How Sugar Is Made | How It's Made

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  • čas přidán 21. 07. 2022
  • Find out how a piece of sugar cane is processed and refined to make sugar.
    From season 12 episode 4.
    🇬🇧 Catch full episodes of your favourite Discovery Channel shows on discovery+:
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @NinjaKitty91_
    @NinjaKitty91_ Před rokem +1712

    If you take the juice right from the cane and boil it down the molasses crystallizes and you get a rock hard brown sugar that in Colombia is called Panela. You just take the cane juice and put in a giant metal bowl and stir constantly while it boils and then when it starts boiling you move it to another metal bowl and repeat the process a few times until you're left with a thick syrup which is poured into molds to cool in and that's how Panela is made.

    • @Masood1810
      @Masood1810 Před rokem +175

      We call that jaggery here in India.

    • @MoisesCaster
      @MoisesCaster Před rokem +84

      Here in Brazil is rapadura.

    • @rama3njoy
      @rama3njoy Před rokem +28

      sugar stone

    • @maccrazy7335
      @maccrazy7335 Před rokem +37

      That kind of stuff crushed into gravel-sized pieces is sold as Kandis over here and is a special treat for tea (provided one drinks tea with sugar). As a kid I loved to put the pieces into my mouth to slowly dissolve like normal hard candy. Especially the brown ones.
      Never would have thought that it was made by a different process than regular sugar until I just read up on it online....

    • @bjosh01
      @bjosh01 Před rokem +35

      I think that’s called panocha in Mexico

  • @saumitrachakravarty
    @saumitrachakravarty Před rokem +333

    All the CZcams industrial videos has taught me that you can solve any problem by spinning it right.

    • @dadrumma8608
      @dadrumma8608 Před rokem +9

      There's some truth to that. Of all the energy produced in the world, over half goes to powering electric motors. For something that does nothing but spin, they have limitless applications.

    • @power_0007
      @power_0007 Před rokem +20

      soo, do i just spin myself till im not sad anymore?

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 Před rokem +12

      @@power_0007 worth a try!

    • @Istandby666
      @Istandby666 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Will spinning it left get the same results....lol

    • @aland7236
      @aland7236 Před 2 měsíci

      Ahh. I learned this from Futurama.

  • @TheBigLeChowski
    @TheBigLeChowski Před rokem +430

    I like how they clarified the whole process

    • @placeholder19
      @placeholder19 Před rokem +37

      I see what you did there.

    • @communistpropagandist4608
      @communistpropagandist4608 Před rokem +19

      Sweet sugar pun

    • @Grizzlox
      @Grizzlox Před rokem +29

      Yeah, they made it crystal clear. Pretty sweet.

    • @pravindahiya719
      @pravindahiya719 Před rokem

      yes ! they cleared the part of 1) adding Sulphur ,2) sending the sediments to make alcohol ; not manure !

    • @ionaedwards6703
      @ionaedwards6703 Před rokem +2

      No it's not clarified they didn't say what the thickener is and what it's make of and they also didn't say what is used to bleached it and what it's made of, there is no additional chemical information that is been handed over to us that is why we are all dieing of disease

  • @bluepearlgirl-emelie
    @bluepearlgirl-emelie Před rokem +1153

    I had no idea that it took this many processes and ingredients to make sugar! How on earth did they discover all of this? Makes me really appreciate Honey!

    • @setcheck67
      @setcheck67 Před rokem +279

      They are overprocessing it here in order to make the sugar last longer. In reality getting the sugar out of sugar cane really just requires juicing it and then slowly drying the water out until you get brown crystals, it has to be done slowly though or you'll caramelize the sugar.

    • @uhyea4569
      @uhyea4569 Před rokem +23

      @@setcheck67 idk since like they gotta sell it all around to people, id probably be more sanitary? idk thats what im thinking

    • @yukinagato1573
      @yukinagato1573 Před rokem +79

      They generally use more steps in order to extract more byproducts too, like molasses and other stuff. But they could simply sell brown sugar as well.

    • @setcheck67
      @setcheck67 Před rokem +103

      @@yukinagato1573 It's really not necessary as anyone who has juiced sugarcane can tell you. Sugarcane juice is delicious and sugar crystals is just painfully sweet. Crystallized sugarcane juice not only has some actual nutrition, but also tastes really good. The issue is that all those non-sucrose molecules don't last as long as desert-dry pure sucrose. If you don't process sugar it lasts like 3 days without refrigeration before mold and bacteria grow on it.

    • @kayleighwukovich8318
      @kayleighwukovich8318 Před rokem +21

      Hundreds of generations messing around with plants

  • @BeefaloBart
    @BeefaloBart Před rokem +300

    Growing up in the southern US. Our family had a sugar cane roller press, and cooking pot. My brother and I would go cut the cane, load it on a trailer and bring it to the roller press. My father would feed the cane into the mill. We didn't have a mule to turn the long beam on the roller press, So we had our grandmother on a riding mower to drive in a circle for hours on end. She was fine as long as she had her Lucky Strikes and cup of coffee. The Juice from the press went to the syrup pot where my grandfather would boil and stoke the fire.

