberous root of which contains a high proportion of sucrose. It is cultivated as a root crop in temperate regions with adequate rainfall and requires a fertile soil. The crop is harvested mechanically in the autumn and the crown of leaves and excess soil removed. The roots do not deteriorate rapidly and may be left in the field for some weeks before being transported to the processing plant where the crop is washed and sliced, and the sugar extracted by diffusion.[90] Milk of lime is added to the raw juice with calcium carbonate. After water is evaporated by boiling the syrup under a vacuum, the syrup is cooled and seeded with sugar crystals. The white sugar that crystallizes can be separated in a centrifuge and dried, requiring no further refining.[90]

Refining

Refined sugar is made from raw sugar that has undergone a refining process to remove the molasses.[91][92] Raw sugar is sucrose which is extracted from sugarcane or sugar beet. While raw sugar can be consumed, the refining process removes unwanted tastes and results in refined sugar or white sugar.[93][94]

The sugar may be transported in bulk to the country where it will be used and the refining process often takes place there. The first stage is known as affination and involves immersing the sugar crystals in a concentrated syrup that softens and removes the sticky brown coating without dissolving them. The crystals are then separated from the liquor and dissolved in water. The resulting syrup is treated either by a carbonatation or by a phosphatation process. Both involve the precipitation of a fine solid in the syrup and when this is filtered out, many of the impurities are removed at the same time. Removal of color is achieved by using either a granular activated carbon or an ion-exchange resin. The sugar syrup is concentrated by boiling and then cooled and seeded with sugar crystals, causing the sugar to crystallize out. The liquor is spun off in a centrifuge and the white crystals are dried in hot air and ready to be packaged or used. The surplus liquor is made into refiners' molasses.[95]

The International Commission for Uniform Methods of Sugar Analysis sets standards for the measurement of the purity of refined sugar, known as ICUMSA numbers; lower numbers indicate a higher level of purity in the refined sugar.[96]

Refined sugar is widely used for industrial needs for higher quality. Refined sugar is purer (ICUMSA below 300) than raw sugar (ICUMSA over 1,500).[97] The level of purity associated with the colors of sugar, expressed by standard number ICUMSA, the smaller ICUMSA numbers indicate the higher purity of sugar.[97]

Forms and uses

Crystal size

 
Misri crystals
 
Rock candy coloured with green dye
  • Coarse-grain sugar, also known as sanding sugar, composed of reflective crystals with grain size of about 1 to 3 mm, similar to kitchen salt. Used atop baked products and candies, it will not dissolve when subjected to heat and moisture.[98]
  • Granulated sugar (about 0.6 mm crystals), also known as table sugar or regular sugar, is used at the table, to sprinkle on foods and to sweeten hot drinks (coffee and tea), and in home baking to add sweetness and texture to baked products (cookies and cakes) and desserts (pudding and ice cream). It is also used as a preservative to prevent micro-organisms from growing and perishable food from spoiling, as in candied fruits, jams, and marmalades.[99]
  • Milled sugars are ground to a fine powder. They are used for dusting foods and in baking and confectionery.[100][98]
    • Caster sugar, sold as "superfine" sugar in the United States, with grain size of about 0.35 mm
    • Powdered sugar, also known as confectioner's sugar or icing sugar, available in varying degrees of fineness (e.g., fine powdered or 3X, very fine or 6X, and ultra-fine or 10X). The ultra-fine variety (sometimes called 10X) has grain size of about 0.060 mm, that is about ten times smaller than granulated sugar.
    • Snow powder, a non-melting form of powdered sugar usually consisting of glucose, rather than sucrose.
  • Screened sugars are crystalline products separated according to the size of the grains. They are used for decorative table sugars, for blending in dry mixes and in baking and confectionery.[100]

Shapes

 
Sugar cubes
  • Sugar cubes (sometimes called sugar lumps) are white or brown granulated sugars lightly steamed and pressed together in block shape. They are used to sweeten drinks.[100]
  • Sugarloaf was the usual cone-form in which refined sugar was produced and sold until the late 19th century. This shape is still in use in Germany (for preparation of Feuerzangenbowle) as well as Iran and Morocco.

Brown sugars

 
Brown sugar examples: Muscovado (top), dark brown (left), light brown (right).

Brown sugars are granulated sugars, either containing residual molasses, or with the grains deliberately coated with molasses to produce a light- or dark-colored sugar. They are used in baked goods, confectionery, and toffees.[100] Their darkness is due to the amount of molasses they contain. They may be classified based on their darkness or country of origin. For instance:[98]

  • Light brown, with little content of molasses (about 3.5%)
  • Dark brown, with higher content of molasses (about 6.5%)
  • Non-centrifugal cane sugar, unrefined and hence very dark cane sugar obtained by evaporating water from sugarcane juice, such as:
    • Panela, also known as rapadura, chancaca, piloncillo.
    • Some varieties of muscovado, also known as Barbados sugar. Other varieties are partially refined by centrifugation or by using a spray dryer.
    • Some varieties of jaggery. Other varieties are produced from date fruits or from palm sap, rather than sugarcane juice.

Liquid sugars

 
A jar of honey with a dipper and a biscuit
  • Honey, mainly containing unbound molecules of fructose and glucose, is a viscous liquid produced by bees by digesting floral nectar.
  • Syrups are thick, viscous liquids consisting primarily of a solution of sugar in water. They are used in the food processing of a wide range of products including beverages, hard candy, ice cream, and jams.[100]
    • Syrups made by dissolving granulated sugar in water are sometimes referred to as liquid sugar. A liquid sugar containing 50% sugar and 50% water is called simple syrup.
    • Syrups can also be made by reducing naturally sweet juices such as cane juice, or maple sap.
    • Corn syrup is made by converting corn starch to sugars (mainly maltose and glucose).
    • High-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), is produced by further processing corn syrup to convert some of its glucose into fructose.
    • Inverted sugar syrup, commonly known as invert syrup or invert sugar, is a mixture of two simple sugars—glucose and fructose—that is made by heating granulated sugar in water. It is used in breads, cakes, and beverages for adjusting sweetness, aiding moisture retention and avoiding crystallization of sugars.[100]
  • Molasses and treacle are obtained by removing sugar from sugarcane or sugar beet juice, as a byproduct of sugar production. They may be blended with the above-mentioned syrups to enhance sweetness and used in a range of baked goods and confectionery including toffees and licorice.[100]
    • Blackstrap molasses, also known as black treacle, has dark color, relatively small sugar content and strong flavour. It is sometimes added to animal feed, or processed to produce rum, or ethanol for fuel.
    • Regular molasses and golden syrup treacle have higher sugar content and lighter color, relative to blackstrap.
  • In winemaking, fruit sugars are converted into alcohol by a fermentation process. If the must formed by pressing the fruit has a low sugar content, additional sugar may be added to raise the alcohol content of the wine in a process called chaptalization. In the production of sweet wines, fermentation may be halted before it has run its full course, leaving behind some residual sugar that gives the wine its sweet taste.[101]

Other sweeteners

  • Low-calorie sweeteners are often made of maltodextrin with added sweeteners. Maltodextrin is an easily digestible synthetic polysaccharide consisting of short chains of three or more glucose molecules and is made by the partial hydrolysis of starch.[102] Strictly, maltodextrin is not classified as sugar as it contains more than two glucose molecules, although its structure is similar to maltose, a molecule composed of two joined glucose molecules.
  • Polyols are sugar alcohols and are used in chewing gums where a sweet flavor is required that lasts for a prolonged time in the mouth.[103]
  • Several different kinds of zero-calorie artificial sweeteners may be also used as sugar substitutes.

Consumption

In most parts of the world, sugar is an important part of the human diet, making food more palatable and providing food energy. After cereals and vegetable oils, sugar derived from sugarcane and beet provided more kilocalories per capita per day on average than other food groups.[104] In 1750 the average Briton got 72 calories a day from sugar. In 1913 this had risen to 395. In 2015 it still provided around 14% of the calories in British diets.[105] According to one source, per capita consumption of sugar in 2016 was highest in the United States, followed by Germany and the Netherlands.[106]

Nutrition and flavor

Sugar (sucrose), brown (with molasses)
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy1,576 kJ (377 kcal)
97.33 g
Sugars96.21 g
Dietary fiber0 g
0 g
0 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Thiamine (B1)
1%
0.008 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
1%
0.007 mg
Niacin (B3)
1%
0.082 mg
Vitamin B6
2%
0.026 mg
Folate (B9)
0%
1 μg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
9%
85 mg
Iron
15%
1.91 mg
Magnesium
8%
29 mg
Phosphorus
3%
22 mg
Potassium
3%
133 mg
Sodium
3%
39 mg
Zinc
2%
0.18 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water1.77 g

Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Sugar (sucrose), granulated
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy1,619 kJ (387 kcal)
99.98 g
Sugars99.91 g
Dietary fiber0 g
0 g
0 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Riboflavin (B2)
2%
0.019 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
0%
1 mg
Iron
0%
0.01 mg
Potassium
0%
2 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water0.03 g

Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.

