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Scientists have worked out how to make less sugar taste just as good
science sugar structure
It is the holy grail of the confectionery world: making the same great taste we love in our chocolate with only a fraction of the sugar. Well, that quest is no longer the stuff of fantasy.

Scientists have discovered a way of changing the structure of sugar so that it dissolves more quickly on your tongue. This allows you to perceive an almost identical sweetness as before, but with much less of the ingredient.

Melt in the mouth

There are no artificial sweeteners involved, no unusual plant extracts, just a new take on the original sweet ingredient: sugar. Nestlé scientists have developed a process that can be likened to making sugar crystals hollow rather than solid.

Scientist
Researchers have found a way to structure sugar differently.

Nestlé Chief Technology Officer Stefan Catsicas explained in an interview with Bloomberg that the company is trying to mimic the complex, natural structures found in food, by distributing sugar in a more uneven way:

"If you look with an electron microscope into an apple, that’s exactly what you see," he said. "Real food in nature is not something smooth and homogeneous. It's full of cavities, crests and densities. So by reproducing this variability, we are capable to restore the same sensation."

"Good science"

Professor Julian Cooper, chair of the UK's Scientific Committee at the Institute of Food Science and Technology, told the BBC that the development was important. "This is good science. A lot of people have been looking at sugar trying to reduce the amount."

The technological accomplishment has major implications for consumers. It has the potential to help Nestlé manage sweetness in its confectionery in a completely new way, at a time when many people are keen to reduce their sugar intake.

This is good science. A lot of people have been looking at sugar trying to reduce the amount. Professor Julian Cooper, chair of the UK’s Scientific Committee

Nestlé is now patenting the new process and plans to begin rolling it out in it confectionery in 2018. The structured sugar was discovered and developed by Nestlé scientists working at research and development facilities in Switzerland and the UK, part of the company’s network of 40 R&D facilities across the globe.

Health commitments

The work will help the company to meet its commitment to reduce sugar in its products. It has been cutting sugar across its range since 2007 when it introduced a global policy on sugar reduction. By the end of 2016 it had reduced its added-sugar content by 39,000 tonnes.

The flavoured milk powder brand Nesquik is a prime example of how this is being achieved over time. In 2015, added sugar in Nesquik was reduced by 15% for the original chocolate flavour and 27% for strawberry. Now, further reductions have been announced.

39,000 tonnes
of sugar has been cut from Nestlé products since 2007

Nesquik Less Sugar, which has just 3.4 grams of added sugar will launch in the UK this year while a lower-sugar version of Nesquik will be available in the United States next year.

 

Reducing added sugar is one of a wide range of commitments the company has made on nutrition, such as reducing the amount of salt and saturated fat in its products. At the same time it is committed to increasing healthier nutrients such as vitamins, minerals and whole grain.