Comparing E334 - L(+)-tartaric acid vs E354 - Calcium tartrate

Synonyms
E334
L(+)-tartaric acid
tartaric acid
2‚3-dihydroxybutanedioic acid
2‚3-dihydroxysuccinic acid
threaric acid
racemic acid
uvic acid
paratartaric acid
E354
Calcium tartrate
Products

Found in 2,434 products

Found in 0 products

Search rank & volume
#1577.7K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#412110 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.46
under-aware

Awareness data is not available.

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 9 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 tartaric acid bad for you?

    No—L(+)-tartaric acid (E334) is approved for use in foods (e.g., EU E-number; FDA GRAS) and is considered safe at typical levels; very high intakes may cause stomach upset, and only the L(+)-form is used as an additive.

  2. What is tartaric acid used for?

    It’s used as an acidulant to add sourness and control pH, and as an antioxidant/sequestrant; it also partners with baking soda in leavening and is added to wine to adjust acidity.

  3. How much tartaric acid to add to wine?

    It depends on your must/wine’s pH and titratable acidity—bench trials are essential; as a rule of thumb, 1 g/L tartaric acid raises TA by about 1 g/L and can lower pH by ~0.1–0.3, with typical adjustments in the 0.5–2 g/L range subject to local regulations.

  4. What does tartaric acid do?

    It provides a sharp, tart flavor while regulating acidity, chelating metals, and limiting oxidation; in baking it reacts with sodium bicarbonate to release CO2, and in wine it helps set acid balance and stability.

  5. What foods have tartaric acid?

    It occurs naturally in grapes, wine, and tamarind (also in smaller amounts in some fruits), and as an additive it’s found in soft drinks, candies, jams/jellies, gelatin desserts, and baking powders/cream of tartar.

  1. Does too much calcium affect how well metoprolol tartrate works to lower heartbeat?

    No—there’s no evidence that the small amounts of calcium from the food additive E354 (calcium tartrate) affect metoprolol tartrate’s effect; the “tartrate” in the drug name is just the salt form and isn’t related to dietary tartrate. If taking high-dose calcium supplements, spacing them a couple of hours from medicines is a general precaution—ask a pharmacist if unsure.

  2. How to add lyrics in walkman nwz-e354?

    E354 refers to calcium tartrate, a food additive used as a preservative/acidity regulator; it isn’t related to Sony Walkman features like lyric display.

  3. How to add lyrics to a song in walkman nwz-e354?

    E354 is calcium tartrate, a food additive, and has no connection to managing lyrics on a Sony Walkman.

  4. How to delete songs from sony walkman nwz-e354?

    E354 denotes calcium tartrate (a food additive), not a Sony Walkman model or function.

  5. How to download sounds onto a yamaha e354?

    E354 is the code for calcium tartrate, a food additive; it’s unrelated to Yamaha instruments or sound downloads.