Cyclamate is approved as a sweetener in over 55 countries,though it is banned in the United States.Sweeteners produced by Sweet'N Low and Sugar Twin for Canada contain cyclamate, though not for those deployed in the United States.
Sodium cyclamate is an artificial sweetener.It is often used synergistically with other artificial sweeteners, especially saccharin. It is less expensive than most sweeteners, including sucralose, and is stable under heating.Cyclamate is the sodium or calcium salt of cyclamic acid, which itself is prepared by the sulfonation of cyclohexylamine. This can be accomplished by reacting cyclohexylamine with either sulfamic acid or sulfur trioxide.
Sodium cyclamate was discovered in 1937 at the University of Illinois by graduate student Michael Sveda.In the US in 1958, it was designated GRAS.Cyclamate was marketed in tablet form for use by diabetics as an alternative tabletop sweetener, as well as in a liquid form; one such product was named 'Sucaryl' and is still available in non-US markets.
In the Philippines, Magic Sugar, a brand of cyclamate, has been banned.It was placed in coconut juices by local street-side vendors. Other studies implicated cyclohexylamine in testicular atrophy in mice.On October 18, 1969, the Food additives and Drug Administration banned its sale in the United States with citation of the Delaney Amendment. In the same month, cyclamate was approved for use in the United Kingdom and is now used in low-cost sweetener products.
The thickener products: agar agar powder Carrageenan Carboxy CMC
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