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  2. Need a Cornstarch Alternative? These 5 Substitutes Have Got ...

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  3. Out of Cornstarch? These Substitutes Thicken Sauces ... - AOL

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  4. 36 Common Substitutes for Cooking and Baking Ingredients - AOL

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    Baking Powder. For one 1 teaspoon of baking powder, use 1/4 tsp. baking soda and 1/2 tsp. vinegar or lemon juice and milk to total half a cup. Make sure to decrease the liquid in your recipe by ...

  5. Corn starch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_starch

    Corn starch mixed in water. Cornflour, cornstarch, maize starch, or corn starch (American English) is the starch derived from corn grain. [2] The starch is obtained from the endosperm of the kernel. Corn starch is a common food ingredient, often used to thicken sauces or soups, and to make corn syrup and other sugars. [3]

  6. Corn ethanol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_ethanol

    The corn starch and remaining water can be fermented into ethanol through a similar process as dry milling, dried and sold as modified corn starch, or made into corn syrup. The gluten protein and steeping liquor are dried to make a corn gluten meal that is sold to the livestock industry. The heavy steep water is also sold as a feed ingredient ...

  7. Corn syrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_syrup

    The more general term glucose syrup is often used synonymously with corn syrup, since glucose syrup in the United States is most commonly made from corn starch. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Technically, glucose syrup is any liquid starch hydrolysate of mono-, di-, and higher- saccharides and can be made from any source of starch: wheat, tapioca and potatoes are ...

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  9. Modified starch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modified_starch

    A suitably modified starch is used as a fat substitute for low-fat versions of traditionally fatty foods, [5] e.g. industrial milk-based desserts like yogurt [6] or reduced-fat hard salami [7] having about 1/3 the usual fat content. For the latter type of uses, it is an alternative to the product Olestra.