How Is Tomato Paste Made In A Factory

tomato paste factory

Industrial tomato paste manufacturing transforms perishable, high-moisture tomatoes into a shelf-stable, intensely flavored concentrate through precisely engineered processes. The tomato paste production line integrates specialized machinery that addresses the fruit’s biochemical properties—high enzymatic sensitivity, pectin vulnerability, and low initial solids (4.0–5.5°Brix)—to achieve concentrations of 28–38°Brix while preserving color, viscosity, and nutrition. Here’s how factories accomplish this at scale.

Stage 1: Raw Material Handling – Selecting Tomatoes for Optimal Solids & Viscosity
Tomatoes must meet strict criteria: ≥90% maturity, deep red color, and solids content >4.0°Brix to ensure efficient concentration and end-product texture. The line begins with:

Hydraulic flume transport: Uses water currents to move tomatoes gently, minimizing bruising.

Roller-conveyor cleaning: Removes 95%+ of soil/sand via high-pressure sprays and bubbling soak tanks.

Sorting: reject green, rotten, or defective fruits to prevent enzymatic degradation.

Why it matters: Underripe tomatoes reduce lycopene content and increase acidity, compromising paste quality.

Stage 2: Pre-Treatment – Enzymatic Deactivation & Pectin Preservation
Tomatoes’ pectin-destroying enzymes (polygalacturonase) activate within minutes of crushing. To halt this:

Crushing & de-seeding: High-speed blades pulp tomatoes while centrifugal separators remove seeds (which impart bitterness if broken).

Flash heating (85–90°C): Inactivates enzymes within 2–4 seconds via tubular heat exchangers, preserving pectin for ideal viscosity.

Critical control point: Temperatures >95°C degrade fructose, causing caramelization and browning.

Stage 3: Pulping & Concentration – Maximizing Yield & Color Retention
Double-pass refining extracts maximum pulp:

Coarse pulping (1.5–2.0mm screens): Removes skin and residual seeds.

Fine pulping (0.6–0.8mm screens + variable-frequency drives): Achieves smooth texture without fiber fragments.

Vacuum concentration then reduces water content:

Forced-circulation evaporators: Operate at ≤70°C under -0.08MPa vacuum to prevent thermal damage to lycopene and vitamins.

Brix monitoring: In-line refractometers automate density control (e.g., 28–30°Brix for retail paste; 36–38°Brix for bulk export).

Efficiency tech: Secondary steam recovery cuts energy use by 30% vs. open-vat boiling.

Stage 4: Sterilization & Aseptic Packaging – Ensuring Safety & Shelf Life
High-temperature-short-time (HTST) sterilization is critical:

Tubular or plate heat exchangers: Heat paste to 100–121°C for 20–30 seconds, killing microbes while minimizing nutrient loss.

Packaging flexibility caters to diverse markets:

Bulk: 220L aseptic bags-in-drums for food processors (common in industrial lines).

Retail: Glass jars, PET bottles, or sachets (70g–500g) filled on servo-driven machines at 50–200 packs/minute.

Key innovation: Four-layer co-current sterilizers prevent fouling—a major cause of downtime in older systems.

Production Line Variations: Tailoring for Scale & Product Type

Line TypeFresh Tomato CapacityKey EquipmentBest For
Small-scale25–500 kg/hourSemi-auto fillers, single-effect evaporatorsStartups, regional brands
Mid-scale1–10 tons/hourAutomated PLC controls, dual-effect evaporatorsRetail suppliers
Industrial150–1500 tons/dayCIP systems, triple-effect evaporators, robotic palletizersExport-focused factories

Note: Hybrid lines can also process onion, pepper, or fruit pastes by swapping pulping screens.

Why Tomato’s Biochemistry Dictates Factory Design
Pectin sensitivity → Requires ultra-fast enzyme deactivation.

High water content (94–95%) → Demands multi-stage vacuum concentration for efficiency.

Thermolabile nutrients → Necessitates low-temp sterilization (<125°C).

Viscosity variability → Adjustable pulping/refining avoids texture defects.

Conclusion

Industrial tomato paste manufacturing hinges on overcoming tomatoesunique biochemical challenges: enzymatic sensitivity, pectin vulnerability, and high water content. Success demands an integrated line with specialized equipment at every stage—from gentle handling andultra-fast enzyme deactivation (85-90°C flash heating), throughlow-temperature vacuum concentration (<70°C) preserving nutrients, toHTST sterilization (100-121°C) ensuring safety.

The right line configuration—tailored to your scale (small startup to industrial 1500 tons/day) and target Brix (28-38°)—directly impacts quality, yield, and efficiency. Modern solutions likemulti-effect evaporators (cutting energy by 30%) andfouling-resistant sterilizers are critical for profitability.

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