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Agar or Carrageenan - pure vegetarian thickener

Updated: 2009-10-20 Author: Home Maker
Carrageenan is readily available among Zuozuo's range of products. It is sold in marketable packaging and can be obtained in Zuozuo assigned shops. It is one of the main ingredients in make jelly dessert which recipes are found here in the recipe page.

Also, one can often purchase powdered carrageenan at natural food stores. It may be used in the preparation of certain wines and beers. Also many sliced deli meats are enriched with carrageenan. Carrageenan may also be marketed in its jelled form as a personal lubricant. Companies like Tom’s of Maine use carrageenan in a variety of products from toothpaste to deodorant.

One can make one’s own carrageenan by boiling down Irish moss for about 20 to 30 minutes. When the mixture cools, and the moss is removed, one is left with a gelled substance. Since many recipes call for a thickening agent, many vegetarians use carrageenan in place of products like gelatin, since it is 100% vegetarian.

Some use carrageenan to make foods like vegetarian marshmallows, to gel jelly, or stabilize ice cream. As it cooks, it often has a fish like odor. This odor and taste is usually masked by the foods in which it is used. Carrageenan in algae form is also quite rich in iron and sulfur. However, when it is processed into a gel, it usually looses these minerals.

Carrageenan is also equivalent to agar,which is derived from red algae, and sometimes seaweed. The process is the same for producing agar as it is for making carrageenan. In both instances, the alga is boiled down to make a jelly substance.

Like carrageenan, agar can also be used in ice cream, soup, jelly, or in brewing wine or beer. It also is a vegetarian alternative to gelatin. In fact, since virtually no difference exists between the two substances, they are excellent substitutes for each other.

It is more common in Asian countries to see agar listed as a thickening agent, while in the US, the term carrageenan is more commonly used.

Ariticle Source: what is carrageenan


 
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