Brown and white granulated sugar are 97% to nearly 100% carbohydrates, respectively, with less than 2% water, and no dietary fiber, protein or fat (table). Brown sugar contains a moderate amount of iron (15% of the Reference Daily Intake in a 100 gram amount, see table), but a typical serving of 4 grams (one teaspoon), would provide 15 calories and a negligible amount of iron or any other nutrient.[107] Because brown sugar contains 5–10% molasses reintroduced during processing, its value to some consumers is a richer flavor than white sugar.[108]

Health effects

Sugar industry funding and health information

Sugar refiners and manufacturers of sugary foods and drinks have sought to influence medical research and public health recommendations,[109][110] with substantial and largely clandestine spending documented from the 1960s to 2016.[111][112][113][114] The results of research on the health effects of sugary food and drink differ significantly, depending on whether the researcher has financial ties to the food and drink industry.[115][116][117] A 2013 medical review concluded that "unhealthy commodity industries should have no role in the formation of national or international NCD [non-communicable disease] policy".[118]

There have been similar efforts to steer coverage of sugar-related health information in popular media, including news media and social media.[119][120][121]

Obesity and metabolic syndrome

A 2003 technical report by the World Health Organization (WHO) provides evidence that high intake of sugary drinks (including fruit juice) increases the risk of obesity by adding to overall energy intake.[122] By itself, sugar is not a factor causing obesity and metabolic syndrome, but rather – when over-consumed – is a component of unhealthy dietary behavior.[122][needs update] Meta-analyses showed that excessive consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages increased the risk of developing type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome – including weight gain[123] and obesity – in adults and children.[124][125]

Hyperactivity

A 2019 meta-analysis found that sugar consumption does not improve mood, but can lower alertness and increase fatigue within an hour of consumption.[126] Some studies report evidence of causality between high consumption of refined sugar and hyperactivity.[127] One review of low-quality studies of children consuming high amounts of energy drinks showed association with higher rates of unhealthy behaviors, including smoking and excessive alcohol use, and with hyperactivity and insomnia, although such effects could not be specifically attributed to sugar over other components of those drinks such as caffeine.[128]

Tooth decay

The 2003 WHO report stated that "Sugars are undoubtedly the most important dietary factor in the development of dental caries".[122] A review of human studies showed that the incidence of caries is lower when sugar intake is less than 10% of total energy consumed.[129]

Nutritional displacement

The "empty calories" argument states that a diet high in added (or 'free') sugars will reduce consumption of foods that contain essential nutrients.[130] This nutrient displacement occurs if sugar makes up more than 25% of daily energy intake,[131] a proportion associated with poor diet quality and risk of obesity.[132] Displacement may occur at lower levels of consumption.[131]

Recommended dietary intake

The WHO recommends that both adults and children reduce the intake of free sugars to less than 10% of total energy intake, and suggests a reduction to below 5%. "Free sugars" include monosaccharides and disaccharides added to foods, and sugars found in fruit juice and concentrates, as well as in honey and syrups. According to the WHO, "[t]hese recommendations were based on the totality of available evidence reviewed regarding the relationship between free sugars intake and body weight (low and moderate quality evidence) and dental caries (very low and moderate quality evidence)."[2]

On 20 May 2016, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced changes to the Nutrition Facts panel displayed on all foods, to be effective by July 2018. New to the panel is a requirement to list "added sugars" by weight and as a percent of Daily Value (DV). For vitamins and minerals, the intent of DVs is to indicate how much should be consumed. For added sugars, the guidance is that 100% DV should not be exceeded. 100% DV is defined as 50 grams. For a person consuming 2000 calories a day, 50 grams is equal to 200 calories and thus 10% of total calories—the same guidance as the WHO.[133] To put this in context, most 355 mL (12 US fl oz) cans of soda contain 39 grams of sugar. In the United States, a government survey on food consumption in 2013–2014 reported that, for men and women aged 20 and older, the average total sugar intakes—naturally occurring in foods and added—were, respectively, 125 and 99 g/day.[134]

Measurements

Various culinary sugars have different densities due to differences in particle size and inclusion of moisture.

Domino Sugar gives the following weight to volume conversions (in United States customary units):[135]

  • Firmly packed brown sugar 1 lb = 2.5 cups (or 1.3 L per kg, 0.77 kg/L)
  • Granulated sugar 1 lb = 2.25 cups (or 1.17 L per kg, 0.85 kg/L)
  • Unsifted confectioner's sugar 1 lb = 3.75 cups (or 2.0 L per kg, 0.5 kg/L)

The "Engineering Resources – Bulk Density Chart" published in Powder and Bulk gives different values for the bulk densities:[136]

  • Beet sugar 0.80 g/mL
  • Dextrose sugar 0.62 g/mL ( = 620 kg/m^3)
  • Granulated sugar 0.70 g/mL
  • Powdered sugar 0.56 g/mL

Society and culture

Manufacturers of sugary products, such as soft drinks and candy, and the Sugar Research Foundation have been accused of trying to influence consumers and medical associations in the 1960s and 1970s by creating doubt about the potential health hazards of sucrose overconsumption, while promoting saturated fat as the main dietary risk factor in cardiovascular diseases.[111] In 2016, the criticism led to recommendations that diet policymakers emphasize the need for high-quality research that accounts for multiple biomarkers on development of cardiovascular diseases.[111]

