Erythritol (Powder, 60-80Mesh)
Erythritol (Powder, 60-80Mesh) food‑grade erythritol (polyol sweetener; E 968 / INS 968) is a sugar alcohol used in foods to replace some or all sucrose while keeping sweetness and bulk with very low energy contribution and a minimal post‑meal blood glucose response compared with sugar. Erythritol is typically ~60–70% as sweet as sucrose and can provide a characteristic cooling sensation.
| Benefit | Typical use / dose* | Key practical findings | High-quality sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Sugar replacement with minimal glycemic impact | Food use levels vary; often blended with high‑intensity sweeteners because erythritol is less sweet than sucrose. | Compared with sucrose, erythritol provides sweetness and bulking with little effect on blood glucose in most users, which supports ‘reduced sugar’ product design. | PMC review |
| 2 Texture & sweetness building (bulking polyol) | Common in sugar‑free / no‑added‑sugar beverages, confectionery, chocolate, gum, bakery, and dairy/frozen desserts. | Adds solids and mouthfeel and can help balance sweetness profiles when paired with stevia/monk fruit/sucralose or small amounts of sugar/allulose. | FDA GRAS (GRN 789) |
| 3 Formulation control (cooling, browning, crystallization) | Confectionery/fillings/chocolate and bakery are most sensitive; particle size (mesh) affects dissolution rate and perceived ‘grit’. | Erythritol can deliver a cooling sensation, may brown less than sucrose systems, and can recrystallize in some matrices (risk of ‘sandiness’) if water activity, cooling curve, and solids balance are not controlled. | Foods (MDPI) 2023 |
*Start from a sensory target (sweetness + cooling) and a texture target (bulk + crystallization control), then tune blends and processing. Results vary by system.
Mechanistic highlights
- Low metabolic impact: Erythritol is poorly metabolized and contributes little energy versus sucrose; most is absorbed and excreted unchanged.
- Cooling sensation: Dissolution is endothermic, creating a cooling mouthfeel (useful in mints/gum; may need balancing in chocolate or beverages).
- Crystallization behavior: As a crystalline polyol, erythritol can recrystallize in some fillings/syrups/fat systems; managing water activity and cooling profiles helps maintain smooth texture.
Safety & practical use
- GI tolerance: Like other polyols, high intakes can cause bloating or laxation in sensitive individuals; design serving sizes accordingly.
- Practical tolerance target: As a starting point for product design, many teams keep typical daily exposure in the range of ~5–30 g/day depending on the target consumers and product category, then validate with sensory and tolerance testing.
- Regulatory status: Permitted as a food additive in multiple regions (e.g., EU E 968; Thailand INS 968). In the U.S., multiple GRAS notices exist for intended uses in foods.
- Regulatory dose reference: EFSA set an ADI of 0.5 g/kg body weight/day (primarily based on GI tolerance). EFSA summary
- Room (25-40C)
- 36 Months from manufacturing or testing date.
- 5000mg - 30000mg
- 10000mg
- 5000mg - 30000mg
- 10000mg
- Add into water phase. Avoid temperature above 60C.
- Avoid heat above 60C
- 3.50 - 7.00
- Soluble in Water, Dispersible in water, Soluble in DMSO (Dimethyl Sulfoxide)
- Oral Care
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| Test Name | Specification |
|---|---|
| Color and taste | White |
| Appearance | Powder |
| Assay (on dry basis) | 99.5-100.5% |
| pH value | 5-7 |
| Loss on drying (%) | 0.3 Max |
| Ash (%) | 0.1 Max |
| Melting range (C) | 119-123 |
| Lead | 0.5ppm Max |
| As | 0.3ppm Max |
| Reducing sugars | 0.3% Max |
| Ribitol and glycerol | 0.1% Max |
| Bacteria count (CFU/g) | 300 Max |
| Yeast (CFU/g) | 25 Max |
| Moulds (CFU/g) | 25 Max |
| Coliforms MPN/g | 0.3 Max |
| Salmonella enterica | Negative |
| Shigella | Negative |
| Staphylococcus aureus | Negative |
| Beta hemolytic streptococcus | Negative |
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