Comparing E160 - Carotenoids vs E161G - Canthaxanthin

Synonyms
E160
Carotenoids
E161g
Canthaxanthin
Functions
Products

Found in 30 products

Found in 25 products

Search rank & volume
#1419.6K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#329450 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×40.02
over-aware

×2.36
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 2 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. What foods have carotenoids?

    Brightly colored fruits and vegetables—carrots, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, tomatoes, red/orange peppers, spinach, kale, corn, mangoes, apricots—naturally contain carotenoids; egg yolks and dairy have smaller amounts.

  2. What is the ul for carotenoids?

    No tolerable upper intake level is set for total carotenoids from foods; specific E160 colorants have ADIs (e.g., lycopene E160d: 0.5 mg/kg body weight/day by EFSA), and high-dose beta-carotene supplements are not advised for smokers.

  3. What are carotenoids in photosynthesis?

    They are accessory pigments that broaden light harvesting (mainly in the blue–green range) and protect photosystems by quenching singlet oxygen and dissipating excess energy (photoprotection).

  4. What foods are high in carotenoids?

    Top sources include carrots, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, spinach, kale, collards, tomatoes and tomato products, red/orange peppers, mango, papaya, apricots, cantaloupe, and corn.

  5. What foods contain carotenoids?

    As additives (E160), carotenoids are used to color margarines/spreads, cheeses, yogurts and dairy drinks, fruit beverages, confectionery, baked goods, sauces, and some processed meats and snacks.

  1. Canthaxanthin what is it?

    Canthaxanthin (E161g) is an orange‑red carotenoid (xanthophyll) used as a food color, occurring naturally in some organisms and also produced synthetically or by microbial fermentation.

  2. How is canthaxanthin used in food?

    It’s added as a color to give orange to red hues in products like beverages, sauces, confectionery, and dairy analogues where permitted; it’s also used in fish and poultry feed to enhance flesh and yolk color.

  3. How to make canthaxanthin?

    Commercially it’s made by chemical synthesis or by fermenting selected microorganisms that biosynthesize the pigment, then purified and formulated; it isn’t practical or safe to produce at home.

  4. How to pronounce canthaxanthin?

    kan-thuh-ZAN-thin (IPA: /ˌkænθəˈzænθɪn/).

  5. What color fool coloring is canthaxanthin in?

    It imparts an orange‑red (reddish‑orange) color.