| Literature DB >> 31252678 |
Trond Løvdal1, Bart Van Droogenbroeck2, Evren Caglar Eroglu3, Stanislaw Kaniszewski4, Giovanni Agati5, Michel Verheul6, Dagbjørn Skipnes7.
Abstract
There is a large potential in Europe for valorization in the vegetable food supply chain. For example, there is occasionally overproduction of tomatoes for fresh consumption, and a fraction of the production is unsuited for fresh consumption sale (unacceptable color, shape, maturity, lesions, etc.). In countries where the facilities and infrastructure for tomato processing is lacking, these tomatoes are normally destroyed, used as landfilling or animal feed, and represent an economic loss for producers and negative environmental impact. Likewise, there is also a potential in the tomato processing industry to valorize side streams and reduce waste. The present paper provides an overview of tomato production in Europe and the strategies employed for processing and valorization of tomato side streams and waste fractions. Special emphasis is put on the four tomato-producing countries Norway, Belgium, Poland, and Turkey. These countries are very different regards for example their climatic preconditions for tomato production and volumes produced, and represent the extremes among European tomato producing countries. Postharvest treatments and applications for optimized harvest time and improved storage for premium raw material quality are discussed, as well as novel, sustainable processing technologies for minimum waste and side stream valorization. Preservation and enrichment of lycopene, the primary health promoting agent and sales argument, is reviewed in detail. The European volume of tomato postharvest wastage is estimated at >3 million metric tons per year. Together, the optimization of harvesting time and preprocessing storage conditions and sustainable food processing technologies, coupled with stabilization and valorization of processing by-products and side streams, can significantly contribute to the valorization of this underutilized biomass.Entities:
Keywords: healthy food; lycopene; postharvest physiology; processing; sustainable production; tomato; valorization; vegetables; waste reduction
Year: 2019 PMID: 31252678 PMCID: PMC6678325 DOI: 10.3390/foods8070229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Lycopene content in tomato varieties (converted to mg/100 g fresh weight (FW)). Literature review. Values in italics are obtained by spectrophotometry, otherwise high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).
| Variety | Total Lycopene | Type | Origin | Growth Conditions | Reference |
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| Ministar | 3.11 | plum | SW Norway | Greenhouse, soil free | This study |
| Juanita | 10.51 | cherry | |||
| Dometica | 4.08 | salad | |||
| Volna | 8.15 | salad | Skierniewice, Poland | Field | |
| Calista | 10.75 | processing | |||
| Pearson |
| N/A | California, USA | Field | [ |
| DX-54 |
| N/A | Utah, USA | Field | [ |
| Unknown | 15.8 | N/A | Florida, USA | Unknown | [ |
| Amico | 7.73 | processing | Gödöllö, Hungary | Field | [ |
| Casper | 6.61 | ||||
| Góbé | 5.92 | ||||
| Ispana | 6.22 | ||||
| Pollux | 5.14 | ||||
| Soprano | 8.65 | ||||
| Tenger | 7.66 | ||||
| Uno | 7.09 | ||||
| Zaphyre | 6.95 | ||||
| Draco | 6.87 | ||||
| Jovanna | 11.61 | ||||
| K-541 | 9.95 | ||||
| Nivo | 8.46 | ||||
| Simeone | 9.88 | ||||
| Sixtina | 10.51 | ||||
| Monika | 7.22 | salad | |||
| Delfine | 6.51 | ||||
| Marlyn | 5.53 | ||||
| Fanny | 5.26 | ||||
| Tiffany | 6.23 | ||||
| Alambra | 5.40 | ||||
| Regulus | 6.59 | ||||
| Petula | 6.68 | ||||
| Diamina | 6.48 | ||||
| Brillante | 8.47 | ||||
