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ColorMaker LYCOPENE

ColorMaker Lycopene is found in soups, sauces, and dressings. Like all carotenoids, it is generally unstable in very low pH (highly acidic) beverages. It can be found in more soft candies than hard candies, because the high heat of hard candy manufacture tends to degrade lycopene color value. Lycopene is somewhat limited in bakery applications (cake and cookie decorating, for example), because it develops an orange-red color, not the “pink” color or “ruby red” color desired by many bakers.

Ingredient Name: Lycopene

Functions: Food Coloring

Pigment Type: Organic Pigments

Enhanced TDS

Enhanced TDS

Knowde-enriched technical product data sheet

Identification & Functionality

Ingredient Name
Ingredient Origin
Pigment Type
Food Ingredients Functions
Ingredients
Tomato Extract

Features & Benefits

Applications & Uses

Applications

In both the US and the EU, lycopene may be used in foods generally.  Lycopene may be found in soups, sauces, and dressings.  Like all carotenoids, it is generally unstable in very low pH (highly acidic) beverages.  It can be found in more soft candies than hard candies, because the high heat of hard candy manufacture tends to degrade lycopene color value. Lycopene is somewhat limited in bakery applications (cake and cookie decorating, for example), because it develops an orange-red color, not the “pink” color or “ruby red” color desired by many bakers.

Properties

Color

Technical Details & Test Data

Preparation

Lycopene is easily extracted from tomatoes using a combination of alkali saponification and solvent extraction.  Tomatoes are harvested, diced, and submerged in oil, where lycopene is naturally oil soluble.  A strong alkali is added to saponify the lycopene and render it water dispersible.  Ethyl acetate is typically used to isolate and concentrate the water dispersible lycopene.  Ethyl acetate is washed away, to be reused later, leaving behind a pure extract of lycopene plus the other carotenoids inside the tomato.  As a result of the tomato’s unique blend of carotenoids, some lycopene extracts are more orange, while others are more red.  The redder the lycopene extract, the more valuable it is to the food industry.