Creative Chemistry - Descriptive of Recent Achievements in the Chemical Industries by Edwin E. Slosson
page 167 of 299 (55%)
page 167 of 299 (55%)
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impossible. To make it the main food is unwise. It is quite proper for
man to separate out the distinct ingredients of natural products--to extract the butter from the milk, the casein from the cheese, the sugar from the cane--but he must not forget to combine them again at each meal with the other essential foodstuffs in their proper proportion. [Illustration: THE RIVAL SUGARS The sugar beet of the north has become a close rival of the sugar cane of the south] [Illustration: INTERIOR OF A SUGAR MILL SHOWING THE MACHINERY FOR CRUSHING CANE TO EXTRACT THE JUICE] [Illustration: Courtesy of American Sugar Refinery Co. VACUUM PANS OF THE AMERICAN SUGAR REFINERY COMPANY In these air-tight vats the water is boiled off from the cane juice under diminished atmospheric pressure until the sugar crystallizes out] Sugar is not a synthetic product and the business of the chemist has been merely to extract and purify it. But this is not so simple as it seems and every sugar factory has had to have its chemist. He has analyzed every mother beet for a hundred years. He has watched every step of the process from the cane to the crystal lest the sucrose should invert to the less sweet and non-crystallizable glucose. He has tested with polarized light every shipment of sugar that has passed through the custom house, much to the mystification of congressmen who have often wondered at the money and argumentation expended in a tariff discussion over the question of the precise angle of rotation of the plane of vibration of infinitesimal waves in a hypothetical ether. |
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