Gallery

See also

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sugar, this, article, about, class, sweet, flavored, substances, used, food, common, table, sugar, sucrose, other, uses, disambiguation, generic, name, sweet, tasting, soluble, carbohydrates, many, which, used, food, simple, sugars, also, called, monosaccharid. This article is about the class of sweet flavored substances used as food For common table sugar see Sucrose For other uses see Sugar disambiguation Sugar is the generic name for sweet tasting soluble carbohydrates many of which are used in food Simple sugars also called monosaccharides include glucose fructose and galactose Compound sugars also called disaccharides or double sugars are molecules made of two bonded monosaccharides common examples are sucrose glucose fructose lactose glucose galactose and maltose two molecules of glucose White sugar is a refined form of sucrose In the body compound sugars are hydrolysed into simple sugars Sugars clockwise from top left white refined unrefined unprocessed cane brown German sugar sculpture 1880 Longer chains of monosaccharides gt 2 are not regarded as sugars and are called oligosaccharides or polysaccharides Starch is a glucose polymer found in plants the most abundant source of energy in human food Some other chemical substances such as glycerol and sugar alcohols may have a sweet taste but are not classified as sugar Sugars are found in the tissues of most plants Honey and fruits are abundant natural sources of simple sugars Sucrose is especially concentrated in sugarcane and sugar beet making them ideal for efficient commercial extraction to make refined sugar In 2016 the combined world production of those two crops was about two billion tonnes Maltose may be produced by malting grain Lactose is the only sugar that cannot be extracted from plants It can only be found in milk including human breast milk and in some dairy products A cheap source of sugar is corn syrup industrially produced by converting corn starch into sugars such as maltose fructose and glucose Sucrose is used in prepared foods e g cookies and cakes is sometimes added to commercially available processed food and beverages and may be used by people as a sweetener for foods e g toast and cereal and beverages e g coffee and tea The average person consumes about 24 kilograms 53 pounds of sugar each year with North and South Americans consuming up to 50 kg 110 lb and Africans consuming under 20 kg 44 lb 1 As sugar consumption grew in the latter part of the 20th century researchers began to examine whether a diet high in sugar especially refined sugar was damaging to human health Excessive consumption of sugar has been implicated in the onset of obesity diabetes cardiovascular disease and tooth decay Numerous studies have tried to clarify those implications but with varying results mainly because of the difficulty of finding populations for use as controls that consume little or no sugar In 2015 the World Health Organization strongly recommended that adults and children reduce their intake of free sugars to less than 10 and encouraged a reduction to below 5 of their total energy intake 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Ancient world to Renaissance 2 1 1 Asia 2 1 2 Europe 2 2 Modern history 3 Chemistry 3 1 Natural polymers 3 2 Flammability and heat response 4 Types 4 1 Monosaccharides 4 2 Disaccharides 5 Sources 6 Production 6 1 Sugarcane 6 2 Sugar beet 6 3 Refining 7 Forms and uses 7 1 Crystal size 7 2 Shapes 7 3 Brown sugars 7 4 Liquid sugars 7 5 Other sweeteners 8 Consumption 9 Nutrition and flavor 10 Health effects 10 1 Sugar industry funding and health information 10 2 Obesity and metabolic syndrome 10 3 Hyperactivity 10 4 Tooth decay 10 5 Nutritional displacement 10 6 Recommended dietary intake 11 Measurements 12 Society and culture 13 Gallery 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology EditThe etymology reflects the spread of the commodity From Sanskrit sarkara code san promoted to code sa meaning ground or candied sugar came Persian shakar code fas promoted to code fa then to 12th century French sucre and the English sugar 3 The English word jaggery a coarse brown sugar made from date palm sap or sugarcane juice has a similar etymological origin Portuguese jagara code por promoted to code pt from the Malayalam cakkara code mal promoted to code ml which is from the Sanskrit sarkara code san promoted to code sa 4 History EditMain article History of sugar Ancient world to Renaissance Edit Sugar cane plantation Asia Edit Sugar has been produced in the Indian subcontinent 5 since ancient times and its cultivation spread from there into modern day Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass 6 It was not plentiful or cheap in early times and in most parts of the world honey was more often used for sweetening 7 Originally people chewed raw sugarcane to extract its sweetness Even after refined sugarcane became more widely available during the European colonial era 8 palm sugar was preferred in Java and other sugar producing parts of southeast Asia and along with coconut sugar is still used locally to make desserts today 9 10 Sugarcane is native of tropical areas such as the Indian subcontinent South Asia and Southeast Asia 5 11 Different species seem to have originated from different locations with Saccharum barberi originating in India and S edule and S officinarum coming from New Guinea 11 12 One of the earliest historical references to sugarcane is in Chinese manuscripts dating to 8th century BCE which state that the use of sugarcane originated in India 13 In the tradition of Indian medicine ayurveda the sugarcane is known by the name Ikṣu and the sugarcane juice is known as Phaṇita Its varieties synonyms and characteristics are defined in nighaṇṭus such as the Bhavaprakasa 1 6 23 group of sugarcanes 14 Sugar remained relatively unimportant until the Indians discovered methods of turning sugarcane juice into granulated crystals that were easier to store and to transport 15 Crystallized sugar was discovered by the time of the Imperial Guptas around the 5th century CE 15 In the local Indian language these crystals were called khanda Devanagari खण ड Khaṇḍa which is the source of the word candy 16 Indian sailors who carried clarified butter and sugar as supplies introduced knowledge of sugar along the various trade routes they travelled 15 Traveling Buddhist monks took sugar crystallization methods to China 17 During the reign of Harsha r 606 647 in North India Indian envoys in Tang China taught methods of cultivating sugarcane after Emperor Taizong of Tang r 626 649 made known his interest in sugar China established its first sugarcane plantations in the seventh century 18 Chinese documents confirm at least two missions to India initiated in 647 CE to obtain technology for sugar refining 19 In the Indian subcontinent 5 the Middle East and China sugar became a staple of cooking and desserts Europe Edit Two elaborate sugar triomfi of goddesses for a dinner given by the Earl of Castlemaine British Ambassador in Rome 1687 Nearchus admiral of Alexander of Macedonia knew of sugar during the year 325 BC because of his participation in the campaign of India led by Alexander Arrian Anabasis 20 21 The Greek physician Pedanius Dioscorides in the 1st century CE described sugar in his medical treatise De Materia Medica 22 and Pliny the Elder a 1st century CE Roman described sugar in his Natural History Sugar is made in Arabia as well but Indian sugar is better It is a kind of honey found in cane white as gum and it crunches between the teeth It comes in lumps the size of a hazelnut Sugar is used only for medical purposes 23 Crusaders brought sugar back to Europe after their campaigns in the Holy Land where they encountered caravans carrying sweet salt Early in the 12th century Venice acquired some villages near Tyre and set up estates to produce sugar for export to Europe It supplemented the use of honey which had previously been the only available sweetener 24 Crusade chronicler William of Tyre writing in the late 12th century described sugar as very necessary for the use and health of mankind 25 In the 15th century Venice was the chief sugar refining and distribution center in Europe 13 There was a drastic change in the mid 15th century when Madeira and the Canary Islands were settled from Europe and sugar introduced there 26 27 After this an all consuming passion for sugar swept through society as it became far more easily available though initially still very expensive 28 By 1492 Madeira was producing over 1 400 000 kilograms 3 000 000 lb of sugar annually 29 Genoa one of the centers of distribution became known for candied fruit while Venice specialized in pastries sweets candies and sugar sculptures Sugar was considered to have valuable medicinal properties as a warm food under prevailing categories being helpful to the stomach to cure cold diseases and sooth lung complaints 30 A feast given in Tours in 1457 by Gaston de Foix which is probably the best and most complete account we have of a late medieval banquet includes the first mention of sugar sculptures as the final food brought in was a heraldic menagerie sculpted in sugar lions stags monkeys each holding in paw or beak the arms of the Hungarian king 31 Other recorded grand feasts in the decades following included similar pieces 32 Originally the sculptures seem to have been eaten in the meal but later they become merely table decorations the most elaborate called triomfi Several significant sculptors are known to have produced them in some cases their preliminary drawings survive Early ones were in brown sugar partly cast in molds with the final touches carved They continued to be used until at least the Coronation Banquet for Edward VII of the United Kingdom in 1903 among other sculptures every guest was given a sugar crown to take away 33 Modern history Edit See also Triangular trade Close up image of sugar cane demand for sugar contributed to creating colonial systems in areas where cultivation of sugar cane was profitable Hacienda La Fortuna A sugar mill complex in Puerto Rico painted by Francisco Oller in 1885 Brooklyn Museum In August 1492 Christopher Columbus collected sugar cane samples in La Gomera in the Canary Islands