Plants that Changed History Newsletter Archive
killerplants.com | Plants that Changed History | Plants that Changed History Archives Most Recent
Click now!

What is pectin?

By Chelsie Vandaveer

July 8, 2003

Pectin is a polysaccharide, long chains of a sugar derivative, galacturonic acid. It is present in the cell walls of plant tissues. It keeps cell walls intact as well as holding the cells together somewhat like mortar holds bricks. Unlike mortar, pectin remains elastic; the cells can move relative to each other allowing the plant flexibility in the wind.

Plants produce versions of pectin with molecular weights (combined weight of the atoms in the molecule) from 20,000 to 400,000. (Merck Index, 11th Edition, 1989) Pectin content varies from species to species and from tissue to tissue within a plant.

Pectin was not discovered until the 1820s. Housewives, responsible for preparing food for winter, knew jellies could be made with certain fruits--sour and crab apples, quinces, gooseberries, Concord grapes, and cranberries. Other fruit like strawberries, blueberries, cherries, or peaches would not gel.

Housewives got around this by adding fruit that would gel to fruit that would not gel. Still, until glass jars were invented which could be sealed with wax (1850s) and Louis Pasteur discovered why food spoiled (1861), jams, jellies, preserves, and conserves were short-term solutions to a glut of ripe fruit. Foods for the winter consisted of what could be dried, buried in barrels, or immersed in salty water (pickled) or oil. ("A Primer on Fruit Jars", Dave Hinson, 1996, Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors)

Pectin was first extracted from the waste of crushed apples (apple pomace) from making juice or cider. Today most pectin is extracted from citrus rinds. The long chains of pectin bind the liquids with the dissolved and suspended solids forming a gel. Pectin allowed for a wider range of fruits to be made into jellies, jams, and preserves. Pectin spurred the fruit-flavored candy industry in Europe. Pectin binds water, thickening and stabilizing foods, cosmetics, and medications for packaging and storage. ("Pectin", Martin Chaplin, 2003, South Bank University)

Pectin in combination with kaolin (china clay, hydrated aluminum silica) is an OTC treatment for diarrhea, a mere inconvenience today. It is a reaction by the body attempting to rid itself of bacteria or toxins from contaminated foods or water. But before the kaolin-pectin medication was available, bacterial diarrhea often killed people especially children. The kaolin is thought to surround the bacteria while the pectin slows the loss of water from the body. ("Kaolin and Pectin", Medline, U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health)


The International Pectin Producers Association has a very informative website. To learn more about pectin, its extraction and uses, click on the link:

http://www.ippa.info/

 

kp  Recent Plants that Changed History Updates:
kp  Other Recent Updates:

 

 

 

 

 

© 2001 - 2005 C. Vandaveer. All rights reserved.