Comparing E406 - Agar vs E1403 - Bleached starch

Synonyms
E406
Agar
Gelose
Kanten
Chinese or Japanese isinglass
agar-agar
agar agar
E1403
Bleached starch
Origins
Products

Found in 2,871 products

Found in 0 products

Search rank & volume
#5854.2K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#54510 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×2.76
over-aware

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Search volume over time

Interest over time for 7 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

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Popular questions
  1. What is agar powder?

    Agar powder (E406) is a plant-derived gelling agent extracted from red algae, used as a vegetarian alternative to gelatin to thicken and stabilize foods.

  2. Is annie agar married?

    This question is unrelated to the food additive E406 (agar); as a food-additive specialist I don’t provide personal information about individuals.

  3. What is agar agar powder?

    Agar-agar powder is the same as agar (E406): a refined red-seaweed extract that forms firm gels and serves as a thickener, stabiliser, and vegetarian gelatin substitute.

  4. How to make agar plates?

    Mix ~1.5% w/v agar with appropriate nutrient broth, heat to dissolve, sterilize (e.g., autoclave/pressure cooker), then pour into sterile Petri dishes at about 50°C and allow to set.

  5. Is agar agar healthy?

    Yes—agar (E406) is generally recognized as safe and functions as non-digestible fiber; excessive amounts may cause bloating or a laxative effect, so consume with adequate fluids.

  1. How is bleached starch used in food?

    As a thickener and stabiliser (and sometimes to aid emulsification), it improves texture, body, and consistency while standardising whiteness in products like soups, sauces, dressings, fillings, and desserts.

  2. How is tapioca starch bleached?

    By treating the wet starch with approved oxidising agents—commonly hydrogen peroxide or sodium hypochlorite—under controlled conditions, then thoroughly washing and drying; this boosts whiteness and reduces off-odours.

  3. What foods have bleached starch?

    It’s found in soups and sauces, salad dressings, bakery creams and fillings, confectionery, dairy desserts and puddings, and some ready-to-drink beverages, typically labelled as “bleached starch” or E1403.

  4. What is bleached starch used for?

    To thicken and stabilise foods, improve whiteness and clarity, help suspend ingredients, and reduce water separation in a range of processed foods.

  5. What is the e number of bleached starch?

    E1403.