Does ethanol evaporate in dried food?

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Ethanol is commonly used as a solvent in food flavorings, but its volatility raises questions about its presence in dried food products. When food containing ethanol is dried, the ethanol typically evaporates completely due to its low boiling point, making it unlikely for traces to remain. This is significant for individuals with ethanol allergies, as the absence of ethanol in dried food suggests they would not be affected. Ethanol is naturally produced by the human body, but concerns about its presence in processed foods remain. It is established that ethanol does not form a powder and is eliminated from the food long before water during the drying process.
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I was wondering, if ethanol is used in a food, as it commonly is with food flavorings (as a solvent), and that food is then dried out such that It is made into a powder or cereal or something, does all the ethanol completely evaporate? I know ethanol is very volatile and has a low boiling point, but does that mean that if, say, a person with an ethanol allergy eats this food, he won't be affected because there's no traces of ethanol?
 
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Yes, if ethanol allergic reaction is the criterion. Ethanol is an essential and integral component of metabolism, humans producing it in grams per day quantities.

Unfortunately an assertion of non-existence cannot be sustained without examination of the entire universe of discussion, searching for the Black Swan of induction, and not possible here for the 7 Billion humans.
 
Haha good point. The reason I said ethanol allergy was because I figured if someone would be deadly allergic to a food if it had any traces of ethanol in it, then being able to eat it probably means its good enough.

On a side note, is it even possible to have ethanol present after drying? Can ethanol form a powder if dried? Or is it a safe assumption that if the food is dry then ethanol is gone?
 
Ethanol is gone long before water is gone. And no, it can't take a powdered form.
 
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