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If cooking doesn't kill all the nutrients in tomatoes, why are none in sauce labels, even the nice ones made direct by an organic farm?

Seasoned Advice Asked on July 31, 2021

I’ve had this question in my head since forever, it’s kind of a food sciencey question. I understand that cooking changes the properties of food including their nutritional value, sometimes positively, sometimes negatively. It appears per this link (https://healthyeating.sfgate.com/health-benefits-eating-cooked-tomato-products-4444.html) that cooking does not affect Vitamin C and lycopene (but it does affect Vitamin A).

But every time I go to buy a tomato sauce (see important note below***), the nutritional label shows literally no vitamins, why? Is it a labeling problem? Like lycopene doesn’t show up on labels. Maybe Vitamin C becomes some new form that’s not label-able?? Or is it that cooking doesn’t kill vitamins but the high pressure canning process does? (implying that if I make homemade tomato sauce, I won’t have this problem)

My motivation for this is that I like healthy eating and am just trying to understand how to healthily consume tomatoes.

***A note on the tomato sauce I’m talking about

I’m talking specifically about the kinds of tomato sauce that vendors at farmer’s markets make using their own products. I can’t speak for all farms, but having worked at one that did sell our products, I know exactly how this gets made. We harvest tomatoes, we cook & process everything in our own kitchen, we hire a contracted nutritionist to analyze the product & write the label, then we print the label and off it goes. Like, the process is basically exactly like a home cook’s. It’s not over-processed, over-salted like some industrial makers’ products would be. I imagine this process is similar for some other local, premium organic brands that you find at small grocers (except they don’t grow their own tomatoes). So given this is so similar to a home cook’s process, why are there no nutritional points?
I know what you’re thinking… yes I am an idiot that I didn’t think to ask our nutritionist this question. But I didn’t and now I don’t have a person to talk to.

2 Answers

I would swear that there was already an answer about this on SA, but I can't find it.

Pressure canning destroys a lot of the vitamin C value of tomatoes:

The heating process during canning destroys from one-third to one-half of vitamins A and C, thiamin, and riboflavin. Once canned, additional losses of these sensitive vitamins are from 5 to 20 percent each year.

(there are other papers with more scientific information, but they're all behind paywalls)

This means that the finished jarred tomatoes in a year-old jar might have only 30% of the original vitamin C content -- and that will vary according to a lot of circumstances that are hard to predict. So, unless you test ascorbic acid content of the finished product over a lot of batches, you really don't know how much C you have, on average.

While the US FDA does want you to list C content on the label, you are unlikely to be punished for under-reporting the amount of C ... whereas overreporting is a lot more likely to get you an unwelcome phone call. So many canners simply leave it out.

For that matter, many commercial canneries report zero vitamin C as well. I have several cans of Muir Glen tomatoes in my pantry, and none of them report C content.

Correct answer by FuzzyChef on July 31, 2021

Most of the fruits and vegetables can lose up to 50% of their vitamin C within a week after their harvest, with a sad record for spinach which lose about 90% of its vitamin C within 24h. If you add to this the impact of the storage time and this type of cooking method, then it is not surprising that the amount of vitamin C in your sauce is so close to 0 that the producer would rather just leave it out. I think I found the related question with its interesting answer, but I don't know how to link it: What is the rate of loss of vitamin C in fresh vegetables?

Answered by Sarah BDnO on July 31, 2021

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