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  2. List of unrefined sweeteners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unrefined_sweeteners

    Some sweeteners made with starch are quite refined and made by degrading purified starch with enzymes, such as corn syrup. Barley malt syrup is made from germinated barley grains. [11] Brown rice malt syrup is made from rice grains cooked and then cultured with malt enzymes. [12] Amazake is made from rice fermented with Koji (Aspergillus oryzae ...

  3. Mizuame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mizuame

    Some mizuame are produced in a very similar fashion to corn syrup and are very similar in taste. Two methods are used to convert the starches to sugars. The traditional method is to take glutinous rice mixed with malt, and let the natural enzymatic process take place, converting the starch to syrup [1] which consists mainly of maltose. [2]

  4. Barley malt syrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barley_malt_syrup

    Barley malt extract is also sold in powdered form, used in the bread and baked good industry for browning and flavoring, in cereal manufacture to add malt flavor, [3] and in place of or addition to malted milk in malted drinks and candy. Adding barley malt syrup to yeast dough increases fermentation as a result of the enzymes in the malt, thus ...

  5. List of syrups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_syrups

    Barley malt syrup – an unrefined sweetener processed by extraction from sprouted, i.e., malted, barley, containing approximately 65 percent maltose, 30 percent complex carbohydrate, 3% protein; Birch syrup – a savory mineral-tasting syrup made from the sap of birch trees and produced in much the same way as maple syrup

  6. List of sugars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sugars

    "Syrup" indicates a sugary solution. Malting is a way of processing starchy grains like wheat and barley into sugar, so "malt extract" will be mostly sugar. Sugar is mostly extracted from plants by juicing them, then drying the purified juice, so "evaporated cane juice crystals" or "concentrated grape juice " are also very similar to pure sugars.

  7. High-maltose corn syrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-maltose_corn_syrup

    To be given the label "high", the syrup must contain at least 50% maltose. [3] Typically, it contains 40–50% maltose, though some have as high as 70%. [4] [5] By using β-amylase or fungal α-amylase, glucose syrups containing over 50% maltose, or even over 70% maltose (extra-high-maltose syrup) can be produced.

  8. Brown rice syrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_rice_syrup

    Brown rice (malt) syrup, also known as rice syrup or rice malt, is a sweetener which is rich in compounds categorized as sugars and is derived by steeping cooked rice starch with saccharifying enzymes to break down the starches, followed by straining off the liquid and reducing it by evaporative heating until the desired consistency is reached.

  9. Mash ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mash_ingredients

    One syrup commonly used in mash, [citation needed] however, is dry or dried malt extract or DME. DME is prepared by mashing malt in the normal fashion, then concentrating and spray drying the resulting wort. DME is used extensively in homebrewing as a substitute for base malt. It typically has no diastatic power because the enzymes are ...