Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJaylynn Pridgen Modified over 9 years ago
1
Tuesday Lecture – Sugar Reading: Textbook, Chapter 7, 8
2
Quiz
3
1. We use the name “potato” for two different food crops, the “Irish Potato” and the “Sweet Potato”. Which of these is a root and which is a stem? 2. What are the two major crops that serve as the source of sugar for people? 3. What plant is the topic of your plant project?
4
Sweets – A Plant Specialty
5
Sugar – chemist = carbohydrate, formula CH 2 O
6
Sweets – A Plant Specialty Sugar – chemist = carbohydrate, formula CH 2 O - many chemicals included in this category
7
Sweets – A Plant Specialty Sugar – chemist = carbohydrate, formula CH 2 O - many chemicals included in this category Sugar – consumer – the specific sugar sucrose 2 units (disaccharide): glucose-fructose
8
Sweets – A Plant Specialty Sugar – chemist = carbohydrate, formula CH 2 O - many chemicals included in this category Sugar – consumer – the specific sugar sucrose 2 units (disaccharide): glucose-fructose Monosaccharides: glucose, fructose
9
Sweets – A Plant Specialty Sugar – chemist = carbohydrate, formula CH 2 O - many chemicals included in this category Sugar – consumer – the specific sugar sucrose 2 units (disaccharide): glucose-fructose Monosaccharides: glucose, fructose Note – terminology can get confusing here – mixture of chemical and colloquial terms: Glucose = d-Glucose = Dextrose Fructose + Glucose - bee sugar (in honey); “inverted” sugar
10
Primary Plant Sources of Sugar Sugar Cane – Saccharum officinarum10%10 tons/hectare sugar yield
11
Primary Plant Sources of Sugar Sugar Cane – Saccharum officinarum10%10 tons/hectare Sugar Beet – Beta vulgaris 17% 7 tons/hectare sugar yield
12
Primary Plant Sources of Sugar Sugar Cane – Saccharum officinarum10%10 tons/hectare Sugar Beet – Beta vulgaris 17% 7 tons/hectare Sorghum – Sorghum bicolor Palm – Phoenix dactylifera sugar yield
13
Primary Plant Sources of Sugar Sugar Cane – Saccharum officinarum10%10 tons/hectare Sugar Beet – Beta vulgaris 17% 7 tons/hectare Sorghum – Sorghum bicolor Palm – Phoenix dactylifera Maple – Acer saccharum 8% (sap) sugar yield
14
Where Sugar is Produced
15
Sugar Cane Saccharum officinarum – member of Poaceae (Grass family) Native to: Polynesia
16
Harvesting Sugar Cane
17
Refining Sugar Cane 1. Cane solids are separated from juice 2. Juice is processed to concentrate sugar 3. Syrup is boiled and sugar is crystallized
18
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there
19
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there Sugar Types: - standard crystals “regular” sugar (crystal size can vary)
20
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there Sugar Types: - standard crystals “regular” sugar (crystal size can vary) - ground crystals (+ cornstarch) powdered (confectioner’s) sugar
21
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there Sugar Types: - standard crystals “regular” sugar (crystal size can vary) - ground crystals (+ cornstarch) powdered (confectioner’s) sugar - crystals “glued” with sugar syrup sugar cubes
22
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there Sugar Types: - standard crystals “regular” sugar (crystal size can vary) - ground crystals (+ cornstarch) powdered (confectioner’s) sugar - crystals “glued” with sugar syrup sugar cubes - crystals mixed with syrup from refining brown sugar
23
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there Sugar Types: - standard crystals “regular” sugar (crystal size can vary) - ground crystals (+ cornstarch) powdered (confectioner’s) sugar - crystals “glued” with sugar syrup sugar cubes - crystals mixed with syrup from refining brown sugar - crystals mixed with glucose “blended” sugar (cheaper)
24
Sugar Cane Products “Raw” Sugar – shipped to country where used, further refined there Sugar Types: - standard crystals “regular” sugar (crystal size can vary) - ground crystals (+ cornstarch) powdered (confectioner’s) sugar - crystals “glued” with sugar syrup sugar cubes - crystals mixed with syrup from refining brown sugar - crystals mixed with glucose “blended” sugar (cheaper) Byproducts: - Molasses - syrups of various types
25
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?)
