What are Glutamate and MSG? Glutamate is one of the most common amino acids found in nature. It is the main component of many proteins and peptides, and is present in most tissues. Glutamate is also produced in the body and plays an essential role in human metabolism. Virtually every food contains glutamate. It is a major component of most natural protein foods such as meat, fish, milk and some vegetables. MSG is the sodium salt of glutamate and is simply glutamate, water and sodium. In the early 1900s scientists isolated the ingredient-glutamate-in plants that is the essential taste component responsible for greatly enhancing flavor. In the early part of this century, MSG was extracted from seaweed and other plant sources. Today, MSG is produced in many countries around the world through a natural fermentation process of molasses from sugar cane or sugar beets, as well as starch and corn sugar. Flavor Enhancement Properties When present in its "free" form-not "bound" together with other amino acids in protein-glutamate has a flavor enhancing effect in foods. When MSG is added to foods, it provides a flavoring function similar to the naturally occurring free glutamate. MSG is used to enhance the natural flavors of meats, poultry, seafood, snacks, soups and stews. Multidimensional scaling experiments, which are used in sensory research, indicate that MSG falls outside the region occupied by the four classic tastes of sweet, sour, salty and bitter. This distinctive taste is known as "umami," a word coined by the Japanese to describe the taste imparted by glutamate.
- Skinny 12-19-2000 1:46 am

Are you OK? This is not the Wheel I know. Seasonal Depression? If you are in need of positive reinforcement: It is interesting and well communicated. Good job.
- jeanne 12-19-2000 10:22 pm [add a comment]


  • we had some interesting food discussions with different crews at our favorite heavy on the MSG chinese restaurant, so i researched the facts (and copy and paste shhh!!)--happy holiday's to you and family!!
    - Skinny 12-20-2000 2:33 am [add a comment]



Happy holidays to you too. Please give my Christmas wishes to your Mom. The TV says no shool in Shrewsbury today so guess you get a day off.
- jeanne 12-20-2000 1:18 pm [add a comment]





add a comment to this page:

Your post will be captioned "posted by anonymous,"
or you may enter a guest username below:


Line breaks work. HTML tags will be stripped.