maestro wrote:If they are glucose based Jelly beans, would they not ferment as well as sugar.
I could be totally wrong about this but I thought it went something like this:
Maltose > Dextrose > Sucrose > Glucose
It would probably impart too much flavour to your beer as well I would think
My meagre understanding is as follows;
Glucose (C6H12O6) is a simple "short chain" sugar, often referred to as a monosaccharide.
Dextrose (C6H12O6) is another term used to describe simple sugar, or more correctly d-Glucose. Its also referred to as dextroglucose. Because it is a simple / short chain sugar, it's readily fermentable, leaving behind little in the way of flavour properties, which makes it ideal for carbonating your beer or raising the alcohol levels without adding to the sweetness of the beer, since it's a "completely fermenting" sugar.
Sucrose (C12H22O11) is a disaccharide made out of Glucose and Fructose units - typically produced in Australia via sugar cane. When we hydrolise sucrose, we break the acetal bond, forming 1:1 glucose and fructose units which is often referred to as "invert sugar".
Malt sugar, or maltose (C12H22O11) consists of two glucose units, i.e a disaccharide - it's produced from malting cereals (such as Barley, Wheat, etc).
So my order would be:
Maltose > Sucrose > Dextrose > Glucose
Oh, and adding a Jellybean should be fine!
Cheers,
TL