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Effect of Cold- and Hot-Break Heat Treatments on the Physicochemical Characteristics of Currant Tomato ( Solanum pimpinellifolium ) Pulp and Paste.

Kandi SridharHilal A MakrooBrijesh Srivastava
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Currant tomato ( Solanum pimpinellifolium ), an underutilized wild species of modern tomato, was investigated to determine the physicochemical properties and understand the effect of cold- and hot-break heat treatments on physicochemical characteristics. Moreover, a new Arrhenius-type equation was used to model the temperature-dependent viscosity of currant tomato pulp and paste. The currant tomato's porosity, surface area, and lycopene content were 40.96 ± 0.84%, 663.86 ± 65.09 mm 2 , and 9.79 ± 1.88 mg/100 g, respectively. Cold- and hot-break heat treatments had a significant ( p < 0.05) effect on tomato pulp and paste color change (0.09 to 0.26; 0.19 to 1.96), viscosity (0.06 to 0.02 Pa.s; 0.85 to 0.37 Pa.s), and lycopene content (9.70 to 9.07 mg/100 g; 9.60 to 9.37 mg/100 g), respectively. An Arrhenius-type equation described the temperature-dependent viscosity of currant tomato pulp and paste with activation energy (E a ) ranging from 7.54 to 11.72 kJ/mol and 8.62 to 8.97 kJ/mol, respectively. Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed a total of variance 99.93% in tomato pulp and paste as affected by the cold- and hot-break heat treatments. Overall, the findings may provide knowledge for design graders and process optimization to develop currant tomato-based products.
Keyphrases
  • heat stress
  • healthcare
  • simultaneous determination
  • liquid chromatography