  • @RukiMoogle
    @RukiMoogle Před rokem +647

    It does make you wonder how we got to this point though? Like how did one person suddenly decide to grind a plant like that into something so widely used in most pastries and other things. It just boggles me how far we've come.

    • @Veylon
      @Veylon Před rokem +185

      It wasn't sudden. It took fifteen hundred years to go from an obscure plant in New Guinea to a cash crop in Central America. It involved Austronesian navigators, Indian doctors, Egyptian millers, Crusader kings, New World explorers, and Industrial scientists. Many tens of thousands of people - the vast majority of them doomed to obscurity - put thought into to how to improve every part of the process from the genetics and cultivation of the cane to the packaging and distribution of the product.
      If you're really interested, there are likely dozens of engaging books packed with stranger-than-fiction stories of how sugar came to be.

    • @LArchieIXI
      @LArchieIXI Před rokem +50

      first, sugar cane are not the only vegetable that can produce sugar with this method, beet can also, and any other vegetable with thick roots. The grind is only for improving the yield and extract the max. Fundamentaly, it is about boiling and you get the sugar in the water, then some process have been researched to improve the final product

    • @RukiMoogle
      @RukiMoogle Před rokem +5

      @@LArchieIXI Thanks for the lesson.

    • @Airon79
      @Airon79 Před rokem +7

      I would like processed sugar developed from some cook overcooking a sweet dish or from storing honey , molasses , or cyrup for too long as they will actually coagulate as they dry out over time ; actually have an old honey bottle that is coagulated which i think i prefer that on my biscuits and toast over the fresh bottle of honey next to it . Although the coagulated jar is probably too sweet for my older body and I should probably throw it away .

    • @pamelanadel3787
      @pamelanadel3787 Před rokem +14

      The recipe is a gift from God. That’s how.

  • @davchan4423
    @davchan4423 Před rokem +221

    We have a few sugar canes in our garden. Back in elementary, my grandma would give some to me so I could sell them at school and get some extra allowance. They tasted great despite being grown in the city and not in a rural or farm-like location.

    • @bnkrazie
      @bnkrazie Před rokem +4

      A girl brought one for show and tell or something in elementary school. I really wanted to taste it but I was out sick that day. Still haven't tried one.

    • @davidplatt8308
      @davidplatt8308 Před rokem

      How much money you make for sell each? I'm curious

    • @davchan4423
      @davchan4423 Před rokem +6

      @@davidplatt8308 used to sell an 8-10in x 2in stick for around 0.20USD back in the late 2000s.
      I was still a kid and had little to no understanding of market prices though, so sugar canes might have been more valuable.
      Edit: At the end of the day I got around 6USD. Sometimes the teacher would buy them and give the whole class some.

    • @cristianpuerto5549
      @cristianpuerto5549 Před rokem +8

      dudee.. my grandpa and I used to eat tons of sugar canes back then when we grow them in our garden. It was a great time until you realize now you have little sugarcane fibers stuck in your teeth lamo.

    • @KokoroKatsura
      @KokoroKatsura Před rokem

      A N I M E
      N
      I
      M
      E

  • @Serjo777
    @Serjo777 Před 10 měsíci +31

    Wtf is this man, this is like a million times more complicated and labor intensive than I would have ever imagined...

    • @AyaEgbuho
      @AyaEgbuho Před 4 měsíci +1

      😂😂😂

    • @preoximerianas
      @preoximerianas Před 2 měsíci

      The entire process would be shorter if a lengthy shelf life and the byproducts weren’t a consideration.

    • @alecnolastname4362
      @alecnolastname4362 Před 11 dny

      and we probably learnt about it from pigs of other wildlife eating the raw cane

  • @bookburner3799
    @bookburner3799 Před rokem +51

    cant believe all this is happening behind the scenes in my crafting menu whenever I make sugar

  • @enchantinosis
    @enchantinosis Před rokem +49

    Watching videos like this makes me realize I can’t imagine designing this process myself, and that’s humbling.

    • @IAmNotYourProblem
      @IAmNotYourProblem Před rokem +5

      And some human thousands of years ago thought if this. Humbling, indeed.

    • @poojamohan4484
      @poojamohan4484 Před rokem +8

      That is why Chemical Engineers exist 😉

    • @ShawFujikawa
      @ShawFujikawa Před 6 měsíci +1

      Very few industrial processes like this are ever designed by just one person. It’s hundreds of them, coming one by one to an already-established process and coming up with incremental refinements to improve the end product.
      I’m sure there are lots of industries (like semiconductor manufacturing) out there where the processes they use are physically too much for any single human to really understand all of it.