and introduced it to the New World 34 The cuttings were planted and the first sugar cane harvest in Hispaniola took place in 1501 Many sugar mills had been constructed in Cuba and Jamaica by the 1520s 35 The Portuguese took sugar cane to Brazil By 1540 there were 800 cane sugar mills in Santa Catarina Island and another 2 000 on the north coast of Brazil Demarara and Surinam It took until 1600 for Brazilian sugar production to exceed that of Sao Tome which was the main center of sugar production in sixteenth century 27 German chemists Andreas Sigismund Marggraf left and Franz Karl Achard right both laid the foundation of the modern sugar industry Sugar was a luxury in Europe until the early 19th century when it became more widely available due to the rise of beet sugar in Prussia and later in France under Napoleon 36 Beet sugar was a German invention since in 1747 Andreas Sigismund Marggraf announced the discovery of sugar in beets and devised a method using alcohol to extract it 37 Marggraf s student Franz Karl Achard devised an economical industrial method to extract the sugar in its pure form in the late 18th century 38 39 Achard first produced beet sugar in 1783 in Kaulsdorf and in 1801 the world s first beet sugar production facility was established in Cunern Silesia then part of Prussia now Poland 40 The works of Marggraf and Achard were the starting point for the sugar industry in Europe 41 and for the modern sugar industry in general since sugar was no longer a luxury product and a product almost only produced in warmer climates 42 Sugar became highly popular and by the 19th century was found in every household This evolution of taste and demand for sugar as an essential food ingredient resulted in major economic and social changes 43 Demand drove in part the colonization of tropical islands and areas where labor intensive sugarcane plantations and sugar manufacturing facilities could be successful 43 World consumption increased more than 100 times from 1850 to 2000 led by Britain where it increased from about 2 pounds per head per year in 1650 to 90 pounds by the early 20th century In the late 18th century Britain consumed about half the sugar which reached Europe 44 After slavery was abolished the demand for workers in European colonies in the Caribbean was filled by indentured laborers from the Indian subcontinent 45 46 47 Millions of enslaved or indentured laborers were brought to various European colonies in the Americas Africa and Asia as a result of demand in Europe for among other commodities sugar influencing the ethnic mixture of numerous nations around the globe 48 49 50 Sugar also led to some industrialization of areas where sugar cane was grown For example in the 1790s Lieutenant J Paterson of the Bengal Presidency promoted to the British parliament the idea that sugar cane could grow in British India where it had started with many advantages and at less expense than in the West Indies As a result sugar factories were established in Bihar in eastern India 51 52 During the Napoleonic Wars sugar beet production increased in continental Europe because of the difficulty of importing sugar when shipping was subject to blockade By 1880 the sugar beet was the main source of sugar in Europe It was also cultivated in Lincolnshire and other parts of England although the United Kingdom continued to import the main part of its sugar from its colonies 53 Until the late nineteenth century sugar was purchased in loaves which had to be cut using implements called sugar nips 54 In later years granulated sugar was more usually sold in bags Sugar cubes were produced in the nineteenth century The first inventor of a process to produce sugar in cube form was Jakob Christof Rad director of a sugar refinery in Dacice In 1841 he produced the first sugar cube in the world 55 He began sugar cube production after being granted a five year patent for the process on 23 January 1843 Henry Tate of Tate amp Lyle was another early manufacturer of sugar cubes at his refineries in Liverpool and London Tate purchased a patent for sugar cube manufacture from German Eugen Langen who in 1872 had invented a different method of processing of sugar cubes 56 Sugar was rationed during World War I though it was said that No previous war in history has been fought so largely on sugar and so little on alcohol 57 and more sharply during World War II 58 59 60 61 62 Rationing led to the development and use of various artificial sweeteners 58 63 Chemistry Edit Sucrose a disaccharide of glucose left and fructose right important molecules in the body Scientifically sugar loosely refers to a number of carbohydrates such as monosaccharides disaccharides or oligosaccharides Monosaccharides are also called simple sugars the most important being glucose Most monosaccharides have a formula that conforms to Cn H2n On with n between 3 and 7 deoxyribose being an exception Glucose has the molecular formula C6 H12 O6 The names of typical sugars end with ose as in glucose and fructose Sometimes such words may also refer to any types of carbohydrates soluble in water The acyclic mono and disaccharides contain either aldehyde groups or ketone groups These carbon oxygen double bonds C O are the reactive centers All saccharides with more than one ring in their structure result from two or more monosaccharides joined by glycosidic bonds with the resultant loss of a molecule of water H2 O per bond 64 Monosaccharides in a closed chain form can form glycosidic bonds with other monosaccharides creating disaccharides such as sucrose and polysaccharides such as starch or cellulose Enzymes must hydrolyze or otherwise break these glycosidic bonds before such compounds become metabolized After digestion and absorption the principal monosaccharides present in the blood and internal tissues include glucose fructose and galactose Many pentoses and hexoses can form ring structures In these closed chain forms the aldehyde or ketone group remains non free so many of the reactions typical of these groups cannot occur Glucose in solution exists mostly in the ring form at equilibrium with less than 0 1 of the molecules in the open chain form 64 In November 2019 scientists reported detecting for the first time sugar molecules including ribose in meteorites suggesting that chemical processes on asteroids can produce some fundamentally essential bio ingredients important to life and supporting the notion of an RNA World prior to a DNA based origin of life on Earth and possibly as well the notion of panspermia 65 66 Natural polymers Edit Biopolymers of sugars are common in nature Through photosynthesis plants produce glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate G3P a phosphated 3 carbon sugar that is used by the cell to make monosaccharides such as glucose C6 H12 O6 or as in cane and beet sucrose C12 H22 O11 Monosaccharides may be further converted into structural polysaccharides such as cellulose and pectin for cell wall construction or into energy reserves in the form of storage polysaccharides such as starch or inulin Starch consisting of two different polymers of glucose is a readily degradable form of chemical energy stored by cells and can be converted to other types of energy 64 Another polymer of glucose is cellulose which is a linear chain composed of several hundred or thousand glucose units It is used by plants as a structural component in their cell walls Humans can digest cellulose only to a very limited extent though ruminants can do so with the help of symbiotic bacteria in their gut 67 DNA and RNA are built up of the monosaccharides deoxyribose and ribose respectively Deoxyribose has the formula C5 H10 O4 and ribose the formula C5 H10 O5 68 Flammability and heat response Edit Magnification of grains of refined sucrose the most common free sugar Because sugars burn easily when exposed to flame the handling of sugars risks dust explosion The risk of explosion is higher when the sugar has been milled to superfine texture such as for use in chewing gum 69 The 2008 Georgia sugar refinery explosion which killed 14 people and injured 36 and destroyed most of the refinery was caused by the ignition of sugar dust 70 In its culinary use exposing sugar to heat causes caramelization As the process occurs volatile chemicals such as diacetyl are released producing the characteristic caramel flavor 71 Types EditMonosaccharides Edit Fructose galactose and glucose are all simple sugars monosaccharides with the general formula C6H12O6 They have five hydroxyl groups OH and a carbonyl group C O and are cyclic when dissolved in water They each exist as several isomers with dextro and laevo rotatory forms that cause polarized light to diverge to the right or the left 72 Fructose or fruit sugar occurs naturally in fruits some root vegetables cane sugar and honey and is the sweetest of the sugars It is one of the components of sucrose or table sugar It is used as a high fructose syrup which is manufactured from hydrolyzed corn starch that has been processed to yield corn syrup with enzymes then added to convert part of the glucose into fructose 73 Galactose generally does not occur in the free state but is a constituent with glucose of the disaccharide lactose or milk sugar It is less sweet than glucose It is a component of the antigens found on the surface of red blood cells that determine blood groups 74 Glucose occurs naturally in fruits and plant juices and is the primary product of photosynthesis Starch is converted into glucose during digestion and glucose is the form of sugar that is transported around the bodies of animals in the bloodstream Although in principle there are two enantiomers of glucose mirror images one of the other naturally occurring glucose is D glucose This is also called dextrose or grape sugar because drying grape juice produces crystals of dextrose that can be sieved from the other components 75 Glucose syrup is a liquid form of glucose that is widely used in the manufacture of foodstuffs It can be manufactured from starch by enzymatic hydrolysis 76 For example corn syrup which is produced commercially by breaking down maize starch is one common source of purified dextrose 77 However dextrose is naturally present in many unprocessed whole foods including honey and fruits such as grapes 78 