Comparing E296 - Malic acid vs E365 - Sodium fumarate

Synonyms
E296
Malic acid
hydroxybutanedioic acid
l-malic acid
E365
Sodium fumarate
Products

Found in 11,508 products

Found in 6 products

Search rank & volume
#8528.3K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#386180 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.36
under-aware

×2.85
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 4 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Search history data is not available.

Popular questions
  1. Is malic acid bad for you?

    No—at normal food levels it’s considered safe (GRAS in the U.S. and authorized in the EU); very high intakes or very sour products can irritate the mouth or stomach.

  2. Is malic acid gluten free?

    Yes. Malic acid is inherently gluten-free; check the overall product for other gluten-containing ingredients.

  3. What is malic acid used for?

    It’s an acidulant that provides a tart, apple-like sourness and adjusts pH in foods and drinks, commonly in beverages, candies, and fruit preparations.

  4. Is malic acid bad for your teeth?

    Acids like malic acid can contribute to enamel erosion with frequent exposure (e.g., sour candies, acidic drinks); limiting contact time and rinsing with water can help.

  5. Is malic acid vegan?

    Yes—malic acid is typically vegan, made synthetically or by microbial fermentation without animal-derived inputs, though other ingredients in a product may not be.

  1. What is sodium stearyl fumarate?

    Sodium stearyl fumarate is a pharmaceutical tablet lubricant, not a food additive; in foods, E365 refers to sodium fumarate—the sodium salt of fumaric acid—used as an acidity regulator and buffering agent.

  2. Badge is awarded to every affiliate who qualifies for the e365 contest.?

    This appears unrelated: in food labeling, E365 is sodium fumarate, an acidity regulator; it has nothing to do with contest badges.

  3. How does asana work with offic e365?

    Unrelated—E365 here is sodium fumarate, a food additive used to control acidity; it has no connection to Asana or Microsoft 365.

  4. How many badge is awarded to every affiliate who qualifies for the e365 contest?

    That contest question is unrelated; E365 denotes sodium fumarate, a permitted food acidity regulator, not an awards program.

  5. How to change offic e365 to hup?

    This is outside the food context—E365 denotes sodium fumarate, a food additive for acidity control, and is unrelated to Microsoft’s Home Use Program.