Processed Tomato Products (processed + tomato_products)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


CONSUMER ACCEPTABILITY OF COLOR IN PROCESSED TOMATO PRODUCTS BY AFRICAN-AMERICAN, LATINO AND PROTOTYPICAL CONSUMERS

JOURNAL OF FOOD QUALITY, Issue 6 2002
KENEKO T. CLAYBON
African-American, Latino, and Prototypical consumers rated the color of ketchup, salsa, tomato sauce, pizza sauce, spaghetti sauce, and barbecue sauce. For most products, ethnicity had little influence on acceptance. Prototypical consumers rated products the highest and had the widest preference range. All but one commercially available product was in the acceptable range, but they were not always in the most preferred range. Ketchup was the only product with no commercially available products in the color most preferred by Prototypical and African-American consumers. The leading brand was within the most preferred range for all products and ethnic groups except African-Americans and Prototypical consumers for ketchup and salsa. A peak color acceptance existed for all products: too red or too brown was undesirable. Understanding the optimum color range can help tomato processors increase the quality of their product for all consumers. [source]


A comparison of flavonoids, carotenoids and vitamin C in commercial organic and conventional marinara pasta sauce

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, Issue 2 2008
Eunmi Koh
Abstract BACKGROUND: Characterising the levels of key phytochemicals in foods commonly consumed in the Western diet is critical for database development, estimating intake and assessing the potential health benefits associated with the consumption of these products. This paper describes a market-basket evaluation of the key flavonoids, carotenoids and vitamin C in commercial organic (five brands) and conventional (five brands) marinara pasta sauces. RESULTS: Levels of ascorbic acid ranged from undetected up to 6.87 mg per 100 g fresh weight. The levels of total vitamin C in six of the ten samples were significantly lower than the amount listed on the Nutrition Facts Panel (P < 0.001 or P < 0.01). The contents of total vitamin C, flavonoids and lycopene were not statistically different between organic and conventional samples. Conventional pasta sauces demonstrated a significantly higher level of all- trans -,-carotene (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: This suggests that any beneficial differences in levels of flavonoids, carotenoids and vitamin C gained through cultivation practices are not measurable at the consumer level in processed tomato products. Additionally, the results point to a large disparity between the actual vitamin C content of these products and the content listed on the Nutrition Facts Panel. Copyright © 2007 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Evaluation of heat and oxidative damage during storage of processed tomato products.

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, Issue 9 2003

Abstract Tomato products (pulp, puree and paste) submitted to accelerated aging (30, 40 and 50 °C for 3 months) were studied to evaluate variations in the kinetics of the degradation of antioxidants and antioxidant activity. The carotenoids lycopene and ,-carotene, ascorbic acid, rutin and total phenolics were analysed. The antioxidant activity was measured using (a) the xanthine oxidase (XOD)/xanthine system, which generates superoxide radicals and hydrogen peroxide, and (b) the linoleic acid/CuSO4 system, which promotes lipid peroxidation. The ascorbic acid content decreased even at 30 °C, following pseudo-first-order kinetics, with an activation energy of 105 200 J mol,1 for tomato pulp and 23 600 J mol,1 for tomato paste. The lower the initial ascorbic acid content, the higher was the degradation rate. Variations in phenolic compounds occurred at 40 °C and higher, following pseudo-zero order kinetics. The antioxidant activity of the hydrophilic fraction of the tomato products depended on both antioxidant degradation and the Maillard reaction and could not be described by a kinetic model. The ,-carotene content decreased even at 30 °C, whereas the lycopene content was stable in all samples. The antioxidant activity of the lipophilic fraction of the tomato products decreased following pseudo-first order kinetics, with an activation energy of 22 200 J mol,1 for tomato pulp and 20 200 J mol,1 for tomato paste. It is concluded that significant ,oxidative damage' can occur in tomato products during their commercial shelf-life. Copyright © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Evaluation of heat and oxidative damage during storage of processed tomato products.

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, Issue 11 2002

Abstract The evolution of heat damage during storage of tomato pulp, puree and paste was studied by accelerated aging tests. Heat damage indices,5-hydroxymethyl-2-furfural (HMF), furosine and colour changes (,E),were evaluated for tomato products stored at 30, 40 and 50,°C for up to 90 days. Furosine and ,E values increased following pseudo-zero-order kinetics, and the higher the solid content of the products, the higher were the rate constant values. HMF formation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics in tomato pulp and pseudo-zero-order kinetics in puree and paste samples. Data show that heat damage reactions in tomato products proceed even at room temperature, and the kinetic model provided can be used to predict changes occurring during shelf-life. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry [source]