    • @walt686868
      @walt686868 Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, humbling to say the least. Who comes up with this whole process??

    • @Revolver.Ocelot
      @Revolver.Ocelot Před 2 měsíci

      Its just looking at the normal procedure and then expand it. Sometimes mistakes are made in the beginning, but at the end you can automate everything. And this process has grown for years and years. Not in 1 night.

  • @allenu6295
    @allenu6295 Před rokem +216

    The sugar does not taste anything like the Sugarcane. I use to pick sugarcane in the desert Nothing like it! Soooo good!

    • @thecooldude4371
      @thecooldude4371 Před rokem +6

      Where?

    • @waterylemon6880
      @waterylemon6880 Před rokem +24

      Why does it seem like you're faking this and just play a lot of minecraft 😂😂😂🤣🤣

    • @rizlanghazali985
      @rizlanghazali985 Před rokem +4

      Sugar has been bleached....

    • @thecooldude4371
      @thecooldude4371 Před rokem +15

      In the dessert 😂

    • @bread9173
      @bread9173 Před rokem +6

      Bro I would get 3 stalks and turn it into paper for my book making hobby! That shit works!

  • @agrocana
    @agrocana Před rokem +34

    Here in Brazil, sugarcane not only makes sugar but also produces clean energy such as ethanol fuel for cars and with biomass more raw material is extracted to make more fuel. Biomass is also used in energy generators for all.

    • @creativemindplay
      @creativemindplay Před 5 měsíci +3

      *cleaner energy

    • @teresashinkansen9402
      @teresashinkansen9402 Před 3 měsíci

      Also if you put the shredded sugar for another 10 consecutive rolling presses it turns into sugar gas.

    • @navinvent
      @navinvent Před 3 měsíci +1

      Same in India, also the pulp left at the end can be used to make paper.

  • @lory2223
    @lory2223 Před rokem +21

    Nothing like freshly squeezed Sugarcane juice. Man I miss my early years in Brazil

    • @RicaAlice
      @RicaAlice Před 11 měsíci +1

      We still have that in many food markets in Singapore. It’s so delicious and it’s my favourite drink !

    • @semoneg2826
      @semoneg2826 Před 7 měsíci

      I love sugarcane juice

  • @Andenvan
    @Andenvan Před rokem +123

    I didn't know how sugar was made, but this was not close to what I expected

    • @VenomStryker
      @VenomStryker Před rokem +11

      In the US and a lot of other countries, sugar comes from Sugar Beets and not Sugarcane.

    • @181cameron
      @181cameron Před rokem +10

      ​@@VenomStryker I could be way off, but I think colder climates use beets, while warmer places use cane. The US, having both (and lots of corn), has a whole lot of options when it comes to getting fat.

    • @fish_fucker2.017
      @fish_fucker2.017 Před rokem

      @@181cameron Sagru is not a fat. Sgur is a type of simple carbohdyrte you smooth brain

    • @DoctorMeatDic
      @DoctorMeatDic Před rokem

      You bloody fool

    • @creativemindplay
      @creativemindplay Před 5 měsíci

      You're cute

  • @Deja_Vroom
    @Deja_Vroom Před rokem +111

    One piece of sugar cane should get you one piece of sugar if crafted correctly

    • @gravityrushfan299
      @gravityrushfan299 Před rokem +5

      Hahahaha so you like one piece

    • @zablnc
      @zablnc Před rokem +11

      @@gravityrushfan299 no thank she or he talking about minecraft

    • @EatCoffee
      @EatCoffee Před rokem +8

      @@zablnc it's 2023. It's they/them or ze/zir

    • @User25859
      @User25859 Před rokem +5

      ​@@EatCoffee 💀

    • @Deja_Vroom
      @Deja_Vroom Před rokem +4

      @@EatCoffee actually its airbus a380 fyi

  • @Yungbeck
    @Yungbeck Před rokem +30

    If you take out the narration I'd say they were making some kind of industrial chemical. Gnarly process.

    • @mad_max21
      @mad_max21 Před rokem

      Uhhh sucrose, the dissacharide with the molecular formula C ₁₂H ₂₂O ₁₁, is an industrial chemical.

  • @jerryg3652
    @jerryg3652 Před rokem +11

    Sugar canes are very juicy and tasty. They taste great raw, much better than just sugar. But you gotta spit out the fibers after you chew them to extract the juices. I see them sold in some asian supermarkets in North America.

  • @keithkamalaraj
    @keithkamalaraj Před rokem +11

    They must have a massive ant problem

  • @cosmicinsane516
    @cosmicinsane516 Před rokem +77

    My sergeant in the army was from the gulf coast of the US, and never knew sugar was also made from sugar beets. We passed a pile of sugar beets while on a run outside our base in Germany, and he asked what they were. He didn’t believe me that they were used to make sugar.

    • @saynotop2w
      @saynotop2w Před rokem +12

      Every one has their expertise, that one just happened to not be his.

