Comparing E422 - Glycerol vs E964 - Polyglycitol syrup

Synonyms
E422
Glycerol
Glycerin
Glycerine
vegetable glycerine
E964
Polyglycitol syrup
Products

Found in 12,762 products

Found in 38 products

Search rank & volume
#5167.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#302610 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×1.91
over-aware

×2.19
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 5 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. What is vegetable glycerin?

    Vegetable glycerin is glycerol (E422) derived from plant oils (e.g., soybean, palm, coconut); it’s chemically identical to other glycerin and commonly used as a humectant and sweetener.

  2. Is glycerin bad for you?

    Generally no—at typical food and cosmetic levels it’s considered safe (FDA GRAS; EFSA found no safety concern at reported uses); large amounts may cause bloating, diarrhea, or thirst.

  3. Is glycerin good for your skin?

    Yes—glycerin is a humectant that draws and holds water in the outer skin layers, helping hydration and barrier function; very high, undiluted use can feel sticky or occasionally irritate.

  4. What is glycerin used for?

    In foods it works as a humectant, mild sweetener, thickener, and solvent/carrier for flavors and colors to keep products moist and stable; it’s also used in pharmaceuticals and personal care as a moisturizer, solvent, and plasticizer.

  5. What is glycerin made of?

    It’s most often produced by hydrolysis, saponification, or transesterification of natural triglycerides from plant or animal fats; it can also be made by microbial fermentation of sugars or synthetically from petrochemical routes.

  1. Usa http://www.ondemandkorea.com/capture-the-moment-how-is-that-possible-e964.html?

    In the United States, polyglycitol syrup (also called hydrogenated starch hydrolysates) is permitted as a bulk sweetener; the U.S. doesn’t use E-numbers, so it appears on labels by name and as a sugar alcohol.

  2. Usajhttp://www.ondemandkorea.com/capture-the-moment-how-is-that-possible-e964.html?

    It is used in U.S. foods under good manufacturing practice and must be labeled as a sugar alcohol; like other polyols, excess intake may cause a laxative effect in some people.

  3. What is in polyglycitol syrup?

    A mixture of sugar alcohols—primarily maltitol and sorbitol—plus maltotriitol and other hydrogenated oligo- and polysaccharides in water.

  4. What is polyglycitol syrup made of?

    It’s produced by catalytic hydrogenation of plant-derived starch hydrolysates (e.g., corn, wheat, or potato glucose syrups), converting the sugars into polyols.

  5. What is the glycemic index of polyglycitol syrup?

    There isn’t a single GI because it varies by formulation, but it generally has a lower glycemic impact than sugar; manufacturers typically report low-to-moderate GI values depending on maltitol content.