Comparing E924A - Potassium bromate vs E927A - Azodicarbonamide
Overview
Synonyms
Products
Found in 423 products
Found in 726 products
Search rank & volume
Awareness score
Search volume over time
Interest over time for 2 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
What foods have potassium bromate?
Primarily products made with 'bromated flour'—such as some breads, rolls, bagels, and pizza crusts—where it strengthens dough and improves rise. It’s banned in the EU/UK/Canada, and many U.S. bakers have phased it out.
What foods contain potassium bromate?
Where permitted (e.g., parts of the U.S.), certain commercial bakery items made with bromated high‑gluten flour may contain it, especially bread and pizza dough.
What brands use potassium bromate?
Usage varies by region and over time; in the U.S., some foodservice pizza/bread flours labeled 'bromated' use it, while many national retail brands and chains avoid it, and it’s banned in the EU/UK/Canada. Check labels for 'bromated flour' to confirm.
Does king arthur flour have potassium bromate?
No—King Arthur Baking Company states its flours are never bromated (and never bleached).
What is potassium bromate in?
It’s in bromated wheat flour used as a flour improver for yeast‑leavened doughs like bread, rolls, bagels, and pizza. Look for 'bromated flour' or E924a on ingredient lists where it’s allowed.
What breads have azodicarbonamide?
In countries where it's permitted (e.g., the U.S.), some mass-produced white and wheat sandwich breads, hamburger/hot dog buns, and bagels may contain azodicarbonamide as a dough conditioner; check the ingredient list for "azodicarbonamide" or "ADA".
What is azodicarbonamide used for?
In foods, azodicarbonamide (E927a) is a flour treatment agent/oxidizing dough conditioner that strengthens dough, improves rise and crumb, and can slightly bleach flour. Outside food, it's used as a blowing agent to make foamed plastics and rubber.
What does azodicarbonamide do to your body?
At permitted food levels it breaks down during dough processing and baking and is not expected to have direct health effects for consumers, and regulators like the FDA allow it within limits. Occupational inhalation of the raw powder can irritate or sensitize the respiratory tract, and concerns about breakdown products have led some regions (e.g., EU, Australia/New Zealand, Singapore) to prohibit its use in food.
What foods contain azodicarbonamide?
Primarily some commercially baked goods such as sliced sandwich breads, hamburger and hot dog buns, bagels, flour tortillas, and frozen or par-baked doughs in countries where allowed. Check labels for "azodicarbonamide" or "ADA," as many brands have reformulated to remove it.
What products contain azodicarbonamide?
Food products that may contain it include certain mass-produced breads, buns, bagels, tortillas, and frozen or par-baked doughs (where permitted). Non-food uses include foamed plastics and rubber products like shoe soles and yoga mats, where it acts as a blowing agent.