Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I'm holding in my hands

  • one of the most magnificent

  • powerful

  • marvelous chemicals in all of the universe

  • and wondering if you would be okay with me if I had some

  • Mmmm...

  • It tastes so good

  • Intro music

  • This, my friends, is your run-of-the-mill table sugar

  • It's made out of some sugar beets...

  • Or...

  • from a...

  • sugar cane...

  • There's no way to tell which

  • But henceforth we're going to be...

  • uhh...

  • calling it by it's proper name

  • which is sucrose.

  • There's a bunch of different kinds of sugars

  • but they're all sweet tasting, edible, carbohydrates

  • So, carbohydrates...

  • probably the tastiest word in the English language

  • and aside from filling up your snack hole

  • and making your kids get all spazzy

  • sugar

  • is one of the most important chemicals on the planet

  • They're pretty much the primary source of energy for every thing on Earth

  • Not this stuff exactly, this stuff is more of the

  • Ahh...

  • primary source of all

  • cavities on Earth

  • At the cellular level, pretty much every living thing on Earth, when it needs an energy fix

  • whether it's a plant, an animal or a bacteria

  • the first they turn to

  • is sugar.

  • Now where does sugar come from?

  • Our earliest word is the energy used to create sugar come from, that of course is our friend the sun.

  • These lovely sweet compounds are found in every single plant though in vastly varying quantities of course

  • because it is the primary product of photosynthesis

  • Now when we talk at all about photosynthesis on the biology crash course channel

  • and when we do that episode - when we post it online you will see the link down in the description

  • if you want to learn more about photosynthesis

  • but for now let's just say that the importance of plants turning carbon dioxide and water and sunlight into sugar

  • cannot be overstated

  • Basically,

  • plants use energy from the sun to split the molecules of water

  • and the hydrogen from that water is combined with the carbon dioxide

  • to create glucose

  • So in effect, this whole process captures the energy of the sun

  • and stores it as chemical energy in sugar

  • I'm eating the sun

  • I'm eating the sun

  • right now

  • It's under my tongue

  • Problem

  • That was a lot of sugar

  • Now I'm worried I gonna have a stomach ache

  • In addition to glucose and other common plant sugars, fructose, which has the same chemical formula

  • it's just...

  • rearranged a little bit...

  • And even though they're very similar and contain the same amount of energy

  • fructose actually tastes significantly sweeter

  • which is why we like to put high fructose corn syrup into beverages

  • That's why we get a wide range of tastiness in plants from super sweet potatoes to "not-sweet-at-all" potatoes

  • which is why what we generally call starch - which is a complex carbohydrate

  • is actually a bunch of sugar molecules all linked together

  • All the way to the sugar in sugarcane is our old friend sucrose

  • which was actually just a molecule of glucose and a molecule of fructose linked together

  • Point is

  • that all these sugars are important

  • The reason why we think they're so delicious

  • is because we need energy to survive

  • and sugar is a really great place to get energy from

  • And if it seems to you like I've been eating a lot of sugar in this video

  • Keep in mind that I've maybe had about two...

  • two, three teaspoons so far?

  • The average American has about twenty-two per day

  • so I've got a long way to go

  • Twenty-two teaspoons a day, people

  • That cannot be healthy

  • I did a little bit of research

  • and I discovered last night that just from drinking soda

  • the average American drinks about fifty pounds of sugar a year

  • We Americans generally have a heck of a lot more sugar than we need to have

  • We should probably having more like six to nine teaspoons a day

  • so you might want to rethink that all Captain Crunch diet you're currently on

  • I'm not really designed for a world

  • where sugar is infinitely available

  • It's certainly pretty hard to come by something really sweet in nature

  • and even if you find something - like a bunch of apples

  • it's hard to eat a lot of apples without making yourself pretty sick

  • Nowadays we've gotten around that by producing this wonderful white powder

  • as well as the high fructose corn syrup that they put in absolutely everything these days

  • So if you want my health advice...

  • try and maybe eat the way that your caveman ancestors did

  • fruits and vegetables

  • maybe some complex carbohydrates here and there

  • And I would suggest overall to not consume sugar

  • in this manner

  • Thank you for watching this episode of SciShow

  • If you wanna learn more about sugar, check the links in the description

  • You can also ask us questions, which we'll be happy to answer

  • and suggest other topics for SciSchow in the YouTube comments.

  • Hook up with us on Facebook and Twitter as well.

  • Goodbye

  • End credits music

I'm holding in my hands

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

B2 US

我們為什麼喜歡糖 (Why We Love Sugar)

  • 75 3
    robert posted on 2021/01/14
Video vocabulary