    • @adamfunk4519
      @adamfunk4519 Před rokem +1

      Yeah they do them in the US,I go to North Dakota and work them,for crystal sugar..big money in it

    • @freemagicfun
      @freemagicfun Před rokem +1

      I am from Texas, and now live in the Philippines. All I have ever seen is sugar cane. I have heard of sugar beets, but do not know where they grow them. 😎

    • @adamfunk4519
      @adamfunk4519 Před rokem +2

      @@freemagicfun I know in the states,its in the Dakota's, Michigan, Colorado and Minnesota, usually colder climates because they do what they call freeze piles to keep them from rotting until the can be refined into Suger.

  • @zer0nix
    @zer0nix Před rokem +34

    Fascinating! Would never have suspected that a centrifuge is used to separate out the molasses!

  • @KristiContemplates
    @KristiContemplates Před rokem +38

    Fresh sugar cane juice is tasty tasty tasty 🤤

  • @DjDobleU809
    @DjDobleU809 Před rokem +45

    In conclusion, first we start with a plant, then 300 steps and 30 machines later we get sugar!

    • @AyaEgbuho
      @AyaEgbuho Před 4 měsíci +2

      😂

    • @lastyhopper2792
      @lastyhopper2792 Před 3 měsíci

      wrong. You'd only need a plant and a crafting table.

    • @DOI_ARTS
      @DOI_ARTS Před 2 měsíci

      You need only a plant and a grinding/squeezer simpke machine, then large vat to half boil it. Industry standards demands thorough process

  • @stephendaurie9344
    @stephendaurie9344 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I always thought sugar was made by grinding the core of the cane. This was a very informative video. Thank you for teaching me this

  • @luckyotter623
    @luckyotter623 Před rokem +17

    I had no idea the process of making sugar had this many steps! Really interesting.

    • @deidradahl2802
      @deidradahl2802 Před 8 měsíci +2

      So many chemicals and different processing of a natural product, no wonder it is so unhealthy. My lovely grandfather used to just juice the cane, and boil it down to crystals. The sugar was put into tea or lemonade which naturally melted it. Just boil and used.

    • @ianswift3521
      @ianswift3521 Před 6 měsíci

      they process it to such an extreme level for mass production because it will last for years this way. when one is consuming it within a matter of weeks or months it's safe to produce it with minimal processing. @@deidradahl2802

  • @hunter.1
    @hunter.1 Před rokem +49

    This is a motivational video for stop using white sugar. I knew that it was processed but i never thought that it was THIS MUCH processed.
    Greetings from Brazil

    • @SayAhh
      @SayAhh Před rokem +1

      Igualmente.

    • @pravindahiya719
      @pravindahiya719 Před rokem +2

      they still didn't show adding Sulphur & other chemicals.

    • @emanwe01
      @emanwe01 Před rokem +1

      Same here. I'd love to see what it's like using a less processed sugar. I'm not sure if the store-brand brown sugar we find here qualifies, or if it's just white sugar with some molasses re-added.

  • @suzettekath9860
    @suzettekath9860 Před rokem +21

    This is from sugar cane.
    There is a few species of beetroot that also produces sugar. The main plant that deals with sugar beetroot is in Wahpeton, ND. It is one of the main businesses that keeps Wahpeton/Breckenridge going. Since there is farmers in the counties surrounding the plant that grow that species of beetroot.

  • @cjPagan87
    @cjPagan87 Před rokem +1

    So much work wow

  • @djunoscasper2494
    @djunoscasper2494 Před rokem +2

    6:06 How 'Poison' Is Made 😮😮

  • @jamese.5047
    @jamese.5047 Před rokem +6

    Wow! I never knew it was such a process!

  • @mathematicalmuscleman
    @mathematicalmuscleman Před 5 měsíci +3

    Fantastic video. Just goes to show, that Physical Chemistry is everywhere especially in Industry and in Chemical Engineering.

  • @thecrimsoncrispy
    @thecrimsoncrispy Před měsícem

    After watching videos like this just makes you appreciate the huge role automated machines had in the industrial evolution , imagine these steps by hand

  • @user-je3fx6li3w
    @user-je3fx6li3w Před 2 měsíci

    It's amazing how many stages of production there are😮

  • @4god115
    @4god115 Před rokem +3

    Just came from Fiji, tons of cane fields

  • @naamek-
    @naamek- Před 6 měsíci +3

    Plz add subtitles 💜💜💜

  • @haichah
    @haichah Před 15 dny

    this video is literally always on my fyp for some reason. also that green sugarcane juice in the thumbnail looks delicious.

  • @Nickster78
    @Nickster78 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Going to a sugar factory like one of these would be any little kids dream.
    Like Sally and the Sugar Factory

    • @younghero80
      @younghero80 Před 6 měsíci

      Nah as a Louisiana native with many factories around the area they smell like they cooking doo doo.

