Comparing E300 - Ascorbic acid vs E927A - Azodicarbonamide

Synonyms
E300
Ascorbic acid
l-ascorbic acid
Synonyms L-xylo-Ascorbic acid
E927a
Azodicarbonamide
Products

Found in 3,523 products

Found in 726 products

Search rank & volume
#5158.9K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2302.6K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×2.44
over-aware

×0.53
under-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 4 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 ascorbic acid bad for you?

    No—ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is considered safe at typical food levels and is essential for health; it’s GRAS in the U.S. and approved in the EU. Very high supplemental doses can cause gastrointestinal upset and, in susceptible people, increase kidney stone risk.

  2. Can dogs have ascorbic acid?

    Yes, small amounts in foods are safe, but dogs synthesize their own vitamin C and usually don’t need supplements. High doses may cause diarrhea, so consult a veterinarian before supplementing.

  3. What is ascorbic acid made from?

    Commercial ascorbic acid is typically made from glucose (often derived from corn, wheat, or cassava) that’s converted via microbial fermentation and chemical steps into L‑ascorbic acid.

  4. How is ascorbic acid made?

    Industrially, D‑glucose is converted to 2‑keto‑L‑gulonic acid by fermentation (or via the older Reichstein process: glucose → sorbitol → L‑sorbose → 2‑KGA) and then chemically cyclized to ascorbic acid. Modern methods use two-step fermentation to improve efficiency.

  5. Is ascorbic acid the same as citric acid?

    No—ascorbic acid (E300) is vitamin C and an antioxidant, while citric acid (E330) is a different compound mainly used as an acidulant and does not provide vitamin C.

  1. What breads have azodicarbonamide?

    In countries where it's permitted (e.g., the U.S.), some mass-produced white and wheat sandwich breads, hamburger/hot dog buns, and bagels may contain azodicarbonamide as a dough conditioner; check the ingredient list for "azodicarbonamide" or "ADA".

  2. What is azodicarbonamide used for?

    In foods, azodicarbonamide (E927a) is a flour treatment agent/oxidizing dough conditioner that strengthens dough, improves rise and crumb, and can slightly bleach flour. Outside food, it's used as a blowing agent to make foamed plastics and rubber.

  3. What does azodicarbonamide do to your body?

    At permitted food levels it breaks down during dough processing and baking and is not expected to have direct health effects for consumers, and regulators like the FDA allow it within limits. Occupational inhalation of the raw powder can irritate or sensitize the respiratory tract, and concerns about breakdown products have led some regions (e.g., EU, Australia/New Zealand, Singapore) to prohibit its use in food.

  4. What foods contain azodicarbonamide?

    Primarily some commercially baked goods such as sliced sandwich breads, hamburger and hot dog buns, bagels, flour tortillas, and frozen or par-baked doughs in countries where allowed. Check labels for "azodicarbonamide" or "ADA," as many brands have reformulated to remove it.

  5. What products contain azodicarbonamide?

    Food products that may contain it include certain mass-produced breads, buns, bagels, tortillas, and frozen or par-baked doughs (where permitted). Non-food uses include foamed plastics and rubber products like shoe soles and yoga mats, where it acts as a blowing agent.