| Furone | 5.18 | ||||
| Linda | 5.69 | ||||
| Early Fire |
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| Bonus |
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| Falcorosso |
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| Korall |
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| Nívó |
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| Strombolino | 5.3–10.3 | cherry, processing | Gödöllö, Hungary | Field | [ |
| 12 unnamed local varieties |
| N/A | SE Spain | Field | [ |
| ACE 55 VF |
| Flattened globe | |||
| Marglobe |
| Round | |||
| Marmande |
| Flattened globe | |||
| CIDA-62 | 6.23 | cherry | Spain | Organic, field | [ |
| CIDA-44A | 2.95 | round | |||
| CIDA-59A | 2.70 | ||||
| BGV-004123 | 5.50 | ||||
| BGV-001020 | 3.66 | flattened and ribbed | |||
| Baghera | 4.64 | round | |||
| CXD277 | 15.33 | processing | Spain | Field | [ |
| H9661 | 12.21 | ||||
| H9997 | 14.96 | ||||
| H9036 | 11.36 | ||||
| ISI-24424 | 17.01 | ||||
| Kalvert | 16.71 | ||||
| Kalvert | 20.2 | processing | Lecce, Italy | Field | [ |
| Hly18 | 19.5 | ||||
| Donald | 9.5 | ||||
| Incas | 9.3 | ||||
| 143 | 9.47 | N/A | San Marzano, Italy | Field | [ |
| Stevens | 10.2 | ||||
| Poly20 | 16.0 | ||||
| Ontario | 6.54 | ||||
| Sel6 | 9.73 | ||||
| Poly56 | 14.2 | ||||
| 1447 | 5.61 | ||||
| 977 | 10.0 | ||||
| 1513 | 9.21 | ||||
| 988 | 14.1 | ||||
| Cayambe | 13.5 | ||||
| Heline | 9.46 | ||||
| 1512 | 3.25 | ||||
| 1438 | 6.35 | ||||
| Motelle | 16.9 | ||||
| Momor | 13.3 | ||||
| 981 | 2.33 | ||||
| Poly27 | 11.0 | ||||
| Shasta | 6.7–7.7 | Early-season varieties | California, USA | Field | [ |
| H9888 | 8.9–9.7 | ||||
| Apt410 | 9.1–10.0 | ||||
| CXD179 | 9.2–10.4 | Mid-season varieties | |||
| CXD254 | 10.5–12.0 | ||||
| H8892 | 8.7–10.1 | ||||
| CXD222 | 9.8–13.2 | Late-season varieties | |||
| H9665 | 8.7–12.2 | ||||
| H9780 | 9.2–13.0 | ||||
| Bos3155 | 14.92 | Red varieties | California, USA | Field | [ |
| CXD510 | 15.37 | ||||
| CXD514 | 11.80 | ||||
| CXD276 | 2.47 | Light color Tangerine variety | |||
| CX8400 | 0.08 | Yellow variety | |||
| CX8401 | 0.68 | Orange variety | |||
| CX8402 | 0.03 | Green variety | |||
| SEL-7 |
| N/A | Haryana, India | [ | |
| ARTH-3 |
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| Laura | 12.20 | N/A | New Jersey, USA | Greenhouse | [ |
| Brigade | 12.9 | Processing | Salerno, Italy | N/A | [ |
| PC 30956 | 18.7 | High lycopene experimental hybrid, | |||
| Cheers |
| N/A | Southern France | Greenhouse | [ |
| Lemance |
| N/A | N/A | Greenhouse | [ |
| Ohio-8245 | 9.93 | Tomato pulp fraction | Ontario, Canada | N/A | [ |
| 92-7136 | 7.76 | ||||
| 92-7025 | 6.46 | ||||
| H-9035 | 10.19 | ||||
| CC-164 | 10.70 | ||||
| Dasher | 3.98 | Plum | Italy | Greenhouse | [ |
| Iride | 4.45 | ||||
| Navidad | 4.89 | ||||
| Sabor | 5.22 | ||||
| 292 | 4.57 | ||||
| 738 | 4.77 | ||||
| Cherubino | 3.43 | Cherry | |||
| Crimson, green, | 0.52 | Salad | Ohio, USA | Purchased from local market | [ |
| Crimson, breaker | 3.84 | ||||
| Crimson, red | 5.09 | ||||
| Unknown | 10.14 | Cherry | California, USA | Purchased from local supermarket | [ |
| Unknown | 5.98 | On-the-vine | |||
| Roma | 8.98 | Processing | |||
| Jennita | 1.60–5.54 | Cherry | SW Norway | Greenhouse, soil free | [ |
| Naomi | 7.1–12.0 | Cherry | Sicily, Italy | Cold greenhouse | [ |
| Naomi | 12.4–13.3 | Cherry | Italy | Cold greenhouse | [ |
| Ikram | 8.5–8.9 | Cluster | |||
| Eroe | 2.1–2.8 | Salad | |||
| Corbarino | 6.8–14.6 | Cherry | Battipaglia, Italy | Field grown | [ |
(a) Harvested twice monthly from May to October. (b) Harvested at six different times throughout the year. (c) As an effect of N and P fertilization load.
