Is the agar for cultivating bacteria the same agar

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Agar used for cultivating bacteria is indeed the same substance found in some food products, derived from seaweed or kelp. It serves as a solidifying agent in both laboratory media and culinary applications, primarily as an emulsifier. While the basic ingredient is the same, there are various formulations of agar for different purposes. For instance, nutrient agar and blood agar differ in their components, with blood agar containing additional nutrients from blood. The agar found in supermarkets may have additives for flavor or preservation, so it's important to check the ingredients. Overall, agar is harmless and has no nutritional value for humans or certain bacteria that cannot digest polysaccharides.
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juz wondering...is the agar for cultivating bacteria the same agar we buy from supermarkets n eat?
 
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The agar use for bacterial culture is from some type of algae. I don't known about the food.
 
Uhm - I don't eat anything called agar?
 
Probably, the Japanese use it

quite a bit in food preparation, but you might want to check on things like salt or other additions.
 
There are different kinds (recipes) of agar used for cultivating bacteria. I don't think you'll find "blood agar" (used for blood-borne bacteria, as you may suspect) on supermarket shelves! :wink:
 
Phobos has correctly bracketed agar for you:

Natural agar is extracted from seaweed, or kelp.

It's a complex polysaccharide that is used mainly as an emulsifier for food preparations, including culture media.

It has no nutrient value for humankind (or, for that matter, bacteria that cannot digest such polysaccharides).

It is like pectin, even cellulose.

Bottom line? It's harmless.
 
Originally posted by Phobos
There are different kinds (recipes) of agar used for cultivating bacteria. I don't think you'll find "blood agar" (used for blood-borne bacteria, as you may suspect) on supermarket shelves! :wink:

It is the same agar used in different media recipecies. The difference between nutirent agar and blood agar, is that one has blodd and the oder does not but both have agar (http://campmicro.com/blood_agar.htm ). As stated by 637h, agar the solidication agent for plates media.

So the agar that you buy from the super market and that use in lab have a common ingredient agar (http://www.ndif.org/Terms/agar.html ).
 
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