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Tapioca Syrup vs Modified Food Starch: which is worse?

Quick answer: Modified Food Starch carries the heavier risk profile. Tapioca Syrup is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US; Modified Food Starch is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US.

PropertyTapioca SyrupModified Food Starch
EU statusAllowedAllowed
US statusAllowedAllowed
Risk levelmediumlow
Banned in
Restricted in
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hidesClif Bar Kids, Larabar (some varieties), Annie's Fruit SnacksCampbell's Soup, Gerber Baby Food, Birds Eye Frozen Meals

What is Tapioca Syrup?

Tapioca syrup is produced by enzymatically or acid-hydrolyzing tapioca starch (derived from cassava root). It is often marketed as a 'clean label' alternative to corn syrup, particularly in organic and natural food products. Chemically, it is similar to corn syrup, consisting primarily of glucose polymers.

What is Modified Food Starch?

Modified food starch is starch (derived from corn, wheat, potato, rice, or tapioca) that has been physically, enzymatically, or chemically treated to alter its properties such as thickening ability, heat stability, or freeze-thaw stability. The term 'modified' refers to chemical modification, not genetic modification. Dozens of specific modifications exist, each designated with E numbers E1400–E1450 in the EU.

Documented risks

Tapioca Syrup: Tapioca syrup contributes added sugar to the diet and has a high glycemic index comparable to corn syrup. A 2019 investigation by the Clean Label Project found that many 'organic' snack bars sweetened with tapioca syrup had sugar contents equivalent to candy, despite their 'natural' branding. The FDA has noted that tapioca syrup, when listed on ingredient labels without quantification, may obscure the total sugar content of a product. Health impacts are equivalent to those of other refined sugars.

Modified Food Starch: Modified food starches are generally recognized as safe by the FDA and EFSA. Modified starches from wheat must be declared as allergens in the EU. Phosphorylated starch modifications (E1412, E1414) are permitted at specific maximum levels by EFSA, which noted no safety concerns at authorized levels in its 2017 re-evaluation. Concerns have been raised about the use of modified starch in infant foods — EFSA's Scientific Panel set conservative limits for infants. For healthy adults, dietary exposure via processed foods poses no identified risk.

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