When I used to work as a barista, I would silently snicker when customers specifically asked for blue sweetener packets, or pink sweetener as the case may have been. That's because I always assumed that there was no real difference between artificial sweeteners, and people arbitrarily preferred the sweetener in the blue packet versus the pink packet. Turns out I was totally wrong, and this is a fact with which I've only recently come to understand. Sure, every type of artificial sweetener has a slightly different taste, but that's because they're made of totally different things. So the easiest way to tell one type of sweetener from another is to look at the color of the artificial sweetener packet.

Sugar packets are color-coded based on what's inside. That way, when you see generic pink sweetener, you've got a pretty good idea what you're dealing with. So don't scoff the next time someone asks you specifically for blue or pink or even yellow sweetener, and give the person what they want, with this guide to everything you never wanted to know about artificial sweeteners.

Pink: Saccharin

A pink packet is probably going to be filled with saccharin—the oldest artificial sweetener, first discovered in 1878 at Johns Hopkins University. For a while, in the 1980s and 1990s, saccharin fell out of favor, because was linked to some pretty nasty potential negative health effects in 1978. Scientists found that saccharin was, "carcinogenic for the urinary bladder in rats and mice, and most likely is carcinogenic in human beings," but that study was later debunked; apparently whatever mechanism that's triggered by saccharin to cause bladder cancer only happens in rats. These days, there's even a growing body of evidence that saccharin "could actually be useful in developing treatments for aggressive cancers," according to research from experts at the University of Florida.

And as far as saccharin as a sweetener goes, it has no calories per serving and is about 300 times as sweet as regular table sugar. Some people complain that it leaves a metallic after-taste, but at least that won't cause cancer!

Blue: Aspartame

The blue packets are filled with aspartame, which, unlike saccharin, is low-calorie, not zero-calorie—though it's only four calories per packet. It's also less sweet than saccharin, only 200 times as sweet as table sugar. You also can't bake with aspartame, because it's not heat stable.

As far as health effects are concerned, there are some people who genuinely have a hard time with aspartame, specifically folks with the metabolic disorder phenylketonuria. These people cannot properly metabolize the amino acid phenylalanine, which is one of the byproducts of digested aspartame. But aspartame has long been erroneously linked to other negative health effects in the general population, "everything from multiple sclerosis to Gulf War syndrome," according to a report from Time. That caused plenty of folks to avoid the little blue packets on the table throughout most of the 1990s.

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That doesn't mean the choice to use aspartame isn't still controversial. Aspartame is the main sweetener in Diet Coke and many other diet sodas, though so much so that Pepsi announced in 2015 that it'd be switching the recipe of its diet sodas from aspartame to to sucralose, which brings us to ...

Yellow: Sucralose

Sucralose one of the newer artificial sweeteners out there, first approved by the F.D.A. in 1999. It's probably best known by its brand name: Splenda. Sucralose is a zero-calorie artificial sweetener that's 600 times as sweet as sugar. (Yes, you read that right.) It's often described as the sweetener that tastes most like sugar, in part because it's derived from sucrose, which is regular old sugar. That also means it's relatively chemically stable, so you can basically use sucralose as a replacement for white table sugar in any baked good or recipe.

Green: Stevia