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Book Cover
Book
Author Edwards, W. P.

Title The science of sugar confectionery / W.P. Edwards
Published Cambridge : Royal Society of Chemistry, [2000]
©2000

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  664.153 Edw/Sos  AVAILABLE
Description x, 166 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Series RSC paperbacks
Royal Society of Chemistry paperbacks.
Contents Contents: Ch.1 Introduction -- Ch.2 Basis science -- Ch.3 Ingredients -- Ch.4 Emulsifiers, colours and flavours -- Ch.5 Confectionery plant -- Ch.6 Sugar glasses in the chemistry of boiled sweets -- Ch.7 Grained sugar products -- Ch.8 Pan Coating -- Ch.9 Toffees and caramels -- Ch.10 Gums, gelled products and liquorice -- Ch.11 Chewing gum -- Ch.12 Aerated products -- Ch.13 Sugar-free confectionery -- Ch.14 Lozenges -- Ch.15 Tabletting -- Ch.16 Experiments -- Ch.17 The future
Summary This product is not available separately, it is only sold as part of a set. There are 750 products in the set and these are all sold as one entity. Confectionery is a topic close to many people's hearts and its manufacture involves some interesting science. The confectionery industry is divided into three classes: chocolate, flour and sugar confectionery. It is the background science of this latter category that is covered in The Science of Sugar Confectionery. The manufacture of confectionery is not a science based industry, as these products have traditionally been created by skilled confectioners working empirically. In fact, scientific understanding of the production process has only been acquired retroactively. Historically however, sugar confectionery has had technological synergies with the pharmaceutical industry, such as making sugar tablets and applying panned sugar coatings. This book gives an introduction to the subject, with some basic definitions and commonly used ingredients and then moves on to discuss the chemistry of various types of sugar confectionery. These include "sugar glasses" (boiled sweets), "grained sugar products" (fondants), toffees and fudges, "hydrocolloids" (gums, pastilles and jellies) and concludes with a chapter dedicated to sugar-free confectionery
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Also available via the World Wide Web
System requirements: Internet connectivity, World Wide Web browser, and Adobe Acrobat
Subject Candy -- Processing.
Confectionery -- Analysis.
Confectionery.
Author Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain)
LC no. 2001431867
ISBN 0854045937 (paperback)