Disaccharides Edit Lactose maltose and sucrose are all compound sugars disaccharides with the general formula C12H22O11 They are formed by the combination of two monosaccharide molecules with the exclusion of a molecule of water 72 Lactose is the naturally occurring sugar found in milk A molecule of lactose is formed by the combination of a molecule of galactose with a molecule of glucose It is broken down when consumed into its constituent parts by the enzyme lactase during digestion Children have this enzyme but some adults no longer form it and they are unable to digest lactose 79 Maltose is formed during the germination of certain grains the most notable being barley which is converted into malt the source of the sugar s name A molecule of maltose is formed by the combination of two molecules of glucose It is less sweet than glucose fructose or sucrose 72 It is formed in the body during the digestion of starch by the enzyme amylase and is itself broken down during digestion by the enzyme maltase 80 Sucrose is found in the stems of sugarcane and roots of sugar beet It also occurs naturally alongside fructose and glucose in other plants in particular fruits and some roots such as carrots The different proportions of sugars found in these foods determines the range of sweetness experienced when eating them 72 A molecule of sucrose is formed by the combination of a molecule of glucose with a molecule of fructose After being eaten sucrose is split into its constituent parts during digestion by a number of enzymes known as sucrases 81 Sources EditThe sugar contents of common fruits and vegetables are presented in Table 1 Table 1 Sugar content of selected common plant foods g 100g 82 Food item TotalcarbohydrateAincludingdietary fiber Totalsugars Freefructose Freeglucose Sucrose Fructose Fructose Glucose ratioB Sucroseas a oftotal sugarsFruits Apple 13 8 10 4 5 9 2 4 2 1 0 67 20Apricot 11 1 9 2 0 9 2 4 5 9 0 42 64Banana 22 8 12 2 4 9 5 0 2 4 0 5 20Fig dried 63 9 47 9 22 9 24 8 0 9 0 48 1 9Grapes 18 1 15 5 8 1 7 2 0 2 0 53 1Navel orange 12 5 8 5 2 25 2 0 4 3 0 51 51Peach 9 5 8 4 1 5 2 0 4 8 0 47 57Pear 15 5 9 8 6 2 2 8 0 8 0 67 8Pineapple 13 1 9 9 2 1 1 7 6 0 0 52 61Plum 11 4 9 9 3 1 5 1 1 6 0 40 16Strawberry 7 68 4 89 2 441 1 99 0 47 0 55 10Vegetables Beet red 9 6 6 8 0 1 0 1 6 5 0 50 96Carrot 9 6 4 7 0 6 0 6 3 6 0 50 77Corn sweet 19 0 6 2 1 9 3 4 0 9 0 38 15Red pepper sweet 6 0 4 2 2 3 1 9 0 0 0 55 0Onion sweet 7 6 5 0 2 0 2 3 0 7 0 47 14Sweet potato 20 1 4 2 0 7 1 0 2 5 0 47 60Yam 27 9 0 5 tr tr tr na trSugar cane 13 18 0 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 11 16 0 50 highSugar beet 17 18 0 1 0 5 0 1 0 5 16 17 0 50 high A The carbohydrate figure is calculated in the USDA database and does not always correspond to the sum of the sugars the starch and the dietary fiber B The fructose to fructose plus glucose ratio is calculated by including the fructose and glucose coming from the sucrose Production EditSee also List of sugars Due to rising demand sugar production in general increased some 14 over the period 2009 to 2018 83 The largest importers were China Indonesia and the United States 83 Sugarcane Edit Sugarcane production 2020Country Millions of tonnes Brazil 757 1 India 370 5 China 108 1 Thailand 75 0World 1 870Source FAOSTAT United Nations 84 Global production of sugarcane in 2020 was 1 9 billion tonnes with Brazil producing 40 of the world total and India 20 table Sugarcane refers to any of several species or their hybrids of giant grasses in the genus Saccharum in the family Poaceae They have been cultivated in tropical climates in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia over centuries for the sucrose found in their stems 5 A great expansion in sugarcane production took place in the 18th century with the establishment of slave plantations in the Americas The use of slavery for the labor intensive process resulted in sugar production enabling prices cheap enough for most people to buy Mechanization reduced some labor needs but in the 21st century cultivation and production relied on low wage laborers World production of raw sugar main producers 85 Sugar cane requires a frost free climate with sufficient rainfall during the growing season to make full use of the plant s substantial growth potential The crop is harvested mechanically or by hand chopped into lengths and conveyed rapidly to the processing plant commonly known as a sugar mill where it is either milled and the juice extracted with water or extracted by diffusion 86 The juice is clarified with lime and heated to destroy enzymes The resulting thin syrup is concentrated in a series of evaporators after which further water is removed The resulting supersaturated solution is seeded with sugar crystals facilitating crystal formation and drying 86 Molasses is a by product of the process and the fiber from the stems known as bagasse 86 is burned to provide energy for the sugar extraction process The crystals of raw sugar have a sticky brown coating and either can be used as they are can be bleached by sulfur dioxide or can be treated in a carbonatation process to produce a whiter product 86 About 2 500 litres 660 US gal of irrigation water is needed for every one kilogram 2 2 pounds of sugar produced 87 Sugar beet Edit Sugar beet production 2020Country Millions of tonnes Russia 33 9 United States 30 5 Germany 28 6 France 26 2World 253Source FAOSTAT United Nations 88 In 2020 global production of sugar beets was 253 million tonnes led by Russia with 13 of the world total table The sugar beet became a major source of sugar in the 19th century when methods for extracting the sugar became available It is a biennial plant 89 a cultivated variety of Beta vulgaris in the family Amaranthaceae the tuberous root of which contains a high proportion of sucrose It is cultivated as a root crop in temperate regions with adequate rainfall and requires a fertile soil The crop is harvested mechanically in the autumn and the crown of leaves and excess soil removed The roots do not deteriorate rapidly and may be left in the field for some weeks before being transported to the processing plant where the crop is washed and sliced and the sugar extracted by diffusion 90 Milk of lime is added to the raw juice with calcium carbonate After water is evaporated by boiling the syrup under a vacuum the syrup is cooled and seeded with sugar crystals The white sugar that crystallizes can be separated in a centrifuge and dried requiring no further refining 90 Refining Edit See also Sugar refinery Non centrifugal cane sugar and White sugar Refined sugar is made from raw sugar that has undergone a refining process to remove the molasses 91 92 Raw sugar is sucrose which is extracted from sugarcane or sugar beet While raw sugar can be consumed the refining process removes unwanted tastes and results in refined sugar or white sugar 93 94 The sugar may be transported in bulk to the country where it will be used and the refining process often takes place there The first stage is known as affination and involves immersing the sugar crystals in a concentrated syrup that softens and removes the sticky brown coating without dissolving them The crystals are then separated from the liquor and dissolved in water The resulting syrup is treated either by a carbonatation or by a phosphatation process Both involve the precipitation of a fine solid in the syrup and when this is filtered out many of the impurities are removed at the same time Removal of color is achieved by using either a granular activated carbon or an ion exchange resin The sugar syrup is concentrated by boiling and then cooled and seeded with sugar crystals causing the sugar to crystallize out The liquor is spun off in a centrifuge and the white crystals are dried in hot air and ready to be packaged or used The surplus liquor is made into refiners molasses 95 The International Commission for Uniform Methods of Sugar Analysis sets standards for the measurement of the purity of refined sugar known as ICUMSA numbers lower numbers indicate a higher level of purity in the refined sugar 96 Refined sugar is widely used for industrial needs for higher quality Refined sugar is purer ICUMSA below 300 than raw sugar ICUMSA over 1 500 97 The level of purity associated with the colors of sugar expressed by standard number ICUMSA the smaller ICUMSA numbers indicate the higher purity of sugar 97 Forms and uses EditCrystal size Edit See also Rock candy Sucrose and Powdered sugar Misri crystals Rock candy coloured with green dye Coarse grain sugar also known as sanding sugar composed of reflective crystals with grain size of about 1 to 3 mm similar to kitchen salt Used atop baked products and candies it will not dissolve when subjected to heat and moisture 98 Granulated sugar about 0 6 mm crystals also known as table sugar or regular sugar is used at the table to sprinkle on foods and to sweeten hot drinks coffee and tea and in home baking to add sweetness and texture to baked products cookies and cakes and desserts pudding and ice cream It is also used as a preservative to prevent micro organisms from growing and perishable food from spoiling as in candied fruits jams and marmalades 99 Milled sugars are ground to a fine powder They are used for dusting foods and in baking and confectionery 100 98 Caster sugar sold as superfine sugar in the United States with grain size of about 0 35 mm Powdered sugar also known as confectioner s sugar or icing sugar available in varying degrees of fineness e g fine powdered or 3X very fine or 6X and ultra fine or 10X The ultra fine variety sometimes called 10X has grain size of about 0 060 mm that is about ten times smaller than granulated sugar Snow powder a non melting form of powdered sugar usually consisting of glucose rather than sucrose Screened sugars are crystalline products separated according to the size of the grains They are used for decorative table sugars for blending in dry mixes and in baking and confectionery 100 Shapes Edit Lump sugar redirects here For the South Korean film see Lump Sugar Sugar cube redirects here For other uses see Sugar cubes disambiguation Sugar cubes Sugar cubes sometimes called sugar lumps are white or brown granulated sugars lightly steamed and pressed together in block shape They are used to sweeten