Comparing E1200 - Polydextrose vs E409 - Arabinogalactan

Synonyms
E1200
Polydextrose
68424-04-4
E409
Arabinogalactan
Products

Found in 1,339 products

Found in 12 products

Search rank & volume
#1805.8K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2701.3K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.63
under-aware

×11.81
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Is polydextrose bad for you?

    No—major regulators (e.g., FDA, EFSA) consider it safe as a food additive and soluble fiber; large amounts may cause gas, bloating, or a laxative effect in some people.

  2. Does polydextrose raise blood sugar?

    It has a very low glycemic impact because it’s largely non‑digestible and provides about 1 kcal/g, so it typically does not significantly raise blood glucose.

  3. Polydextrose what is it?

    A synthetic, soluble fiber made by polymerizing glucose with small amounts of sorbitol and citric acid (E1200), used as a bulking agent, humectant, stabilizer, and thickener.

  4. What is polydextrose fiber?

    It’s a low‑digestible soluble fiber that adds bulk and slight sweetness to foods, helps boost fiber content, and is partially fermented in the gut.

  5. Is polydextrose good for you?

    It can help increase fiber intake and reduce calories/sugar in foods, which may support digestive regularity and weight management; tolerance varies, and excessive intake can cause GI discomfort.

  1. What is larch arabinogalactan?

    Larch arabinogalactan is a plant-derived polysaccharide (soluble dietary fiber) extracted from larch trees (Larix spp.), used as food additive E409 for stabilization/thickening and as a prebiotic fiber.

  2. 90 e409 trans hunting for gear when on constant throttle?

    E409 is the food additive code for arabinogalactan and is unrelated to vehicle transmissions—you may be thinking of the E4OD transmission.

  3. 90 ford f350 e409 trans hunting for gear when on constant throttle?

    E409 refers to the food additive arabinogalactan, not an automotive transmission; the Ford transmission you likely mean is the E4OD.

  4. Arabinogalactan found in which food?

    It occurs naturally in larch wood and in plant gums like gum arabic and gum ghatti; in the food supply, it’s present when added as E409 to products such as beverages, confections, dairy, and sauces as a stabilizer/soluble fiber.

  5. Arabinogalactan how to take?

    Follow product directions; a common supplemental amount is about 4–10 g per day mixed into water or food, starting lower to reduce gas and bloating and drinking adequate fluids.