Apart from the sugar, which is such an important factor in the chocolate manufacture, mention must also be made of another sweetening material, formerly frequently used as a substitute for sugar, but now only to be obtained at the apothecary’s on exhibition of a medical order, in consequence of certain legal restrictions which have recently come in force. It is called Fahlberg saccharin, and again zuckerin, sykorin, crystallose, “Süßstoss Höchst” and sykose.
Saccharin is not like sugar a carbohydrate naturally produced by plants, but a derivative of the aromatic compounds which the chemist has artificially constructed from the products of the distillation of coal.
Saccharin is benzoyl-sulphonimide, and it has the chemical formula
| C6H4≺ | CO | ≻NH |
| SO2 |
It is a white, crystalline powder, so exceedingly sweet that its taste can be perceived in a dilution of 1 in 70000. It is only slightly soluble in cold water (1: 400) but more easily so in hot water (1: 28). The material known as easily soluble saccharin is its sodium salt. It contains 90 percent of saccharin and is the most easily digested compound of saccharin.
For technical, domestic and medicinal purposes the soluble saccharin which is only from 300-450 times as sweet as sugar is employed. Besides being unfermentable saccharin has very slight antiseptic properties; according to L. Nencki[139] the digestibility of albumin is less affected by it, in the proportion usually added to articles of food, than by Rhine wine, or by a sugar solution of equal sweetness. Saccharin is entirely unaltered in the human organism, hence it forms a welcome sweetening material for invalids suffering from diabetes, corpulence or diseases of the stomach to whom ordinary sugar is injurious. The substances known as dulcin and glucin are analogous to saccharin in sweetening property, the first being phenetol-carbamid and the latter a monosulphonate of amido-triazine.
The latest substance of this class is termed “sucramin” and consists of the ammonium salt of saccharin. It is readily soluble in water, less so in alcohol and is 700 times sweeter than sugar. It can be obtained either in the pure form or mixed (20 percent) with sugar.
In chocolate making, saccharin is at present of little importance, owing to the relatively small volume required as compared with sugar. Recently it has again been recommended to the extent of 0·76 percent as a sweetening material for cocoa powder. It would certainly be of value in cocoa powders to be consumed by invalids and persons not able to take sugar, although it will never come into general use. The detection of saccharin has acquired increased importance in Germany since the passing of the acts of October 1st 1898 and July 7th 1902, regulating the trade in artificial sweetening materials. According to Zipperer’s experiments, it may be detected in the following manner: A mixture of 5 grammes of the finely powdered substance with 100 ccm of water is allowed to stand for 2 hours, occasionally stirred and afterwards filtered. The filtrate is acidulated with three drops of hydrochloric acid and evaporated to 20 ccm, then shaken[140] with 50 ccm of ether in a separator and left standing for a day to separate into two layers. The ether solution is separated and evaporated to dryness in a beaker, the residue being mixed with 0·1 gramme of resorcin and 4-5 drops of concentrated sulphuric acid[141] (Börnsteins test). The mixture is then heated over a small Bunsen flame and the melted material saturated with normal sodium hydrate. The appearance of a strong fluorescence indicates the presence of saccharin. Saccharin can also be easily recognised by the sweet taste of the ether residue.
II. Kinds of Starch, Flour.
The chief kinds of starch used in chocolate making are rice starch, arrowroot, potato starch and wheat starch, occasionally also small quantities of dextrine.