E500 Sodium carbonate
Supplier location : Hungary Type of Product / CAS Number / Additional designation |
Sodium bicarbonate |
Genetic Type |
Without GMO |
Quantity Available |
KG |
Purchase Options |
Pickup |
Quantity per Trade Item |
25.0 KG |
Trade Unit |
KG |
Country of Origin |
Germany |
Incoterms |
FCA
|
Minimum Order Quantity |
500.0 KG |
Price per trading unit |
|
Best Before |
|
Certificates of supplier |
Sodium carbonate has several uses in cuisine, largely because it is a stronger base than baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) but weaker than lye (which may refer to sodium hydroxide or, less commonly, potassium hydroxide). Alkalinity affects gluten production in kneaded doughs, and also improves browning by reducing the temperature at which the Maillard reaction occurs. To take advantage of the former effect, sodium carbonate is therefore one of the components of kansui , a solution of alkaline salts used to give Japanese ramen noodles their characteristic flavor and chewy texture; a similar solution is used in Chinese cuisine to make lamian, for similar reasons. Cantonese bakers similarly use sodium carbonate as a substitute for lye-water to give moon cakes their characteristic texture and improve browning. In German cuisine (and Central European cuisine more broadly), breads such as pretzels and lye rolls traditionally treated with lye to improve browning can be treated instead with sodium carbonate; sodium carbonate does not produce quite as strong a browning as lye, but is much safer and easier to work with.
Product documents
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