Comparing E353 - Metatartaric acid vs E466 - Sodium carboxy methyl cellulose

Synonyms
E353
Metatartaric acid
E466
Sodium carboxy methyl cellulose
sodium carboxymethylcellulose
carboxy methyl cellulose
Carboxymethylcellulose
cellulose gum
carboxymethyl cellulose
CMC
NaCMC
Products

Found in 0 products

Found in 12,512 products

Search rank & volume
#46360 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2789K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

Awareness data is not available.

×1.04
normal

Search volume over time

Search history data is not available.

Interest over time for 9 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. How do i set my sony nwz-e353 mp3 player to continue to the next track?

    That device question is unrelated; E353 is metatartaric acid, a wine additive used near bottling to inhibit tartrate crystal formation, with effectiveness decreasing over time as it hydrolyzes back to tartaric acid.

  2. How do i transpose on the psr e353 keyboard?

    Unrelated to the keyboard: E353 (metatartaric acid) is authorized in the EU to stabilize wine against tartrate precipitation, typically up to 100 mg/L.

  3. How does the yamaha psr-e353 sound like?

    Not about the additive: E353 metatartaric acid does not noticeably affect taste or aroma at normal use levels; it simply helps keep wine clear by preventing tartrate crystals.

  4. How to add music to sony mwz-e353?

    This refers to a device; E353 is metatartaric acid produced by heating tartaric acid (from grapes or synthetically) into a polymer that stabilizes wine against crystallization.

  5. How to change sony walkman nwz-e353 battery?

    Unrelated to E-numbers: E353 is considered safe at permitted food levels and gradually breaks down to tartaric acid, a natural component of grapes and wine (suitable for vegans).

  1. When is cmc coming back?

    CMC (E466) hasn’t been withdrawn; it remains approved in the EU and US and is widely produced, so any restock timing depends on the specific retailer or supplier.

  2. When will cmc return?

    There’s been no general ban or recall of sodium carboxymethyl cellulose; if you’re seeing a shortage, only the manufacturer or seller can give a return date.

  3. When will cmc be back?

    CMC is still authorized and manufactured—availability issues are local or product-specific, so contact the brand or distributor for timing.

  4. How long is cmc out?

    It isn’t out globally; regulatory approval and production continue, and any gaps are due to individual supply chains.

  5. Is cmc coming back?

    Yes—CMC (E466) remains permitted and in use; if a particular product removed it, only that brand can say whether they’ll add it back.