Azodicarbonamide- Another Reason to Avoid Most Bread
And if you said, “yes”, Alpha calls B.S. The azodicarbonamide is illegal in some countries but here in the US, it’s a common ingredient in fast food breads and crappy breads in the grocery stores. Aaron Marino of alpha m. discusses what azocarbonamide is… plus a link for further information.
Check This Out!
The principal use of azodicarbonamide is in the production of foamed plastics as a blowing agent. The thermal decomposition of azodicarbonamide results in the evolution of nitrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and ammonia gases, which are trapped in the polymer as bubbles to form a foamed article.
Azodicarbonamide is used in plastics, synthetic leather, and other industries and can be pure or modified. Modification affects the reaction temperatures. Pure azodicarbonamide generally reacts around 200 °C. In the plastic, leather, and other industries, modified azodicarbonamide (average decomposition temperature 170 °C) contains additives that accelerate the reaction or react at lower temperatures.
Azodicarbonamide as a blowing agent in plastics has been banned in Europe since August 2005 for the manufacture of plastic articles that are intended to come into direct contact with food.