Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5768404 LWT - Food Science and Technology 2017 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Two long-storage tomatoes were assessed for nutritional and technological traits.•TSS >8°Brix and reducing sugars >53 g/kg reveal a great tastiness of these fruits.•Polyphenols ≥0.12 mg/g and vitamin C ≥ 0.59 mg/g indicate great nutritional value.•Low PME and PG in 'Pizzottello di Montallegro' prove a great resistance to softening.•Low PPO in 'Locale di Filicudi' reveals great aptitude to nutritional value retention.

Long storage tomato is a crop traditionally cultivated under no irrigation in Southern Italy. Recently, great interest has been directing towards this crop, as a source of novel products for industrial purposes. A research has been conducted to assess some nutritional and technological traits which affect the fruit suitability to processing, in two Sicilian landraces ('Pizzottello di Montallegro' and 'Locale di Filicudi') of long storage tomato, compared to the Hy. 'Brigade' of processing tomato (Dry and Irrigated). High total solids (>103 g/kg), total soluble solids (>8°Brix) and reducing sugars (>53 g/kg), mostly greater than those of the control, reveal the tastiness of long-storage tomatoes. These were slightly poorer in lycopene than the control (both dry and irrigated) but richer in polyphenols (≥0.12 mg/g) and vitamin C (≥0.59 mg/g), as also revealed by the antioxidant activity (DPPH>80%). Degradative enzymatic activities (pectin methyl esterase and polygalacturonase) were the lowest in 'Pizzottello di Montallegro', proving a fruit susceptibility to softening even lower than control. In turn, low polyphenol oxidase activity in 'Locale di Filicudi' indicates a great aptitude of fruits to retain the nutritional value.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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