drinks 100 Sugarloaf was the usual cone form in which refined sugar was produced and sold until the late 19th century This shape is still in use in Germany for preparation of Feuerzangenbowle as well as Iran and Morocco Brown sugars Edit Main article Brown sugar Brown sugar examples Muscovado top dark brown left light brown right Brown sugars are granulated sugars either containing residual molasses or with the grains deliberately coated with molasses to produce a light or dark colored sugar They are used in baked goods confectionery and toffees 100 Their darkness is due to the amount of molasses they contain They may be classified based on their darkness or country of origin For instance 98 Light brown with little content of molasses about 3 5 Dark brown with higher content of molasses about 6 5 Non centrifugal cane sugar unrefined and hence very dark cane sugar obtained by evaporating water from sugarcane juice such as Panela also known as rapadura chancaca piloncillo Some varieties of muscovado also known as Barbados sugar Other varieties are partially refined by centrifugation or by using a spray dryer Some varieties of jaggery Other varieties are produced from date fruits or from palm sap rather than sugarcane juice Liquid sugars Edit A jar of honey with a dipper and a biscuit Honey mainly containing unbound molecules of fructose and glucose is a viscous liquid produced by bees by digesting floral nectar Syrups are thick viscous liquids consisting primarily of a solution of sugar in water They are used in the food processing of a wide range of products including beverages hard candy ice cream and jams 100 Syrups made by dissolving granulated sugar in water are sometimes referred to as liquid sugar A liquid sugar containing 50 sugar and 50 water is called simple syrup Syrups can also be made by reducing naturally sweet juices such as cane juice or maple sap Corn syrup is made by converting corn starch to sugars mainly maltose and glucose High fructose corn syrup HFCS is produced by further processing corn syrup to convert some of its glucose into fructose Inverted sugar syrup commonly known as invert syrup or invert sugar is a mixture of two simple sugars glucose and fructose that is made by heating granulated sugar in water It is used in breads cakes and beverages for adjusting sweetness aiding moisture retention and avoiding crystallization of sugars 100 Molasses and treacle are obtained by removing sugar from sugarcane or sugar beet juice as a byproduct of sugar production They may be blended with the above mentioned syrups to enhance sweetness and used in a range of baked goods and confectionery including toffees and licorice 100 Blackstrap molasses also known as black treacle has dark color relatively small sugar content and strong flavour It is sometimes added to animal feed or processed to produce rum or ethanol for fuel Regular molasses and golden syrup treacle have higher sugar content and lighter color relative to blackstrap In winemaking fruit sugars are converted into alcohol by a fermentation process If the must formed by pressing the fruit has a low sugar content additional sugar may be added to raise the alcohol content of the wine in a process called chaptalization In the production of sweet wines fermentation may be halted before it has run its full course leaving behind some residual sugar that gives the wine its sweet taste 101 Other sweeteners Edit Low calorie sweeteners are often made of maltodextrin with added sweeteners Maltodextrin is an easily digestible synthetic polysaccharide consisting of short chains of three or more glucose molecules and is made by the partial hydrolysis of starch 102 Strictly maltodextrin is not classified as sugar as it contains more than two glucose molecules although its structure is similar to maltose a molecule composed of two joined glucose molecules Polyols are sugar alcohols and are used in chewing gums where a sweet flavor is required that lasts for a prolonged time in the mouth 103 Several different kinds of zero calorie artificial sweeteners may be also used as sugar substitutes Consumption EditIn most parts of the world sugar is an important part of the human diet making food more palatable and providing food energy After cereals and vegetable oils sugar derived from sugarcane and beet provided more kilocalories per capita per day on average than other food groups 104 In 1750 the average Briton got 72 calories a day from sugar In 1913 this had risen to 395 In 2015 it still provided around 14 of the calories in British diets 105 According to one source per capita consumption of sugar in 2016 was highest in the United States followed by Germany and the Netherlands 106 Nutrition and flavor EditSugar sucrose brown with molasses Nutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy1 576 kJ 377 kcal Carbohydrates97 33 gSugars96 21 gDietary fiber0 gFat0 gProtein0 gVitaminsQuantity DV Thiamine B1 1 0 008 mgRiboflavin B2 1 0 007 mgNiacin B3 1 0 082 mgVitamin B62 0 026 mgFolate B9 0 1 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium9 85 mgIron15 1 91 mgMagnesium8 29 mgPhosphorus3 22 mgPotassium3 133 mgSodium3 39 mgZinc2 0 18 mgOther constituentsQuantityWater1 77 gFull link to USDA database entry Link to precise page Units mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Sugar sucrose granulatedNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy1 619 kJ 387 kcal Carbohydrates99 98 gSugars99 91 gDietary fiber0 gFat0 gProtein0 gVitaminsQuantity DV Riboflavin B2 2 0 019 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium0 1 mgIron0 0 01 mgPotassium0 2 mgOther constituentsQuantityWater0 03 gFull link to USDA database entry Link to precise page Units mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Brown and white granulated sugar are 97 to nearly 100 carbohydrates respectively with less than 2 water and no dietary fiber protein or fat table Brown sugar contains a moderate amount of iron 15 of the Reference Daily Intake in a 100 gram amount see table but a typical serving of 4 grams one teaspoon would provide 15 calories and a negligible amount of iron or any other nutrient 107 Because brown sugar contains 5 10 molasses reintroduced during processing its value to some consumers is a richer flavor than white sugar 108 Health effects EditSugar industry funding and health information Edit Main article Sugar marketing Influence on health information and guidelines Sugar refiners and manufacturers of sugary foods and drinks have sought to influence medical research and public health recommendations 109 110 with substantial and largely clandestine spending documented from the 1960s to 2016 111 112 113 114 The results of research on the health effects of sugary food and drink differ significantly depending on whether the researcher has financial ties to the food and drink industry 115 116 117 A 2013 medical review concluded that unhealthy commodity industries should have no role in the formation of national or international NCD non communicable disease policy 118 There have been similar efforts to steer coverage of sugar related health information in popular media including news media and social media 119 120 121 Obesity and metabolic syndrome Edit Main article Diet and obesity Sugar consumption A 2003 technical report by the World Health Organization WHO provides evidence that high intake of sugary drinks including fruit juice increases the risk of obesity by adding to overall energy intake 122 By itself sugar is not a factor causing obesity and metabolic syndrome but rather when over consumed is a component of unhealthy dietary behavior 122 needs update Meta analyses showed that excessive consumption of sugar sweetened beverages increased the risk of developing type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome including weight gain 123 and obesity in adults and children 124 125 Hyperactivity Edit A 2019 meta analysis found that sugar consumption does not improve mood but can lower alertness and increase fatigue within an hour of consumption 126 Some studies report evidence of causality between high consumption of refined sugar and hyperactivity 127 One review of low quality studies of children consuming high amounts of energy drinks showed association with higher rates of unhealthy behaviors including smoking and excessive alcohol use and with hyperactivity and insomnia although such effects could not be specifically attributed to sugar over other components of those drinks such as caffeine 128 Tooth decay Edit The 2003 WHO report stated that Sugars are undoubtedly the most important dietary factor in the development of dental caries 122 A review of human studies showed that the incidence of caries is lower when sugar intake is less than 10 of total energy consumed 129 Nutritional displacement Edit The empty calories argument states that a diet high in added or free sugars will reduce consumption of foods that contain essential nutrients 130 This nutrient displacement occurs if sugar makes up more than 25 of daily energy intake 131 a proportion associated with poor diet quality and risk of obesity 132 Displacement may occur at lower levels of consumption 131 Recommended dietary intake Edit The WHO recommends that both adults and children reduce the intake of free sugars to less than 10 of total energy intake and suggests a reduction to below 5 Free sugars include monosaccharides and disaccharides added to foods and sugars found in fruit juice and concentrates as well as in honey and syrups According to the WHO t hese recommendations were based on the totality of available evidence reviewed regarding the relationship between free sugars intake and body weight low and moderate quality evidence and dental caries very low and moderate quality evidence 2 On 20 May 2016 the U S Food and Drug Administration announced changes to the Nutrition Facts panel displayed on all foods to be effective by July 2018 New to the panel is a requirement to list added sugars by weight and as a percent of Daily Value DV For vitamins and minerals the intent of DVs is to indicate how much should be consumed For added sugars the guidance is that 100 DV should not be exceeded 100 DV is defined as 50 grams For a person consuming 2000 calories a day 50 grams is equal to 200 calories and thus 10 of total