  • @hypercomms2001
    @hypercomms2001 Před rokem +8

    I am impressed with the chemists and chemical engineers that worked out this process....

    • @ernstschmidt4725
      @ernstschmidt4725 Před 10 měsíci +1

      it was centuries of work to get to the crystal white sugar. kinda similar to how white flour was developed.

    • @semoneg2826
      @semoneg2826 Před 7 měsíci

      Indeed

  • @bluubam2719
    @bluubam2719 Před rokem

    wow! now i know how it's made!

  • @alliyahwilliams4736
    @alliyahwilliams4736 Před měsícem

    Nice! Very informative

  • @phs125
    @phs125 Před rokem +29

    The molasses left behind still has a lot of uncryatalized sugar.
    They ferment it and make alcohol.
    Then they distill it partially to get Rum.
    Distill some more and you get white rum.
    Distill even more and you get cane vodka.
    In india, they take cane vodka, which is cheap to produce, then they add some foreign liquor, and barley malt, to make it taste like whiskey.
    They sell it as whiskey, which is legally called IMFL (Indian made foreign liquor)

    • @natwel1544
      @natwel1544 Před rokem

      Sell it at Rum

    • @PlantaJah
      @PlantaJah Před rokem

      @@natwel1544 cachaça in Brazil

    • @bebedor_de_cafe3272
      @bebedor_de_cafe3272 Před rokem

      also, cachaça and pinga

    • @pflaffik
      @pflaffik Před rokem

      Most alcohol in tropical countries are made like that. Using grains or grapes would not work since those cannot be grown in the tropics, and require larger fields and high maintenance.

  • @corygriffis2818
    @corygriffis2818 Před rokem +72

    In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women.

    • @FitraRahim
      @FitraRahim Před rokem +1

      I don't understand, could you elaborate please?

    • @Easy_Going__
      @Easy_Going__ Před rokem +9

      @@FitraRahimScarface

    • @superfaz32
      @superfaz32 Před rokem

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @kyles5513
      @kyles5513 Před rokem +1

      The Simpsons actually

    • @superfaz32
      @superfaz32 Před rokem

      @@kyles5513 what about them 😵‍💫

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Před rokem

    Nice info, thank you for sharing it :)

  • @thetransferaccount4586

    nice clarification of matters there

  • @teentraveler1790
    @teentraveler1790 Před rokem +5

    All this knowledge is _sweet._

  • @datgaydangernoodle1315
    @datgaydangernoodle1315 Před rokem +4

    Thats cool

  • @masonc4105
    @masonc4105 Před rokem +8

    In Brazil you just drink the juice very refreshing

    • @aaroncapricorn5867
      @aaroncapricorn5867 Před rokem

      what do you use to juice the cane? what kind of juicer?

    • @masonc4105
      @masonc4105 Před rokem

      @@aaroncapricorn5867 it is a grinding/juicing Machine carried on a cart . They run the cane through fold it and repeat it a few times then strain the juice and serve with ice.

  • @SEIJA712
    @SEIJA712 Před rokem +1

    The juiceee!

  • @bakedhawaii
    @bakedhawaii Před rokem +6

    My schools used to be sugar cane plantations, so it's really cool to see how sugar is made today

  • @JohnAranita
    @JohnAranita Před rokem +9

    My family and I moved back to Hawaii from California. My Dad had something fun in store for me. He went to a sugar cane field. He planted a cane in our garden. After it grew a bit, he cut me a piece. I chewed on the piece. What an interesting experience!!

    • @pflaffik
      @pflaffik Před rokem +2

      Its both delicious and feel rewarding to eat sugarcane.

  • @sooky2524
    @sooky2524 Před rokem +2

    we in the ARAB country's , specially in JORDAN , EGYPT PALESTINE and more ... Lovvveee this juice 🤍🤍❤️❤️ happy eid every body .

  • @brianramirez6435
    @brianramirez6435 Před rokem

    This is sweet!

  • @ninnusridhar
    @ninnusridhar Před rokem +12

    A couple weeks ago I turned on discovery channel after a veeeery long time(i haven't used the tv in 7 years or something). And the first thing I saw was this exact episode. And a wave of absolute nostalgia overtook me.
    I love this show

  • @Monica_bondevik
    @Monica_bondevik Před rokem +10

    Uk narrator is the best I swear, I like how he adds little things like "to put in your tea"

    • @calvinramontsho4437
      @calvinramontsho4437 Před rokem +1

      yeah! i wonder whats his name.

    • @tureba
      @tureba Před rokem +1

      Sounds like Richard Ayoade trying to be low key.

    • @Monica_bondevik
      @Monica_bondevik Před rokem

      @@calvinramontsho4437 apparently according to Google he’s Anthony Hirst.

  • @user-tu1li2ib1c
    @user-tu1li2ib1c Před rokem

    super!