26
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India
27
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia
28
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia 11 th Century - Crusaders bring sugar to Europe (1099 in England)
29
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia 11 th Century - Crusaders bring sugar to Europe (1099 in England) Medieval times – Sugar = White Gold (1319 - $220/lb in England)
30
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia 11 th Century - Crusaders bring sugar to Europe (1099 in England) Medieval times – Sugar = White Gold (1319 - $220/lb in England) 1493 – Columbus takes sugar cane to West Indies
31
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia 11 th Century - Crusaders bring sugar to Europe (1099 in England) Medieval times – Sugar = White Gold (1319 - $220/lb in England) 1493 – Columbus takes sugar cane to West Indies 1700’s – American “Sugar Triangle” (sugar, rum, slaves)
32
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia 11 th Century - Crusaders bring sugar to Europe (1099 in England) Medieval times – Sugar = White Gold (1319 - $220/lb in England) 1493 – Columbus takes sugar cane to West Indies 1700’s – American “Sugar Triangle” (sugar, rum, slaves) 1700’s – Sugar taxation Revolution
33
Sugar Cane – History Sugar Cane – domesticated in New Guinea (?) 2992 B.C. – unrefined sugar being produced in India 642 A.D. – Arab-speaking peoples get sugar refining from Persia 11 th Century - Crusaders bring sugar to Europe (1099 in England) Medieval times – Sugar = White Gold (1319 - $220/lb in England) 1493 – Columbus takes sugar cane to West Indies 1700’s – American “Sugar Triangle” (sugar, rum, slaves) 1700’s – Sugar taxation Revolution 1800’s – Sugar beet provides competition in temperate areas Currently: sugar production subsidized, taxed, politicized
34
Napoleon Sweetens the Pot – Sugar Beet Beta vulgaris – Chenopodiaceae (Goosefoot Family)
35
Sugar Beet Processing Lewistown, Idaho Sugar Factory, 1905 Caption to Photo: 10 year old boys can be very useful
36
Where Sugar is Produced
37
North American Sweetener Acer saccharum – Sugar Maple
38
Maple Syrup Sap is collected in early spring Sap is boiled in “sugar house” 40 gallons sap 1 gallon syrup
39
Glucose, Fructose - C 6 H 12 O 6 sucrose glucose fructose fructose - “chair”
40
Glucose, Fructose - C 6 H 12 O 6 sucrose glucose fructose fructose - “chair” Starch - amylose
41
Glucose, Fructose - C 6 H 12 O 6 sucrose High Fructose Corn Syrup 1. Starch from Corn 2. Treat with alpha-amylase oligosaccharides 3. Treat with glucoamylase glucose 4. Treat with glucose isomerase mixture of glucose and fructose 5. Enrichment, “back-blending” to produce final product glucose fructose fructose - “chair” Starch - amylose
42
Glucose, Fructose - C 6 H 12 O 6 sucrose High Fructose Corn Syrup 1. Starch from Corn 2. Treat with alpha-amylase oligosaccharides 3. Treat with glucoamylase glucose 4. Treat with glucose isomerase mixture of glucose and fructose 5. Enrichment, “back-blending” to produce final product glucose fructose fructose - “chair” Starch - amylose
43
Non-caloric Sweeteners from Plants Glycyrrhizin – from licorice root (Glycyrrhiza, a legume) - Used originally to make licorice candy - 30 x as sweet as table sugar - more than limited consumption has health effects - potential as an herbal medicine in anti-cancer treatments
44
Non-caloric Sweeteners from Plants Glycyrrhizin – from licorice root (Glycyrrhiza, a legume) - Used originally to make licorice candy - 30 x as sweet as table sugar - more than limited consumption has health effects - potential as an herbal medicine in anti-cancer treatments Stevia – from sweetleaf plant, Stevia - Widespread use in Japan - regulatory issues, starting to be used elsewhere
45
Non-caloric Sweeteners from Plants Glycyrrhizin – from licorice root (Glycyrrhiza, a legume) - Used originally to make licorice candy - 30 x as sweet as table sugar - more than limited consumption has health effects - potential as an herbal medicine in anti-cancer treatments Stevia – from sweetleaf plant, Stevia - Widespread use in Japan - regulatory issues, starting to be used elsewhere Miraculin – protein from miracle fruit, Synsepalum - Not sweet, but modifies taste receptors so foods are sweet
46
Tuesday March 8 – optional assignment. Due Tuesday March 22. Write a brief paragraph, using proper English grammar, that explains: What was the “Sugar Trade Triangle” - what were the major elements (both geographical and trading items)? How did it impact the history of the U.S.A.?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.