calories the same guidance as the WHO 133 To put this in context most 355 mL 12 US fl oz cans of soda contain 39 grams of sugar In the United States a government survey on food consumption in 2013 2014 reported that for men and women aged 20 and older the average total sugar intakes naturally occurring in foods and added were respectively 125 and 99 g day 134 Measurements EditVarious culinary sugars have different densities due to differences in particle size and inclusion of moisture Domino Sugar gives the following weight to volume conversions in United States customary units 135 Firmly packed brown sugar 1 lb 2 5 cups or 1 3 L per kg 0 77 kg L Granulated sugar 1 lb 2 25 cups or 1 17 L per kg 0 85 kg L Unsifted confectioner s sugar 1 lb 3 75 cups or 2 0 L per kg 0 5 kg L The Engineering Resources Bulk Density Chart published in Powder and Bulk gives different values for the bulk densities 136 Beet sugar 0 80 g mL Dextrose sugar 0 62 g mL 620 kg m 3 Granulated sugar 0 70 g mL Powdered sugar 0 56 g mLSociety and culture EditManufacturers of sugary products such as soft drinks and candy and the Sugar Research Foundation have been accused of trying to influence consumers and medical associations in the 1960s and 1970s by creating doubt about the potential health hazards of sucrose overconsumption while promoting saturated fat as the main dietary risk factor in cardiovascular diseases 111 In 2016 the criticism led to recommendations that diet policymakers emphasize the need for high quality research that accounts for multiple biomarkers on development of cardiovascular diseases 111 Gallery Edit Brown sugar crystals Whole date sugar Whole cane sugar grey vacuum dried Whole cane sugar brown vacuum dried Raw crystals of unrefined unbleached sugarSee also Edit Food portalBarley sugar Holing cane List of unrefined sweeteners Rare sugar Sugar plantations in the Caribbean GlycomicsReferences Edit OECD FAO Agricultural Outlook 2020 2029 Sugar PDF Food and Agriculture Organization 2019 Retrieved 15 February 2021 a b Guideline Sugar intake for adults and children PDF Geneva World Health Organization 2015 p 4 Archived PDF from the original on 4 July 2018 Harper Douglas Sugar Online Etymology Dictionary Jaggery Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 1 October 2012 Retrieved 17 August 2012 a b c d Roy Moxham 7 February 2002 The Great Hedge of India The Search for the Living Barrier that Divided a People Basic Books ISBN 978 0 7867 0976 2 Gordon Stewart 2008 When Asia was the World Da Capo Press p 12 Eteraf Oskouei Tahereh Najafi Moslem June 2013 Traditional and Modern Uses of Natural Honey in Human Diseases A Review Iranian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences 16 6 731 742 PMC 3758027 PMID 23997898 The Cambridge World History of Food Cambridge University Press 2000 p 1162 ISBN 9780521402156 Southeast Asia A Historical Encyclopedia from Angor Wat to East Timor ABC CLIO 2004 p 1257 ISBN 9781576077702 Cooking Through History A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Food with Menus and Recipes ABC CLIO 2 December 2020 p 645 ISBN 9781610694568 a b Kiple Kenneth F amp Kriemhild Conee Ornelas World history of Food Sugar Cambridge University Press Retrieved 9 January 2012 Sharpe Peter 1998 Sugar Cane Past and Present Illinois Southern Illinois University Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 a b Rolph George 1873 Something about sugar its history growth manufacture and distribution San Francisco J J Newbegin Murthy K R Srikantha 2016 Bhavaprakasa of Bhavamisra Vol I Krishnadas Ayurveda Series 45 reprint 2016 ed Chowkhamba Krishnadas Academy Varanasi pp 490 94 ISBN 978 81 218 0000 6 a b c Adas Michael January 2001 Agricultural and Pastoral Societies in Ancient and Classical History Temple University Press ISBN 1 56639 832 0 p 311 Sugarcane Saccharum Officinarum PDF USAID Govt of United States 2006 p 7 1 Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2013 Kieschnick John 2003 The Impact of Buddhism on Chinese Material Culture Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09676 7 Sen Tansen 2003 Buddhism Diplomacy and Trade The Realignment of Sino Indian Relations 600 1400 Manoa Asian Interactions and Comparisons a joint publication of the University of Hawaii Press and the Association for Asian Studies ISBN 0 8248 2593 4 pp 38 40 Kieschnick John 2003 The Impact of Buddhism on Chinese Material Culture Princeton University Press 258 ISBN 0 691 09676 7 Jean Meyer Histoire du sucre ed Desjonquieres 1989 Anabasis Alexandri translated by E J Chinnock 1893 There is a kind of coalesced honey called sakcharon i e sugar found in reeds in India and Eudaimon Arabia similar in consistency to salt and brittle enough to be broken between the teeth like salt Quoted from Book Two of Dioscorides Materia Medica The book is downloadable from links at the Wikipedia Dioscorides page Faas Patrick 2003 Around the Roman Table Food and Feasting in Ancient Rome Archived 31 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Chicago University of Chicago Press p 149 ISBN 0 226 23347 2 Ponting Clive 2000 2000 World history a new perspective London Chatto amp Windus p 481 ISBN 978 0 7011 6834 6 Barber Malcolm 2004 The two cities medieval Europe 1050 1320 2nd ed Routledge p 14 ISBN 978 0 415 17415 2 Strong 195 a b Manning Patrick 2006 Slavery amp Slave Trade in West Africa 1450 1930 Themes in West Africa s history Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Athens Ohio University pp 102 103 ISBN 978 0 8214 4566 2 OCLC 745696019 Strong 194 Frankopan 200 By the time Columbus set sail Madeira alone was producing more than 3 million pounds in weight of sugar per year albeit at the cost of what one scholar has described as early modern ecocide as forests were cleared and non native animal species like rabbits and rats multiplied in such numbers that they were seen as a form of divine punishment Strong 194 195 195 quoted Strong 75 Strong 133 134 195 197 Strong 309 Abreu y Galindo 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Immigration Into Trinidad amp British Guiana 1875 1917 St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 12172 3 St Lucia s Indian Arrival Day Caribbean Repeating Islands 2009 Indian indentured labourers The National Archives Government of the United Kingdom 2010 Early Sugar Industry of Bihar Bihargatha Archived 10 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bihargatha in Retrieved on 7 January 2012 Compare Bosma Ulbe 2013 The Sugar Plantation in India and Indonesia Industrial Production 1770 2010 Studies in Comparative World History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 43530 8 Retrieved 3 September 2018 How Sugar is Made the History SKIL Sugar Knowledge International Retrieved 28 March 2012 A Visit to the Tate amp Lyle Archive The Sugar Girls blog 10 March 2012 Retrieved 11 March 2012 Dacice Mesto Dacice Retrieved 2 September 2021 Barrett Duncan amp Nuala Calvi 2012 The Sugar Girls Collins p ix ISBN 978 0 00 744847 0 Otter Chris 2020 Diet for a large planet USA University of Chicago Press p 96 ISBN 978 0 226 69710 9 a b Hicks Jesse Spring 2010 The Pursuit of Sweet Science History Institute 1953 Sweet rationing ends in Britain BBC 5 February 1953 Nilsson Jeff 5 May 2017 Could You Stomach America s Wartime Sugar Ration 75 Years Ago Saturday Evening Post Lee K 1946 Sugar Supply CQ Press Retrieved 28 October 2018 Rationing of food and clothing during the Second World War The Australian War Memorial 25 October 2017 Ur Rehman S Mushtaq Z Zahoor T Jamil A Murtaza MA 2015 Xylitol a review on bioproduction application health benefits and related safety issues Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 55 11 1514 28 doi 10 1080 10408398 2012 702288 PMID 24915309 S2CID 20359589 a b c Pigman Ward Horton D 1972 Pigman and Horton ed The Carbohydrates Chemistry and Biochemistry Vol 1A 2nd ed San Diego Academic Press pp 1 67 ISBN 978 0 12 556352 9 Steigerwald Bill Jones Nancy Furukawa Yoshihiro 18 November 2019 First Detection of Sugars in Meteorites Gives Clues to Origin of Life NASA Retrieved 18 November 2019 Furukawa Yoshihiro et al 18 November 2019 Extraterrestrial ribose and other sugars in primitive meteorites Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 116 49 24440 24445 Bibcode 2019PNAS 11624440F doi 10 1073 pnas 1907169116 PMC 6900709 PMID 31740594 Joshi S Agte V 1995 Digestibility of dietary fiber components in vegetarian men Plant Foods for Human Nutrition Dordrecht Netherlands 48 1 39 44 doi 10 1007 BF01089198 PMID 8719737 S2CID 25995873 The Merck Index An Encyclopedia of Chemicals Drugs and Biologicals 11th ed Merck 1989 ISBN 091191028X 8205 Edwards William P 9 November 2015 The Science of Sugar Confectionery Royal Society of Chemistry p 120 ISBN 978 1 78262 609 1 CSB Releases New Safety Video Inferno Dust Explosion at Imperial Sugar U S Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board Washington D C 7 October 2009 Retrieved 17 May 2021 Woo K S Kim H Y Hwang I G Lee S H Jeong H S 2015 Characteristics of the Thermal Degradation of 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Maltase Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Sucrase Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Use link to FoodData Central USDA Archived 3 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine and then search for the particular food and click on SR Legacy Foods a b Sugar World Markets and Trade PDF Foreign Agricultural Service US Department of Agriculture November 2017 Retrieved 20 May 2018 Sugarcane production in 2020 Crops Regions World list Production Quantity pick lists UN Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database FAOSTAT 2022 Retrieved 27 April 2022 World Food and Agriculture Statistical Yearbook 2021 www fao org 2021 doi 10 4060 cb4477en ISBN 978 92 5 134332 6 S2CID 240163091 Retrieved 13 December 2021 a b c d How Cane Sugar is Made the Basic Story Sugar Knowledge International Retrieved 24 September 2018 Flynn Kerry 23 April 2016 India Drought 2016 May Lead 29 35 Drop In Sugar Output For 2016 17 Season Report International Business Times Retrieved 27 October 2016 Sugar beet production in 2020 Crops Regions World list Production Quantity pick lists UN Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database FAOSTAT 2022 