Common food additives may cut acrylamide formation in potato chips

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Common food additives may cut acrylamide formation in potato chips
September 24, 2007
Common food additives like calcium chloride and l-cysteine could reduce the formation of acrylamide in potato chips by about 85 per cent, according to a new study.

"This research presents a technology to inhibit acrylamide formation in fried potato chips by immersion of fresh potato chips with some food additives,"wrote the researchers in the journal Innovative Food Science &Emerging Technologies.
"It was found that l-cysteine showed little effect on the texture of the crisps and CaCl2 is regarded as the suitable choice because of its low price and the acceptable mouth feel of fried crisps treated by CaCl2, although it increased the brittleness," wrote lead author Shiyi Ou.
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