Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Tue, 8 Nov 2005 14:03:02 -0800 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
I finally got around to reading my Nov ABJ last night, and yep, type 55 HFCS is 23% moisture and 77% solids, presuably all available sugar of some sort, mostly fructose.
Lionel wrote: I just got off the phone with Steve in the lab at Cargill Corn Sweetener
plant in Decatur, Alabama. He said that "55" is 77% solids. Which is 23%
water.
I found my old ABJ where I asked this question in the classroom. Jerry Hayes passed along the question to Steve Martin of ADM, who also confirmed the 23% moisture, adding that type 42 HFCS is 29% moisture. Check out the ABJ, Volume 141, number 12 (Dec 2001) page 860.
To get us on track, the formulas then work out like this:
a) Cost of container of HFCS / pounds in container = cost per pound of syrup
b) cost per pound of syrup / .77 = cost per pound of sugar in type 55 HFCS.
If I can still get that 5-gallon bucket (57.5 pounds) for $17.25, then my cost per pound of syrup is ($17.25 / 57.5 lbs) = .30 cents per pound of syrup.
But if only 77% is sugar, then my cost per pound of sugar is (.30 cents / .77) = .39 cents per pound of sugar in that bucket of HFCS
Now I can compare the cost of HFCS to granulated sucrose.
Thanks for all your patience. We learn together!
Grant
Jackson, MO
---------------------------------
Yahoo! FareChase - Search multiple travel sites in one click.
-- Visit www.honeybeeworld.com/bee-l for rules, FAQ and other info ---
|
|
|