1Department of Food Science and Technology, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana
2Department of Food and Post-Harvest Technology, Koforidua Technical University, Koforidua, Ghana
3Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana
Most Ghanaians preferably consume spoiled tomatoes due to their inexpensiveness, however, the nutritional content and health implications associated with tomato spoilage remain unknown. This study compared the nutritional and phytochemical composition, and the microbial safety of fresh and spoiled tomatoes from the Ghanaian market using standard analytical protocols. The study results revealed considerably higher levels of crude fibre (3.54%), potassium (140.80 mg/100g), and folic acid (0.07 mg/100 g) in spoiled tomatoes when compared with fresh tomato samples which recorded corresponding amounts as 0.81%, 88.88 mg/100 g and 0.04 mg/100 g, except for moisture and Vitamin C which were otherwise. Also, phytochemicals including lycopene, beta-carotene and chlorogenic acid were 58.33, 57.05 and 1.17 mg/100 g, respectively higher in spoiled tomatoes than the fresh samples. Nonetheless, microbial loads in spoiled tomatoes were very high with Total Viable Count (TVC) ranging from 3.31 to 5.52 Log10 CFU/mL and similarly unacceptable values for Total Coliform Count (TCC) and
Microbial load, Nutritional content, Phytochemicals, Tomato