  • @MLBBYoutubeShorts
    @MLBBYoutubeShorts Před měsícem +1

    At the mill, trucks empty their load into a receiving table

  • @glass1258
    @glass1258 Před rokem +11

    That’s a sweet job !

  • @jamesevans7388
    @jamesevans7388 Před rokem +5

    is it bad that i was expecting Hugbee when i clicked this video?

    • @OkieDokieOk
      @OkieDokieOk Před 2 dny

      This one wasn’t quite vulgar enough. 😂

  • @BaghaShams
    @BaghaShams Před 6 měsíci

    I prefer How It's Made. Their explanations don't have as many gaps and the music is better.

  • @13thravenpurple94
    @13thravenpurple94 Před rokem

    Great work thank yoU

  • @odemata87
    @odemata87 Před rokem +3

    Thought the lime was used to neutralize the acid used

  • @pravindahiya719
    @pravindahiya719 Před rokem +27

    In India, we make five things from sugarcane; without using sulphur or other chemicals
    1) Sheeraa 2) Gud 3) Sharkara / Shakkar
    4) Khaand 5) Boora.
    processes are simple
    1) juice is boiled ,wild lady finger plant ( or a particular tree bark ) is added to separate impurities , floating impurities removed & the thick syruppy liquid is SHEERAA.
    2) further cooked, almost solid , poured in fist sizes or 2.5 kg chunks to cool , loose moisture & solidify for an hour or two is GUD.
    3) SHAKKAR looks like grains of Gud but has a little different taste - don't know the exact process to make.
    4) Gud has 1.5-2 cm wheat-brownish layers & in between , there are whitish 2-3 mm layers. if pushed with a spud ( khurpa खुरपा ), along the white layer , it divides in two. The white layer from both parts is peeled using the same spud & separated is called KHAAND. the remaining brown part is again made into Gud balls ( little less sweeter ) & used as suppliment to the cattle feed. (humans also can & do eat it)
    5) Khaand boiled in milk , impurities removed (& may be washed, not sure ) & again crystallined (white , small grains ) is called BOORA . ( served to special guests with Ghee , in North India ).

    • @commentnahipadhaikar2339
      @commentnahipadhaikar2339 Před rokem +3

      Sugar was actually invented in India only.
      These methods were taken to rest of the world

    • @Ivander_K
      @Ivander_K Před rokem +1

      @@commentnahipadhaikar2339 ok? what are you trying to prove?

    • @SriramVenkatesan
      @SriramVenkatesan Před rokem

      @@Ivander_K You are welcome.

  • @mentalizatelo
    @mentalizatelo Před rokem +1

    Sweet video!

  • @MichaelSHartman
    @MichaelSHartman Před rokem +1

    So much for homemade.

  • @elderaarondavis1
    @elderaarondavis1 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I’m having a sudden migraine by watching how sugar is made

  • @MiniMii550
    @MiniMii550 Před rokem +7

    In Venezuela we make juice with lime and sugar cane and plenty of ice and it's to die for on a hot summer's day, one of my favorite juices

    • @mvlevitch1745
      @mvlevitch1745 Před rokem

      That's lemonade, or in your case, lime-ade.

    • @SweBeach2023
      @SweBeach2023 Před rokem

      With the obesity and diabetes rates in many countries it's literally to die for.

    • @ntmn8444
      @ntmn8444 Před rokem +4

      @@SweBeach2023 Venezuelans are starving to death thanks to their communist regime so don’t worry, that’s not a problem.

  • @shaanisoomro1770
    @shaanisoomro1770 Před rokem

    Amazing..

  • @nonamenoname2767
    @nonamenoname2767 Před rokem +1

    So many steps to turn into table sugar

  • @chloehennessey6813
    @chloehennessey6813 Před rokem +4

    In my 8th grade science class Last year we got to make sugar from Sugar Beets and sugar from cane.
    They are both molecularly identical with a few very slight variations.

  • @p33t3rpark3r
    @p33t3rpark3r Před rokem +36

    just drink the damn sugar cane juice...mix it with coconut juice and you are in heaven

  • @evlkenevl2721
    @evlkenevl2721 Před rokem

    Sweet!

  • @stephencroft761
    @stephencroft761 Před rokem +11

    I moved to America when I was 11. At recess one morning I watched all the kids in my class run out to the street and begin breaking apart a stick and putting pieces in their mouths. I was horrified until someone handed me a piece and told me it was sugarcane that had fallen off a truck.

  • @grimwarz6084
    @grimwarz6084 Před rokem +3

    And here I was thinking that crystalized sugar was just inside the cane itself.

  • @user-sm4hc6il8d
    @user-sm4hc6il8d Před rokem

    آرزوی موفقیت برای شما

  • @crimsonstring588
    @crimsonstring588 Před rokem +11

    interesting how so many chemichals are added to sugar, in Costa Rica the process is way simpler and we consume more of what is called raw sugar, the color is brown but it isnt caramel or anything like it its just the sugar before most of the chemical baths...

