The Rivalry Between Sugar Beets and Sugar Cane
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Acid Beverage Floc from Sugar Beets
Acid beverage floc (ABF), a flocculated turbid material that can form in sugar-sweetened, acidified, carbonated beverages after several days standing, is a customer problem to bever age bottlers and their suppliers of sugar. ABF from beet sugar has been reported to be caused by a saponin from the beet plant, and recent work has shown the presence of several sa ponins in sugarbeet. ABF from ca...
متن کاملLeaf Temperatures of Sugar Cane.
Since the results in the literature are at considerable variance regarding leaf temperatures with reference to the surrounding air temperature, the writer thought it would be of interest to check some leaf temperatures in a different section of the country from those previously reported. The investigations of CURTIS (2) were performed at Berkeley and Riverside, California, and those of CLUM (1)...
متن کاملSugar cane and sugar beet molasses, antioxidant-rich alternatives to refined sugar.
Molasses, the main byproduct of sugar production, is a well-known source of antioxidants. In this study sugar cane molasses (SCM) and sugar beet molasses (SBM) were investigated for their phenolic profile and in vitro antioxidant capacity and for their protective effect in human HepG2 cells submitted to oxidative stress. According to its higher phenolic concentration and antioxidant capacity in...
متن کاملEffect of Storage Temperature and Light on the Freeze-Dried Amino Acids from Sugar Beet and Sugar Cane Molasses
Molasses is a significant by-product of sugar beet or sugar cane refining industry. In this work, the effects of storage temperature and packaging on the contents of free amino acids (AAs) in sugar beet and sugar cane molasses after freeze drying were inquired. The effect of different variables such as, temperature (4 and 25˚C) and light (Metallized polypropylene container and Normal polypropyl...
متن کاملThe Biosynthesis of Starch in Sugar Cane
Althougll starch poses a problem in the factory by retarding filtration and crystallization rates of cane juices (Balch, 1953; Feulherade, ~gzg) , little attention has been given the mechanisms of starch formation in sugarcane. Of further importance is the knowledge that both glucose-I-phosphate* and uridine diphospl~oglucose, themselves major precursors of sucrose, are also involved in starch ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Journal of Geography
سال: 1920
ISSN: 0022-1341,1752-6868
DOI: 10.1080/00221342008984891