2017, Number 5
Current consumption of natural sweeteners (benefits and problems): Stevia
Vázquez HMC, Guevara GRG, Aguirre BH, Alvarado AM, Romero ZH
Language: Spanish
References: 0
Page: 1153-1159
PDF size: 59.01 Kb.
ABSTRACT
Stevia [Stevia rebaudiana (Bertoni)] is a perennial shrub belonging to the Asteraceae family that grows in tropical and subtropical areas of South America. Today its cultivation has spread to other regions of the world, including Canada and some parts of Asia, Europe and México, where its leaves have been used traditionally as a natural sweetener for hundreds of years. Nowadays, the potential use and practical implications of Stevia as a sweetener are shown in a number of processed foods, because it contains steviol-glycosides, which are low- or noncaloric ingredients, up to 100–300 times sweeter than sucrose. In addition, dry Stevia leaves also contain minerals, vitamins, phenolic compounds, flavonoids and other antioxidant compounds, with antimicrobial and antioxidant properties. Stevia accumulates up to 30% of diterpenoid steviol glycosides (SGs) of the leaf dry weight. Stevioside and rebaudioside A are the major SGs. Since December 2011, SGs (E 960) have been permitted for use as food additive and a sweetener in the United States. Its use in various food categories is regulated, e.g. food supplements and dietary foods for special medical purposes and weight control. However, the information offered to the consumers is misleading and far from reliable. This article offers the interested public, data that should be evaluated when buying products added with Stevia.