Guar gum is extracted from the
guar bean (
Cyamopsis tetragonoloba).
Guar gum is a cold water soluble
polysaccharide, consisting of
mannose and
galactose units. This ability to hydrate without heating makes it very useful in many industrial and food applications.
Solutions with different gum concentrations can be used as emulsifiers and stabilizers[?] because they prevent oil droplets from coalescing.
Guar gum is also used as suspension stabilizer.
Industrial applications of Guar gum
Food applications
The largest market for Guar gum (
EU food additive code E412) is in the food industry, where guar gum is used as a thickener and binder of free water in sauces, salad dressings, ice creams, instant noodles, pet foods, processed meats, bread improvers and beverages to name some.
Guar gum has very similar properties to locust bean gum[?], which is extracted from the seeds of the carob[?] tree (Seratonia siliqua).
Demand for guar gum is still growing and the production of guar bean has expanded to other countries.
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License