Lycopene content in peel versus pulp in some tomato varieties (converted to mg/100 g FW). Literature review. Values in italics are obtained by spectrophotometry, otherwise HPLC.
| Cultivar | Total Lycopene | Comment | Reference | |
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| Peel | Pulp | |||
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| 89.3 | 28.0 | Field grown, Northern Tunisia | [ |
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| 50.8 | 16.7 | ||
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| 42.4 | 10.1 | ||
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| Harvested at mature green stage (Ludhiana, India) and stored at 20 °C until ripe | [ |
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| Field grown, New Delhi, India | [ |
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| 6.0 | 1.2 | Purchased in supermarket or open-air market, Zagreb, Croatia, | [ |
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| 7.2 | 2.0 | ||
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| 5.3 | 1.6 | ||
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| 3.5 | 1.3 | ||
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| 3.3 | 1.2 | ||
FW: fresh weight.
Figure 1Lycopene evolution in processing tomatoes, cv. Calista, as measured during ripening in the field by a nondestructive optical method as previously described in Ciaccheri et al., 2019 [65]. FW: fresh weight.
Effects of heat treatment on tomato products.
| Processing | Heat Treatment | Effect | Texture | Taste | Lycopene | Color |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chopping raw | Mild < 80 °C | Enzymes are released, pectin degraded and hexanal/hexanol formed | Thick before heating, then soup | Vivid Green | Unchanged | Poor, controlled by pH |
| Strong > 80 °C | Moderate green | Increased | Acceptable | |||
| Chopping raw, waiting for thickening before cooking, for example 2 h | Instantly to 100 °C, medium shortly, to thicken | Slightly thick and thickens with increased cooking time | Vivid Green | Somewhat increased | Acceptable | |
| Chopping cooked | Mild < 80 °C | Enzymes inactivated only partially | Thin | Moderate green | Unchanged | Poor, controlled by pH |
| Strong > 80 °C | Enzymes inactivated | Thick | Green aroma | Unknown | Acceptable | |
| Puree, unpeeled | 2 h 100 °C | Carotenoid content maximum after 2 h. | Unknown | A little green | Most after 2 h * | Most after 2 h |
| Puree, peeled | Carotenoid content low and stable unaffected by time | Less than unpeeled | Less than unpeeled |
* Carotenoid associated protein structures are broken down so that lycopene is released and isomerization occurs so that the bioavailability increases.