Retrieved 27 April 2022 Biennial beet GMO Compass Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 26 January 2014 a b How Beet Sugar is Made Sugar Knowledge International Retrieved 22 March 2012 Tantangan Menghadapi Ketergantungan Impor Gula Rafinasi in Indonesian Asosiasi Gula Rafinasi Indonesia Retrieved 9 April 2014 Rafinasi Vs Gula Kristal Putih in Indonesian Kompas Gramedia 29 July 2011 Retrieved 9 April 2014 Refining and Processing Sugar PDF The Sugar Association Archived from the original PDF on 21 February 2015 Retrieved 16 April 2014 Pakpahan Agus Supriono Agus eds 2005 Bagaimana Gula Dimurnikan Proses Dasar Ketika Tebu Mulai Berbunga in Indonesian Bogor Sugar Observer ISBN 978 979 99311 0 8 How Sugar is Refined SKIL Retrieved 22 March 2012 Deulgaonkar Atul 12 25 March 2005 A case for reform Frontline 22 8 Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Pakpahan Agus Supriono Agus eds 2005 Industri Rafinasi Kunci Pembuka Restrukturisasi Industri Gula Indonesia Ketika Tebu Mulai Berbunga in Indonesian Bogor Sugar Observer pp 70 72 ISBN 978 979 99311 0 8 a b c Sugar types The sugar association Retrieved 23 September 2019 Types and uses Sugar Nutrition UK Retrieved 23 March 2012 a b c d e f g The journey of sugar British Sugar Archived from the original on 26 March 2011 Retrieved 23 March 2012 Robinson Jancis 2006 The Oxford Companion to Wine 3rd ed Oxford University Press pp 665 66 ISBN 978 0 19 860990 2 Hofman D L Van Buul V J Brouns F J 2015 Nutrition Health and Regulatory Aspects of Digestible Maltodextrins Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 56 12 2091 2100 doi 10 1080 10408398 2014 940415 PMC 4940893 PMID 25674937 European Parliament and Council 1990 Council Directive on nutrition labelling for foodstuffs Council Directive of 24 September 1990 on nutrition labelling for foodstuffs p 4 Retrieved 28 September 2011 Food Balance Sheets Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations 2007 Otter Chris 2020 Diet for a large planet USA University of Chicago Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 226 69710 9 Amber Pariona 25 April 2017 Top Sugar Consuming Nations In The World World Atlas Retrieved 20 May 2018 Sugars granulated sucrose in 4 grams from pick list Conde Nast for the USDA National Nutrient Database version SR 21 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2017 O Connor Anahad 12 June 2007 The Claim Brown Sugar Is Healthier Than White Sugar The New York Times Retrieved 13 May 2017 Mozaffarian Dariush 2 May 2017 Conflict of Interest and the Role of the Food Industry in Nutrition Research JAMA 317 17 1755 56 doi 10 1001 jama 2017 3456 ISSN 0098 7484 PMID 28464165 Anderson P Miller D 11 February 2015 Commentary Sweet policies PDF BMJ 350 feb10 16 780 h780 doi 10 1136 bmj h780 ISSN 1756 1833 PMID 25672619 S2CID 34501758 a b c Kearns C E Schmidt L A Glantz S A 2016 Sugar Industry and Coronary Heart Disease Research A Historical Analysis of Internal Industry Documents JAMA Internal Medicine 176 11 1680 85 doi 10 1001 jamainternmed 2016 5394 PMC 5099084 PMID 27617709 Kearns Cristin E Glantz Stanton A Schmidt Laura A 10 March 2015 Simon Capewell ed Sugar Industry Influence on the Scientific Agenda of the National Institute of Dental Research s 1971 National Caries Program A Historical Analysis of Internal Documents PLOS Medicine 12 3 1001798 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 1001798 ISSN 1549 1676 PMC 4355299 PMID 25756179 Flint Stuart W 1 August 2016 Are we selling our souls Novel aspects of the presence in academic conferences of brands linked to ill health J Epidemiol Community Health 70 8 739 40 doi 10 1136 jech 2015 206586 ISSN 0143 005X PMID 27009056 S2CID 35094445 Retrieved 25 March 2018 second ISSN 1470 2738 Aaron Daniel G Siegel Michael B January 2017 Sponsorship of National Health Organizations by Two Major Soda Companies American Journal of Preventive Medicine 52 1 20 30 doi 10 1016 j amepre 2016 08 010 ISSN 0749 3797 PMID 27745783 Schillinger Dean Tran Jessica Mangurian Christina Kearns Cristin 20 December 2016 Do Sugar Sweetened Beverages Cause Obesity and Diabetes Industry and the Manufacture of Scientific Controversy PDF Annals of Internal Medicine 165 12 895 97 doi 10 7326 L16 0534 ISSN 0003 4819 PMC 7883900 PMID 27802504 S2CID 207537905 Retrieved 21 March 2018 original url paywalled Archived 31 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Author s conflict of interest disclosure forms Archived 3 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Bes Rastrollo Maira Schulze Matthias B Ruiz Canela Miguel Martinez Gonzalez Miguel A 2013 Financial conflicts of interest and reporting bias regarding the association between sugar sweetened beverages and weight gain a systematic review of systematic reviews PLOS Medicine 10 12 1001578 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 1001578 PMC 3876974 PMID 24391479 O Connor Anahad 31 October 2016 Studies Linked to Soda Industry Mask Health Risks The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 23 March 2018 Moodie Rob Stuckler David Monteiro Carlos Sheron Nick Neal Bruce Thamarangsi Thaksaphon Lincoln Paul Casswell Sally 23 February 2013 Profits and pandemics prevention of harmful effects of tobacco alcohol and ultra processed food and drink industries The Lancet 381 9867 670 79 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 12 62089 3 ISSN 0140 6736 PMID 23410611 S2CID 844739 O Connor Anahad 9 August 2015 Coca Cola Funds Scientists Who Shift Blame for Obesity Away From Bad Diets Well Retrieved 24 March 2018 Lipton Eric 11 February 2014 Rival Industries Sweet Talk the Public The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 23 March 2018 Sifferlin Alexandra 10 October 2016 Soda Companies Fund 96 Health Groups In the U S Time Retrieved 24 March 2018 a b c Joint WHO FAO Expert Consultation 2003 WHO Technical Report Series 916 Diet Nutrition and the Prevention of Chronic Diseases PDF Retrieved 25 December 2013 Hill J O Prentice A M 1 July 1995 Sugar and body weight regulation The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 62 1 264S 273S doi 10 1093 ajcn 62 1 264S ISSN 0002 9165 PMID 7598083 Malik V S Popkin B M Bray G A Despres J P Willett W C Hu F B 2010 Sugar Sweetened Beverages and Risk of Metabolic Syndrome and Type 2 Diabetes A meta analysis Diabetes Care 33 11 2477 83 doi 10 2337 dc10 1079 PMC 2963518 PMID 20693348 Malik Vasanti S Pan An Willett Walter C Hu Frank B 1 October 2013 Sugar sweetened beverages and weight gain in children and adults a systematic review and meta analysis The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 98 4 1084 1102 doi 10 3945 ajcn 113 058362 ISSN 0002 9165 PMC 3778861 PMID 23966427 Mantantzis Konstantinos Schlaghecken Friederike Sunram Lea Sandra I Maylor Elizabeth A 1 June 2019 Sugar rush or sugar crash A meta analysis of carbohydrate effects on mood PDF Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 101 45 67 doi 10 1016 j neubiorev 2019 03 016 PMID 30951762 S2CID 92575160 Davis Caroline 2010 Attention deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Associations with Overeating and Obesity Current Psychiatry Reports 12 5 389 95 doi 10 1007 s11920 010 0133 7 PMID 20632134 S2CID 30902766 Visram Shelina Cheetham Mandy Riby Deborah M Crossley Stephen J Lake Amelia A 1 October 2016 Consumption of energy drinks by children and young people a rapid review examining evidence of physical effects and consumer attitudes BMJ Open 6 10 e010380 doi 10 1136 bmjopen 2015 010380 ISSN 2044 6055 PMC 5073652 PMID 27855083 Moynihan P J Kelly S A 2014 Effect on Caries of Restricting Sugars Intake Systematic Review to Inform WHO Guidelines Journal of Dental Research 93 1 8 18 doi 10 1177 0022034513508954 PMC 3872848 PMID 24323509 Marriott BP Olsho L Hadden L Connor P 2010 Intake of added sugars and selected nutrients in the United States National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey NHANES 2003 2006 Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 50 3 228 58 doi 10 1080 10408391003626223 PMID 20301013 S2CID 205689533 a b Panel on Macronutrients Panel on the Definition of Dietary Fiber Subcommittee on Upper Reference Levels of Nutrients Subcommittee on Interpretation and Uses of Dietary Reference Intakes the Standing Committee on the Scientific Evaluation of Dietary Reference Intakes Food and Nutrition Board Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine National Research Council 2005 Dietary reference intakes for energy carbohydrate fiber fat fatty acids cholesterol protein and amino acids Washington DC National Academies Press ISBN 978 0 309 08525 0 Retrieved 4 December 2018 Although there were insufficient data to set a UL Tolerable Upper Intake Levels for added sugars a maximal intake level of 25 percent or less of energy is suggested to prevent the displacement of foods that are major sources of essential micronutrients World Health Organization 2015 Guideline Sugars intake for adults and children PDF Report Geneva WHO Press ISBN 978 92 4 154902 8 Nutrition Center for Food Safety and Applied 22 February 2021 Labeling amp Nutrition Changes to the Nutrition Facts Label www fda gov What We Eat In America NHANES 2013 2014 Archived 24 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Measurement amp conversion charts Domino Sugar 2011 Archived from the original on 3 October 2014 Engineering Resources Bulk Density Chart Powder and Bulk Archived from the original on 27 October 2002 Further reading EditBarrett Duncan Calvi Nuala 2012 The Sugar Girls Collins ISBN 978 0 00 744847 0 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Sugar Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Frankopan Peter The Silk Roads A New History of the World 2016 Bloomsbury ISBN 9781408839997 Saulo Aurora A March 2005 Sugars and Sweeteners in Foods PDF College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources Strong Roy 2002 Feast A History of Grand Eating Jonathan Cape ISBN 0224061380External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sugars Look up sugar in Wiktionary the free dictionary Sugar at the National Health Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sugar amp oldid 1146773208, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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