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Scientific News Health care Preventive maintenance of diseases ITALIAN CHEFS KNEW IT ALL ALONG: COOKING PLUMP RED TOMATOES BOOSTS DISEASE-FIGHTING, NUTRITIONAL POWER, CORNELL RESEARCHERS SAY
ITALIAN CHEFS KNEW
IT ALL ALONG: COOKING PLUMP RED TOMATOES BOOSTS DISEASE-FIGHTING, NUTRITIONAL
POWER, CORNELL RESEARCHERS SAY
Cooking tomatoes -- such as in spaghetti sauce --
makes the fruit heart-healthier and boosts its cancer-fighting ability. All this,
despite a loss of vitamin C during the cooking process, say Cornell food
scientists. The reason: cooking substantially raises the levels of beneficial
compounds called phytochemicals.
Writing in the latest issue of the Journal of
Agriculture and Food Chemistry (April 17), Rui Hai Liu, M.D., Cornell
assistant professor of food science, notes, "This research demonstrates
that heat processing actually enhanced the nutritional value of tomatoes by
increasing the lycopene content -- a phytochemical that makes tomatoes red --
that can be absorbed by the body, as well as the total antioxidant activity. The
research dispels the popular notion that processed fruits and vegetables have
lower nutritional value than fresh produce."
Tomato samples were heated to 88 degrees Celsius
(190.4 degrees Fahrenheit) for two minutes, a quarter-hour and a half-hour.
Consistent with previous studies, vitamin C content decreased by 10, 15 and 29
percent, respectively, when compared to raw, uncooked tomatoes. However, the
research revealed that the beneficial trans-lycopene content of the cooked
tomatoes increased by 54, 171 and 164 percent, respectively. Levels of cis
-lycopene (which the body easily absorbs) rose by 6, 17 and 35 percent,
respectively; and antioxidant levels in the heated tomatoes increased by 28, 34
and 62 percent, respectively. Antioxidants protect the human body from cell and
tissue damage, which occurs when harmful molecules called free radicals,
released as oxygen, are metabolized by the body.
Lycopene, a carotenoid responsible for the red
color in tomatoes and other fruits, has long been known as a powerful
antioxidant that decreases cancer and heart-disease risk. Carotenoids, along
with phenolic acids and flavonoids, are all phytochemicals, the nutritionally
beneficial active compounds found in every fruit and vegetable.
While the antioxidant activity in tomatoes is
enhanced during the cooking process, vitamin C loss occurs when the food's
ascorbic acid is oxidized to dehydroascorbic acid and other forms of
nutritionally inactive components.Lycopene is the most-efficient single oxygen
quencher, and devours more than 10 times more oxygenated free radicals than
vitamin E. "This makes lycopene's presence in the diet important,"
says Liu.
"While these findings go against the notion
that processed fruits and vegetables have lower nutritional value, this may
create a new image for processed fruits and vegetables," says Liu. "Ultimately,
this could increase consumers' intake of fruits and vegetables and could
possibly reduce a person's risk of chronic disease."
Liu's coauthors on the research paper, "Thermal
Processing Enhances the Nutritional Value of Tomatoes by Increasing Total
Antioxidant Activity," are Cornell graduate students Veronica Dewanto and
Kafui K. Adom, and a visiting fellow in Liu's laboratory, Xianzhong Wu. The
research was funded with Hatch funds from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service.
Contact: Blaine P. Friedlander Jr.
Office: 607-255-3290
E-Mail: bpf2@cornell.edu
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Cornell
University
Publishing date: April 30, 2002
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