Comparing E418 - Gellan gum vs E1403 - Bleached starch

Synonyms
E418
Gellan gum
gellan
E-418
E 418
INS418
INS-418
INS 418
E1403
Bleached starch
Products

Found in 2,816 products

Found in 0 products

Search rank & volume
#11017.4K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#54510 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.90
normal

Awareness data is not available.

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 8 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Search history data is not available.

Popular questions
  1. Is gellan gum bad for you?

    No—it's considered safe by major regulators (GRAS in the U.S., approved in the EU); very high intakes may cause gas or loose stools, but typical food amounts are well tolerated.

  2. What is gellan gum made of?

    It's a polysaccharide produced by fermenting sugars with the bacterium Sphingomonas elodea; chemically it contains repeating units of glucose, glucuronic acid, and rhamnose.

  3. Is gellan gum vegan?

    Yes—it's made by microbial fermentation and is not animal-derived, so it's generally considered vegan.

  4. Is gellan gum bad for your gut?

    Generally no; it's not digested and is used in small amounts, though large amounts can cause bloating or laxative effects in some people, with no evidence of gut-lining harm at permitted levels.

  5. Is gellan gum inflammatory?

    No; there's no evidence it promotes inflammation at approved food-use levels, and regulatory evaluations have not identified pro-inflammatory effects.

  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.