CODEX GENERAL STANDARD FOR FOOD ADDITIVES

CODEX GENERAL STANDARD FOR FOOD ADDITIVES

Only the food additives listed herein are recognized as suitable for use in foods in conformance with the
provisions of this Standard.1 Only food additives that have been assigned an Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI)
or determined, on the basis of other criteria, to be safe2 by the Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food
Additives (JECFA)3 and an International Numbering System (INS) designation by Codex will be considered
for inclusion in this Standard. The use of additives in conformance with this Standard is considered to be
technologically justified.

More at:

www.codexalimentarius.org/input/download/standards/4/CXS_192e.pdf

ADDITIVES for Beer and malt beverages (14.2.1)

Aditives for Beer and malt beverages (14.2.1)

Alcoholic beverages brewed from germinated barley (malt), hops, yeast, and water. Examples include: ale, brown beer, weiss beer, pilsner, lager beer, oud bruin beer, Obergariges Einfachbier, light beer, table beer, malt liquor, porter, stout, and barleywine.1

This page provides information on the food additive provisions that are acceptable for use in foods conforming to the food category.

http://www.codexalimentarius.net/gsfaonline/foods/details.html;jsessionid=24347136B2C75435D066CFF484D2B0DF?id=254

ADDITIVES for Aromatized alcoholic beverages (e.g., beer, wine and spirituous cooler-type beverages, low alcoholic refreshers) (14.2.7)

Aditives for Aromatized alcoholic beverages (e.g., beer, wine and spirituous cooler-type beverages, low alcoholic refreshers) (14.2.7)

Description:
Includes all non-standardized alcoholic beverage products. Although most of these products contain less than 15% alcohol, some traditional non-standardized aromatized products may contain up to 24% alcohol. Examples include aromatized wine, cider and perry; apéritif wines; americano; batidas (drinks made from cachaça, fruit juice or coconut milk and, optionally, sweetened condensed milk)1; bitter soda and bitter vino; clarea (also claré or clary; a mixture of honey, white wine and spices; it is closely related to hippocras, which is made with red wine); jurubeba alcoholic drinks (beverage alcohol product made from the Solanum paniculatum plant indigenous to the north of Brazil and other parts of South America); negus (sangria; a hot drink made with port wine, sugar, lemon and spice); sod, saft, and sodet; vermouth; zurra (in Southern Spain, a sangria made with peaches or nectarines; also the Spanish term for a spiced wine made of cold or warm wine, sugar, lemon, oranges or spices); amazake (a sweet low-alcoholic beverages (<1% alcohol) made from rice by koji; mirin (a sweet alcoholic beverage (<10% alcohol) made from a mixture of shoochuu (a spirituous beverage), rice and koji); “malternatives,” and prepared cocktails (mixtures of liquors, liqueurs, wines, essences, fruit and plant extracts, etc. marketed as ready-to-drink products or mixes). Cooler-type beverages are composed of beer, malt beverage, wine or spirituous beverage, fruit juice(s), and soda water (if carbonated).2,3,4

This page provides information on the food additive provisions that are acceptable for use in foods conforming to the food category.

http://www.codexalimentarius.net/gsfaonline/foods/details.html;jsessionid=24347136B2C75435D066CFF484D2B0DF?id=263