Lycopene content in tomato products (converted to mg/100 g FW). Literature review. Values in italics are obtained by spectrophotometry, otherwise HPLC.
| Product | Total Lycopene | Comment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pulp | 10.6–18.7 | Commercial products, Salerno, Italy | [ |
| Purée | 12.7–19.6 | ||
| Paste | 57.87 | Commercial products, California, USA | [ |
| Purée | 23.46 | ||
| Juice | 10.33 | ||
| Ketchup | 12.26–14.69 | ||
| Juice, heat concentrated | 2.34 | Experimentally processed from Crimson-type tomatoes purchased from local markets, Ohio, USA | [ |
| Paste, heat concentrated | 9.93 | ||
| Soup, retorted | 10.72 | ||
| Sauce, retorted | 10.22 | ||
| Juice | 7.83 | Experimentally processed from tomatoes purchased from local markets and heat treated according to standardized industrial food processing requirements | [ |
| Soup, condensed | 7.99 | ||
| Canned whole tomato | 11.21 | ||
| Canned pizza sauce | 12.71 | ||
| Paste | 30.07 | ||
| Powder, spray dried | 126.49 | ||
| Powder, sun dried | 112.63 | ||
| Sun dried in oil | 46.50 | ||
| Ketchup | 13.44 | ||
| Tangerine tomato sauce | 4.86 | Experimentally processed from tomatoes grown at the Ohio State University, USA | [ |
| Tangerine tomato juice | 2.19 | ||
| Red tomato juice | 7.63 | ||
| Regular salad tomatoes, Gran Canaria, Spain | 1.15 | Fresh | [ |
| 1.09 | Boiled 10 min | ||
| 0.99–1.18 | LTLT, 60 °C 40 min | ||
| 1.07–1.23 | HTST, 90 °C 4 min | ||
| Bella Donna on the vine, Netherlands | 3.80 | Fresh | |
| 3.06 | Boiled 20 min | ||
| 3.91–4.31 | LTLT, 60 °C 40 min | ||
| 3.43–4.15 | HTST, 90 °C 10 min | ||
| Daniella, Spain | 2.37 | Fresh purée | [ |
| Daniella, Spain | 0.99 | Fresh | [ |
| 1.48 | HP (400 MPa, 25 °C, 15 min) | ||
| 0.86 | Pasteurization (70 °C, 30 s) | ||
| 0.95 | Pasteurization (90 °C, 60 s) | ||
| Torrito, Spain | 39.67 | Fresh | This study |
| 26.39 | HTST (90 °C, 15 min) | ||
| 23.77 | HP (400 MPa, 90 °C, 15 min) | ||
| Torrito, the Netherlands | 11.44 | Fresh | |
| 7.57 | HTST (90 °C, 15 min) | ||
| 10.10 | HP (400 MPa, 90 °C, 15 min) | ||
| 10.00 | HP (400 MPa, 20 °C, 15 min) | ||
| 5.41 | HP (600 MPa, 90 °C, 15 min) | ||
| 4.08 | HP(600 MPa, 20 °C, 15 min) | ||
| Heinz purée, USA | 6.62 | Puré, fresh | [ |
| 6.61 | Boiled 5 min | ||
| 6.57 | Boiled 10 min | ||
| 6.48 | Boiled 30 min | ||
| 6.39 | Boiled 60 min | ||
| Double concentrated commercial canned tomato purée, Netherlands |
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| Autoclaved 100 °C, 60 min | ||
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| Autoclaved 100 °C, 120 min | ||
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| Autoclaved 120 °C, 20 min | ||
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| Autoclaved 120 °C, 60 min | ||
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| Autoclaved 120 °C, 120 min | ||
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| Autoclaved 135 °C, 20 min | ||
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| Experimental purée | 3.79 | Unheated | [ |
| 5.93 | Steam retorted, 90 °C, 110 min | ||
| 5.20 | Steam retorted, 100 °C, 11 min | ||
| 4.74 | Steam retorted, 110 °C, 1.1 min | ||
| 3.37 | Steam retorted, 120 °C, 0.11 min | ||
| FG99-218, USA | 16.04 | Juice, fresh | [ |
| 16.05 | Juice, hot break | ||
| 17.95 | Juice, HP (700 Mpa/45 °C/10 min) | ||
| 17.12 | Juice, HP (600 Mpa/100 °C/10 min) | ||
| 15.50 | Juice, TP (100 °C/35 min) | ||
| OX325, USA | 9.84 | Juice, fresh | |
| 10.22 | Juice, hot break | ||
| 10.88 | Juice, HP (700 Mpa/45 °C/10 min) | ||
| 10.29 | Juice, HP (600 Mpa/100 °C/10 min) | ||
| 8.49 | Juice, TP (100 °C/35 min) |
LTLT: Low Temperature, Long Time; HTST: High Temperature, Short Time; HP: High Pressure processing.