    • @al6243
      @al6243 Před rokem +7

      1. Many chemicals? There's like only +3 used in the process and most of them are just used to purify the sugar and is removed after the process.
      2. Your process is simpler because you're not making white/refined sugar. Your sugar is brown for a reason.
      3. White, brown, raw sugar have different uses. Contrary to popular belief, despite brown sugar having slightly more minerals than white/refined ones, the difference is so miniscule that they both essentially have the same nutritional effect. Intake of all of type of sugar should be in moderation.

    • @crimsonstring588
      @crimsonstring588 Před rokem +1

      @@al6243 I encourage you to watch documentaries more often but paying attention... they disclosed most of them, im not gonna educate you but you can

    • @al6243
      @al6243 Před rokem +1

      @@crimsonstring588 Wow, what an incredibly typical, lazy, pseudointellectual reply. Instead of counterarguing my points and defending your statement, you chose to reply with... that. This reply of yours just perfectly summarized what type of person you are. I thought you were worth arguing with but nah, you're just like those typical FB/YT know-it-alls whose "research" is nothing more than a few FB posts, sensationalists CZcams videos and blogs, and a few seconds on Google search.
      "im not gonna educate you but you can"
      - Should have kept your mouth shut in the first place then.

    • @Insomniac3d
      @Insomniac3d Před rokem +1

      @@crimsonstring588 no matter if you're eating raw, brown or white sugar you're literally only eating glucose and fructose. no chemicals are left behind in the sugar after the process is complete.

    • @bbbustos
      @bbbustos Před rokem +1

      @@Insomniac3d Costa Rican here, Funny thing about his comments is that the production process shown in the video is literally from a Costa Rican co- op named "LAICA". That entity has monopoly in the country and must of Costa Rican sugar is processed in its plants. Thus all sugar is produced like that.

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena Před rokem +10

    This is the modern way of processing sugar. I wonder how the process was done in the old days.

    • @dalegreer3095
      @dalegreer3095 Před rokem +2

      About 2,500 years ago people in India had a more simple refining process. At that time they just squeezed out the juice in a mill, then dried out the juice in the sun. But they must have developed some of the methods shown here, because that would have produced brown sugar, and Romans described sugar from India as "white".

    • @bebedor_de_cafe3272
      @bebedor_de_cafe3272 Před rokem +1

      ooooh boy, here we go
      well they did have many steps to do so, but it was wasnt mechanized, and made by slaves, basically the machines are the same, but they used slaves to do it, so there were horrible injures

    • @semoneg2826
      @semoneg2826 Před 7 měsíci

      My grand parents use to do it at home..I was little and can't remember...looking at this factory am amazed and wonder how they did it at home

  • @Triharyanto1968
    @Triharyanto1968 Před 8 měsíci

    That's so sweet

  • @user-yp4pn3fk2f
    @user-yp4pn3fk2f Před 6 měsíci

    nice vid!

  • @esport1686
    @esport1686 Před rokem +17

    Sugarcane juice is the healthy part 😋

    • @thejesusaurus6573
      @thejesusaurus6573 Před rokem +3

      @Derek_Dayrik Ja'far Sha'ban aben-Rik _Sparks sugar is a chemical

    • @xeroxcopy8183
      @xeroxcopy8183 Před rokem

      @Derek_ماليكية جا'فارشا'بان بن ريك _Sparks everything is a chemical, especially your water Dihydrogen Monoxide

    • @makokx7063
      @makokx7063 Před rokem

      Even the juice isn't healthy. You need the fiber of the plant to slow absorption. Drinking any plant juice spikes insulin, do that enough and you get type 2 diabetes.

    • @bebedor_de_cafe3272
      @bebedor_de_cafe3272 Před rokem

      its still pure sugar

    • @aPeachWhoLovesYeshua
      @aPeachWhoLovesYeshua Před rokem +1

      @@bebedor_de_cafe3272 sugarcane juice has actual health benefits unlike table sugar

  • @darkman6577
    @darkman6577 Před rokem +3

    Sugar cane taste like the yellow honey dew melon

  • @kallolpaul8764
    @kallolpaul8764 Před 2 měsíci

    nice !

  • @noerdienchanel
    @noerdienchanel Před rokem +1

    Wow....make a sugar like this....first time i see in my life....good job my friends

  • @KaleidoSTARPH
    @KaleidoSTARPH Před rokem +3

    as one legend said:
    "EUROOOOOOPE! AAAAAW!!! ❤️"

  • @coversandwhatnot7344
    @coversandwhatnot7344 Před rokem +8

    as horrible as humans can be it never ceases to amaze me how much we are capable of when we work together

    • @TheSuperRatt
      @TheSuperRatt Před měsícem

      Eh... I'd really hate to burst your optimism, so I'll just vaguely imply that inventing the sugar production process, and making its product available to millions, was absolutely not a good development in human history. You could even say it contributed to one of the most shameful periods in "modern" history.

