Home Colors & Flavors Americas: USDA increases tomato lycopene limit for meat products

Americas: USDA increases tomato lycopene limit for meat products

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) approved a five-fold increase in the level of tomato lycopene allowed as a colorant in ready-to-eat (RTE) meat products.

This increase allows tomato lycopene colorants from Israeli manufacturer LycoRed to effectively replace FD&C Red #40 and carmine in a wide assortment of deli meats, sausage and hot dogs.

LycoRed’s Tomat-O-Red produces red hues similar to those from artificial and insect-based colors

Natural food-color applications for global meat product launches, as tracked by market research company Innova Market Insights, showed a 21% increase in product launch activity in 2012 over 2011, and a further 5% increase in 2013 from 2012.

“The USDA decision changes the ballgame for us,” says Roee Nir, colorant business unit manager at LycoRed.

“We now may offer RTE meat manufacturers dramatic color options that previously were only attainable with artificial or insect-derived colors.”

Both of the LycoRed clean-label colorants are acceptable for use in RTE beef, pork and poultry products, as well as RTE meats for the fast-growing kosher and halal markets.

Kosher and halal rules forbid products colored with carmine.

The heat- and light-stable colorants are based on lycopene, a carotenoid highly valued for its antioxidant health benefits.

Tomat-O-Red is sourced strictly from non-genetically modified organism tomatoes.

LycoRed oversees production from the farmer’s fields to the finished product.

This tomato supply translates into stable pricing for the processed meat manufacturer.

The company says it will be launching new, natural tomato-based ingredients for clean-label use.

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