Skip to main content
Book
CAHS researchers receive provisional patent for potential plant sweetener
Datasets Collection
  • Aruna Weerasooriya, Prairie View A&M University
  • Godson Osuji, Prairie View A&M University
  • Laura Carson, Prairie View A&M University
  • Peter Ampim, Prairie View A&M University
  • Subhani Bandara, Prairie View A&M University
  • Eric Obeng, Prairie View A&M University
  • Sela Woldesenbet, Prairie View A&M University
Description

The plant is a perennial herb native to southern Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America, Colombia, and Venezuela. It is commonly known as the Aztec sweet herb, bushy lippia, honey herb, or hierba dulce, used as a natural sweetener and medicinal herb in its native Mexico and parts of Central America. The Aztecs used it and introduced it to the Spanish when they arrived. A compound called Hernandulcin, whose sweetness is about 1,000 times higher than in sucrose, provides the plant’s sweet taste.The plant has low Hernandulcin production in its tissues. Despite its sweetness, it isn’t used in the natural sweetener industry due to its complexity, difficulty in chemical synthesis, and the presence of another camphor. This aromatic compound gives an unpleasant taste to the natural extract.

Publication Date
5-5-2021
Department
College of Agriculture and Human Sciences
Date of Digitization
8/3/2021
Document Version
Final Version
County
Waller
Contributing Institution
John B Coleman Library
Media Type
Document
Rights

© 2021 Prairie View A & M University


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
MIME Type
Application/PDF
Publisher
Prairie View A&M University
Keywords
  • phyla dulcis,
  • sweet herb,
  • bushy lippia,
  • honey herb,
  • Aztecs
Citation Information
Aruna Weerasooriya, Godson Osuji, Laura Carson, Peter Ampim, et al.. CAHS researchers receive provisional patent for potential plant sweetener. Prairie View(2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/subhani-bandara/8/