INGREDIENTS & FLAVORS · EMULSIFIERS & GUMS

Emulsifier & gum kosher certification.

Emulsifiers, stabilizers, and gums — lecithin, mono- and diglycerides, and gum sources verified.
WHAT WE CHECK

Emulsifiers can be animal-derived

Mono- and diglycerides and stearates can be animal- or plant-derived — a key concern. We verify your emulsifiers, stabilizers, and gums to their source so your ingredient earns its certification.

Mono- & Diglycerides

Verified to plant or animal source — a frequent concern.

Lecithin

Soy and sunflower lecithin verified for status and processing.

Gums & Stabilizers

Gum arabic, xanthan, and carrageenan verified to source.

A deeper look at emulsifier & gum certification

Why emulsifiers and gums hinge on source

Emulsifiers, stabilizers, and gums are the quiet workhorses of food manufacturing, and they carry a concern that is easy to overlook: many of them can be made from either animal or plant material, and the label rarely tells you which. Mono- and diglycerides, stearates, and lecithin all illustrate the point — chemically identical products can come from very different sources. Because these ingredients end up in so many finished formulas, verifying them properly is central to our ingredients & flavors certification program, where we confirm the origin of each one rather than assuming.

What we verify in emulsifiers and gums

Mono- and diglycerides and their source fats

Mono- and diglycerides are the most common emulsifiers in the food supply, and they are produced from fats and oils that may be plant-based or animal-derived. Since the finished emulsifier gives no clue to its origin, we trace it back to the source fat and confirm the acceptability of that fat before the emulsifier can be certified. The same review applies to stearates, polysorbates, and related derivatives.

Lecithin

Lecithin is usually derived from soy or sunflower, but it can also come from egg or other sources, and it is often carried or processed with additional components. We confirm the source and processing of every lecithin you use, since it appears in so many products as an emulsifier and release aid. Our guide on whether lecithin is kosher walks through why the source matters so much.

Gums and stabilizers

Gum arabic, guar, xanthan, locust bean, carrageenan, and pectin are generally plant- or microbial-derived, but their processing, standardization, and carriers still need review. Xanthan, for example, is fermentation-produced and inherits the status of its growth media, so we look past the raw gum to the way it was actually made.

Carriers, anticaking agents, and blends

Emulsifier and gum systems are frequently sold as blends with carriers, flow agents, and anticaking additives. Each of those minor components carries its own status, so we verify the complete formulation. A blended stabilizer system is only as acceptable as its least-certain ingredient.

Shared equipment and documentation

Because these ingredients are produced on shared processing lines and sold business-to-business, we review changeover procedures to prevent carryover and keep your letter of certification matched to the exact products your customers buy.

Certifying your emulsifiers with Pure K

Our team certifies emulsifiers, stabilizers, and gums of every kind, and we know that the answer almost always lives in the source. We trace each ingredient to its origin, verify blends component by component, and issue documentation your buyers can rely on. To begin, request a free, no-obligation quote.

Ready to certify your emulsifiers?

Start with a free, no-obligation quote tailored to your emulsifier, stabilizer, and gum products.