Lycopene content (mg/100 g FW) in tomato and tomato products including the fractions of trans- and cis-isomers.
| Produkt | Total Lycopene | All | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conesa tomato paste, Spain, 0.16% fat | 32.1 | 29.2 (91.0) | 2.9 (9.0) | This study |
| Conesa tomato paste Spain, 0.16% fat | 26.6 | 23.6 (88.7) | 3.0 (11.3) | |
| Conesa tomato paste Spain, 0.16% fat | 22.8 | 19.9 (87.3) | 2.9 (12.7) | |
| Conesa tomato paste Spain, 0.16% fat | 22.9 | 20.1 (87.8) | 2.8 (12.2) | |
| Conesa tomato fine chopped, Spain, 0.04% fat | 6.5 | 5.9 (90.8) | 0.6 (9.2) | |
| Heinz ketchup 0.1% fat | 11.0 | 9.4 (85.5) | 1.6 (14.5) | |
| Eldorado tomato puree, Italy, 1% fat | 32.1 | 29.4 (91.6) | 2.7 (8.4) | |
| Cherry tomatoes | 10.14 | 8.91 (87.9) | 1.23 (12.1) | [ |
| On-the-vine tomatoes | 5.98 | 5.00 (83.6) | 0.98 (16.4) | |
| Roma tomatoes | 8.98 | 7.88 (87.7) | 1.10 (12.3) | |
| Tomato paste | 57.87 | 45.94 (79.4) | 11.93 (20.6) | |
| Tomato purée | 23.46 | 17.85 (76.1) | 5.61 (23.9) | |
| Tomato juice | 10.33 | 8.47 (82.0) | 1.86 (18.0) | |
| Tomato ketchup | 12.26–14.69 | 9.40–9.47 (64.4–76.7) | 2.86–5.22(23.3–35.6) |
Figure 2Example of ethylene treatment. Examples of Calista (a) and Volna (c) varieties that were not ripe at the time of harvesting and the respective varieties after six days of storage under ethylene atmosphere (b,d). Adapted from Grzegorzewska et al., 2017 [89], with permission.
Figure 3Lycopene increase (%) in pink harvested processing tomatoes, cv. Calista, during storage in the dark at 3 different temperatures (12, 20, and 25 °C) and 80% relative humidity. The initial level of lycopene was about 6.5 mg/100g fresh weight (FW). Rearranged from data previously published in Sikorska-Zimny et al., 2019 [66], with permission.
Proposed utilization of tomato side streams and by-products from food processing.
| Product | Active Ingredients | Fraction | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Color pigments, | Lycopene | Skin, pomace, whole fruit | [ |
| Tomato seed oil | Unsaturated fatty acids (linoleic acid) | Seeds | [ |
| Thickening agent | Pectin | Dried Pomace | [ |
| Comminuted and vegetarian sausages | Dried and bleached tomato pomace | Dried Pomace | [ |
| Tomato seed meals | Protein, polyphenols, etc. | Seeds, pomace | [ |
| Nutrient supplements | Vitamin B12 | Pomace | [ |
| Cosmetics | Phenolic compounds, antioxidants, lactic acid, etc. | Whole plant | [ |
| Compost, growth substrates, fertilizer | Phytochemicals | Whole plant | [ |