Hi,
I am looking for a way of lowering pH in a finished product without the addition of liquid, or without changing the taste.
Is there any NATURAL Powder form ingredients available?
Thank you
Posted Yesterday, 03:01 PM
Hi,
I am looking for a way of lowering pH in a finished product without the addition of liquid, or without changing the taste.
Is there any NATURAL Powder form ingredients available?
Thank you
Posted Today, 04:05 AM
Hi Serious,
Only acids come to mind, so something like citric acid but I guess it is likely to change the taste. May be worth trying depending on how much you would need to add to get the right pH.
Kind regards,
Tony
IFSQN Implementation Packages, helping sites achieve food safety certification since 2009:
Practical Internal Auditor Training for Food Operations - Available via the previous webinar recording.
Suitable for Internal Auditors as per the requirements of GFSI benchmarked standards including BRCGS and SQF.
Practical HACCP Training for Food Safety Teams available via the recording until the next live webinar.
Suitable for food safety (HACCP) team members as per the requirements of GFSI benchmarked standards including BRCGS and SQF.
Posted Today, 10:50 AM
What's your product? Different natural acids have different impacts on taste. Malic acid (as the name implies, from apples) tends to enhance fruit flavours more than citric does (as the name suggests, more associated with lemons). It also depends what pH you're trying to achieve. Also if it's for micro reasons bear in mind that dry blending may not give an even pH result.
You might also be able to get to the pH you want with a combination. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) could be part of that mix, albeit you won't be able to use it in crazy amounts. You could also try tartaric acid and lactic acid but I'd steer away from acetic due to the flavour being pretty strong.
Everything will bring a bit of a "tang" as we're quite good at detecting acids via taste. It depends how much that needs to be avoided and how you're then using your solid product. You could always have a neutralising element which only works when water is added (e.g. if this is for dilution) if that doesn't mess up the purpose of lowering the pH?
Basically knowing more would be helpful.
************************************************
25 years in food. And it never gets easier.
Food Safety Topics →
HACCP - Food Products & Ingredients →
Using pH as a Critical Control Point (CCP) for Listeria ControlStarted by Serious, 09 Apr 2025 |
|
|
|
Food Safety Topics →
Lab Management & Testing →
pH of Bread DoughStarted by S.Mohammed, 03 Mar 2022 |
|
|
|
Food Safety Topics →
Food Technology →
Cold Brew Coffee pH testingStarted by rdy23456, 24 Nov 2021 |
|
|
|
Food Safety Topics →
Lab Management & Testing →
Should I continue micro testing for E. Coli, Salmonella, and Listeria Species on a product with a PH under 4?Started by NutANDFruitFoodSafety, 30 Jun 2020 |
|
|
|
Food Safety Topics →
Food Technology →
Root Cause of Juice Concentrate Packages Bloating?Started by Melissa C, 20 Jun 2020 |
|
|
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users