- Hernandulcin
Hernandulcin is an intensely sweet
oil gained from the chiefly Mexican and South AmericanLippia dulcis plant. [cite web
url = http://www.dansukker.com/omsocker/sotningslexikon/skrivut.asp?id=140
title = Dansukker Sweetness Glossary
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quote = ]History and Origin
In the 1570s, Spanish physician
Francisco Hernandez [cite web
url = http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1200/is_v127/ai_3614350
title = Find Articles Science News (from 1985)
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quote = ] described a remarkably sweet plant known to the Aztecs as Tzonpelic xihuitl, meaning "sweet herb". This reference, accompanied by an accurate description and illustration of the plant, led pharmacologists in1985 to a previously unrecognised, intensely sweet chemical that can providesweetness withouttooth decay .A. Douglas Kinghorn , a graduate of the University of Illinois Medical Centre in Chicago took samples of the sweetcompound from the leaves and flowers of theLippia dulcis plant, inGuanajuato . The researchers noted the chemical structure of thecolourless oil, and named it hernandulcin after Francisco Hernandez. By slightly modifying the compound, they identified the two chemical groups which caused the sweet taste - thecarbonyl group, and thehydroxyl group.tructure
By slightly modifying the compound, researchers have identified the two chemical groups which caused the sweet taste - the
carbonyl group, and thehydroxyl group. The structure of hernandulcin is very simple, and after a panel of volunteers tasted hernandulcin, it was decided that it was 1,000 times sweeter than sugar. Hernandulcin also has a bitteraftertaste , and does not cause tooth decay, which would make it a good candidate for amouthwash .References
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