Scientists Work on the 'Essence' of Better-Tasting Tomato Juice

Essence, usually extracted from a plant to add flavor or provide a scent, according to a new UF/IFAS study, can be used to improve juice flavor

Written byUniversity of Florida
| 2 min read
Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
2:00

tomato juice

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — If you’re yearning for a better-tasting tomato juice, University of Florida scientists are in their labs, working on satisfying your palate.

Essence, usually extracted from a plant to add flavor or provide a scent, according to a new UF/IFAS study, can be used to improve juice flavor. Using volatile capture, UF/IFAS scientists obtained the essence from the tomatoes, said Paul Sarnoski, an assistant professor in the UF/IFAS food science and human nutrition department.

Lab manager academy logo

Lab Safety Management Certificate

The Lab Safety Management certificate is more than training—it’s a professional advantage.

Gain critical skills and IACET-approved CEUs that make a measurable difference.

Juices often need to be pasteurized before they are consumed, Sarnoski said. During that process, the volatiles that give a juice flavor are lost because of the thermal processing required for pasteurization. That is part of the reason tomato juice does not quite taste like a fresh tomato.

“Many individuals complain that tomato juice doesn’t resemble typical, fresh, tomato flavor,” Sarnoski said. “Perhaps, by adding an essence, we could make the juice more closely resemble fresh tomato flavor.”

Related Article: Creating Tomatoes That Last Longer and Still Taste Good

The citrus industry already uses this technique, but the tomato industry does not use “tomato essence” to produce tomato juice, said Sarnoski, lead author of the new study.

In the study, researchers used Garden Gem tomatoes—a UF/IFAS-bred variety—as the premium flavor tomato. They used Roma tomato as the control flavor. They wanted to test whether Garden Gem retained more of its flavor after pasteurization. The Garden Gem did, and was found as a suitable variety for essence production because of a high content of flavor volatiles, thus leading scientists to believe this system will provide better flavor when they test it on consumers.

Interested in chemistry and materials science?

Subscribe to our free Chemistry & Materials Science Newsletter.

Is the form not loading? If you use an ad blocker or browser privacy features, try turning them off and refresh the page.

By subscribing, you agree to receive email related to Lab Manager content and products. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Fruit juices, including tomato juice, are big business in the U.S. In fact, juices may be the driving force behind rising beverage sales in the United States, Sarnoski said. Beverage sales are expected to continue to increase from $131 billion in 2013 to an estimated $164 billion by 2018, according to 2015 statistics from the Beverage Marketing Corporation. Tomato-related processed products saw a 14 percent increase in sales in 2015 alone.

The study is published in the journal Food Chemistry.

Loading Next Article...
Loading Next Article...

CURRENT ISSUE - May/June 2025

The Benefits, Business Case, And Planning Strategies Behind Lab Digitalization

Joining Processes And Software For a Streamlined, Quality-First Laboratory

Lab Manager May/June 2025 Cover Image