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Status: Exhibitors of IFFA 2025

Zhenpai Hydrocolloids Co., Ltd.

Carrageenan Solution for Gummies

Carrageenan Solution for Gummies

Zhenpai Hydrocolloids Co., Ltd.

Description

Soft sweets
Zhenpai carrageenan is a thermally reversible gelling agent suitable for the production of crystal-clear gummy candies. It offers several advantages for this application:
1.Crystal clear, elastic, doesn't melt in summer.
2.Low calorie, similar to the texture of gelatin, without sticking to the teeth.
3.Easy to mold, very much user-friendly.
4.Good flavor releasing.

More products by Zhenpai Hydrocolloids Co., Ltd.

Agar

Agar, also known as "kanten" or "Japanese isinglass," is a substance with an interesting origin story. It is said that in the 17th century, in a small fishing village in Japan, a fisherman was cooking a hot seaweed soup at home on a bitterly cold day. Accidentally, he overcooked the seaweed soup, and it turned into a "jelly-like" substance. Not knowing what to do with it, he discarded it outside. To his surprise, the next morning, the discarded seaweed soup had transformed into a semi-transparent solid. The fisherman brought this material back inside, added water, and it turned back into jelly. This marked the first recorded discovery of agar. Because it was formed naturally through freezing and dehydration in the cold winter, it was named "kanten," which means "cold sky" in Japanese. This primitive method of making agar through natural freezing was later refined, leading to the widespread production of agar.
In 1859, the French chemist Anselme Payen conducted the first chemical analysis of agar, obtaining it from the red seaweed, Gracilaria. From the late 19th century, agar began to be used as a solid culture medium for various microorganisms.
In 1882, German microbiologist Walther Hesse, on the suggestion of his wife Fanny Hesse, first described the use of agar for microbiology in Robert Koch's laboratory. Agar rapidly replaced gelatin as the foundation of microbial culture media because it has a higher melting temperature, allowing microorganisms to grow at higher temperatures without liquefying the medium.
With its new applications in microbiology, the production of agar rapidly increased, and Japan produced most of the world's agar before the Second World War.

Zhenpai began researching and producing agar (also known as "kanten" or "Japanese isinglass") in 1985. It was one of the earliest companies in China to engage in industrial agar production.

Carrageenan

Carrageenan is a high-molecular-weight polysaccharide with a history in food dating back over 600 years. It was originally used by the Irish more than six centuries ago to make a kind of pudding from a type of seaweed known as "Irish Moss," which contains carrageenan and imparts a jelly-like texture. In the 18th century, due to a severe famine, a large number of Irish people emigrated to the United States, bringing their knowledge of cultivating red seaweed to the New England region. With the emergence of carrageenan separation technology, industrial carrageenan production and processing gradually developed on the East Coast of the United States.
In 1837, the formal report on the extraction of polysaccharides from Irish Moss was made, and in 1892, carrageenan was first officially named "Carrageenin" by Stanwood. During World War II in the 1940s, the carrageenan industry experienced rapid development in the United States, becoming the most widely used seaweed extract in the global food industry after the war. In the 1950s, the molecular structure of carrageenan was officially determined, and it was named "Carrageenan" by the Polysaccharides Nomenclature Committee of the American Chemical Society.
In the 1960s, carrageenan was formally regulated as a food additive in the United States. In the 1970s, the Philippines began mass cultivation of carrageenan's source material, Kappaphycus alvarezii (locally known as "gigante"), providing a sustainable source for large-scale carrageenan production.

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