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In reply to the discussion: HFCS and YOU [View all]HiPointDem
(20,729 posts)To produce agave nectar from the Agave americana and A. tequiliana plants, the leaves are cut off the plant after it has aged seven to fourteen years.
The juice is then extracted from the core of the agave, called the piña.[2] The juice is filtered, then heated to separate the complex components (the polysaccharides) into simple sugars.
The main polysaccharide is called inulin or fructosan and is mostly fructose. This filtered juice is then concentrated to a syrupy liquid, slightly thinner than honey. Its color varies from light- to dark-amber, depending on the degree of processing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agave_nectar
Not to mention that using a plant that takes 7 to 14 years to reach maturity for your main source of an all-purpose sweetner isn't very ecologically sustainable.
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