  • @Xine1988
    @Xine1988 Před rokem

    Sweet!!

  • @TaylorMMontgomery
    @TaylorMMontgomery Před rokem

    This is so complicated!

  • @EyesOfByes
    @EyesOfByes Před rokem +6

    0:02 *That’s what she said…*

  • @JackSilver1410
    @JackSilver1410 Před rokem +10

    A thousand kilo bag of sugar. Now that is a ton of sugar...
    I'll see myself out.

  • @chrislaurent1137
    @chrislaurent1137 Před 10 měsíci

    4:09-4:12 Not going to lie, that looks pretty good

  • @hannahduggan3599
    @hannahduggan3599 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I have tasted sugarcane before. It tasted like real sugar 😋.

  • @Bloomcycle
    @Bloomcycle Před rokem +3

    The most addictive product on the planet

    • @flat-earther
      @flat-earther Před rokem

      There is not proof of globe earth

    • @Lozzie74
      @Lozzie74 Před rokem

      Methamphetamine is the most addictive. Second: Xanex. Third: opiates. Fourth: cocaine. Fifth: alcohol. Quit any of these and you go into serious withdrawal. But sure…. You keep pushing the anti-sugar band wagon.

  • @fatilaa1735
    @fatilaa1735 Před rokem +22

    Am I the only one who drinks sugar cane juice it's so delicious 😋

    • @Mo-fu9sm
      @Mo-fu9sm Před rokem +14

      Yes, you're totally the only human on planet earth that drinks sugar cane juice. No one else has ever tasted it. Smh.

    • @mafuyu5112
      @mafuyu5112 Před rokem +4

      @@Mo-fu9sm Every Vietnamese hearing this information:

    • @pravindahiya719
      @pravindahiya719 Před rokem +1

      @@mafuyu5112 every Indian too !

    • @GeeztJeez
      @GeeztJeez Před rokem +1

      Yeah it is
      Don't drink too much though

    • @Quzga
      @Quzga Před rokem

      Never had any, don't think it's possible to buy up here in Sweden.

  • @brassen
    @brassen Před rokem

    the bagasse is crazy

  • @user-yp4pn3fk2f
    @user-yp4pn3fk2f Před 6 měsíci

    coffin dance 10hrs challenge, COMPLETED!!! 👍🤣🤣🤣

  • @cheesusllama
    @cheesusllama Před rokem +7

    This is exactly the same process of turning bauxite into alumina powder... I worked at a refinery for 8 years... I'd know this process anywhere... What in the world. Digestion, clarification, precipitation and calcination.

  • @jasonreyarana4034
    @jasonreyarana4034 Před rokem +3

    I wonder how they prevent ants.

  • @ThePir869
    @ThePir869 Před 5 měsíci

    It was fitting eating some butterfingers while watching this amazing breakdown.

  • @aputin654
    @aputin654 Před rokem +1

    clearly delicious and all natural product

  • @BallofBase
    @BallofBase Před rokem +4

    Wait, so one of the steps for making sucrose is "add sucrose"? What the hell?

    • @mattmanyam
      @mattmanyam Před rokem

      Crystallization requires nucleation.

    • @BallofBase
      @BallofBase Před rokem +2

      @@mattmanyam Right, that much I understand. But, How does one make the sucrose that gets included in the sucrose-making process? Does THAT sucrose also require premade sucrose for nucleation? If so, where did THAT sucrose come from? And so on, until the beginning of time.

    • @mattmanyam
      @mattmanyam Před rokem

      Nucleation can initiate around any small "defect"... why not make that "defect" another crystal structure? This isn't a "chicken or egg" situation, but a "hey, we've already got all these ideal nucleation seeds kicking around (that conveniently won't contaminate our product)" situation.

    • @TheSuperRatt
      @TheSuperRatt Před měsícem

      @@mattmanyam Are you a bot, or do you just lack reading comprehension.

    • @mattmanyam
      @mattmanyam Před měsícem

      @@TheSuperRatt what can I help you with?

  • @Ray-cy3ih
    @Ray-cy3ih Před rokem +13

    Yeah now imma stick with honey or brown sugar for the rest of my life

    • @xeroxcopy8183
      @xeroxcopy8183 Před rokem +3

      nice, white sugar with tons of added mollases

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 Před rokem +1

      Coconut sugar also works.

    • @pravindahiya719
      @pravindahiya719 Před rokem

      @@xeroxcopy8183 & without added Sulphur or other chemicals. the 'lot of molasses is NOT harmful.

    • @bebedor_de_cafe3272
      @bebedor_de_cafe3272 Před rokem

      its the same my bro, they just dont process it

  • @TheLilikprasaja
    @TheLilikprasaja Před 4 měsíci

    There is an old sugar factory in my area and it has awful stench when you walk nearby