What
@Hornbein is talking about is usually termed recrystallization. The formation of new crystals of sucrose removes the impurities - ie., the brown molasses residue
-
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_sugar
Sugar and salt are used to preserve food from attack by bacteria and fungi. Drying food is a very good way to preserve food. Of course something like 'dried lettuce' may not be appealing.
If you want to defeat the effect of these treatments add some water to the food either through high relative humidity or simply letting the food get wet. So.
Foods preserved as described above are kept in sealed containers - to keep out water and humidity.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmosis
From wikpedia on osmosis:
Osmosis is the spontaneous net movement of
solvent molecules through a
semi-permeable membrane into a region of higher
solute concentration, in the direction that tends to equalize the solute concentrations on the two sides.
This applies to water as a solvent.
Why does it work to preserve food? Osmotic pressure is a way to understand. Jams and jellies have high enough levels of solutes - sugar - such that the osmotic pressure on bacterial cells is too high to allow the growth of species that would otherwise colonize the food. Water moves the 'wrong' way (out of cells) for growth to occur, so the cells dies and bacterial spores stay dormant. Jams and jellies have enough water for some species of fungi to grow, however.
As an aside: In the first half of the 20th century ( see the very first addition of 'The Settlement Cookbook' ) people let a "mother" form on sweet pickles, jams and jellies. A mother is a fungal mat. What this does is to prevent bacterial spores and new fungi from getting into the food. This has a downside. For example, there are fungi that produce aflatoxins and will grow on/in nut butters, vegetable jellies and types of pickles.
Aflatoxins are poisonous and cancer-causing chemicals that are produced by certain molds (ex: Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus)
http://poisonousplants.ansci.cornell.edu/toxicagents/aflatoxin/aflatoxin.html
http://www.foodsafetywatch.org/factsheets/aflatoxins/
When food moisture content is low enough or osmotic pressure from sugars or salt is high enough, even fungi have a hard time growing.[/quote]