Food Science and Technology Library
Influence of Heat Treatments on Carotenoid Content of Cherry Tomatoes

Open Access Article

Influence of Heat Treatments on Carotenoid Content of Cherry Tomatoes

Tomatoes and tomato products are rich sources of carotenoids—principally lycopene, followed by β-carotene and lutein. The aim of this work was to study...

Research navigation

Keep reading from this topic cluster

Move to the next article, compare related research, or jump back into the FSTDESK archive without leaving the reading flow.

Browse Food Science and Technology Articles Library Page 47 Explore the FSTDESK open access food science article library

Tomatoes and tomato products are rich sources of carotenoids—principally lycopene, followed by β-carotene and lutein. The aim of this work was to study the effect of heat treatment on carotenoid content in cherry tomatoes. Raw and canned products were sampled and analysed; furthermore whole, skin and pulp fractions of cherry tomatoes were analysed when raw and home-processed, in order to better understand heat treatment effects. Lycopene content in canned tomatoes was two-fold higher than in raw tomatoes (11.60 mg/100 g versus 5.12 mg/100 g). Lutein and β-carotene were respectively 0.15 mg/100 g and 0.75 mg/100 g in canned tomatoes versus 0.11 mg/100 g and 1.00 mg/100 g in raw tomatoes. For home-processed tomatoes, β-carotene and lutein showed a content decrease in all thermally treated products. This decrease was more evident for β-carotene in the skin fraction (−17%), while for lutein it was greater in the pulp fraction (−25%). Lycopene presented a different pattern: after heat treatment its concentration increased both in the whole and in pulp fractions, while in the skin fraction it decreased dramatically (−36%). The analysis of the isomers formed during the thermal treatment suggests that lycopene is rather stable inside the tomato matrix. Keywords: lycopene; home-processed; thermal treatments; geometric isomers

PDF reader The PDF viewer loads when this section enters the screen.