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Introduction to Natural Colors

Beet Juice Extract

Beets (Beta vulgaris ruba) have been cultivated as a table vegetable in all temperate climes for many thousands of years. Who has not experienced the deep red-purple color of the broth after boiling beets? In traditional processing, the beets are prepared by blanching, cutting, hydraulic pressing of the root and vacuum concentrating the filtered expressed liquid to 60-65% total solids. The juice can be spray-dried to a free-flowing pink-red powder with maltodextrin added as a carrier to obviate the stickiness one usually gets with high sucrose containing liquids. The pigments extracted are made up of yellow fractions and a red fraction chemically called betanin, representing 75-95% of the total color present.

Beet juice extract is readily soluble in water providing an intense color. In solution, the hue is pH dependent. At pH 4 to 5, it is a bright bluish-red and probably the closest match to FD&C Red No. 2. At higher pH, the hue becomes blue-violet, while on the alkaline side betanin breaks down to a yellow-brown. Beet juice extract functions best between pH 4 and 7. It is sold on the basis of betanin content, which can vary from 0.3 to 1% for the liquid, and about half as much for the powder.

Beet juice extract is sensitive to heat processing. The loss of color varies by temperature, heat duration, pH and water activity of the product to be colored. The color may survive HTST provided the cool-down time is fast. Betanin reportedly survives pasteurization temperatures (but not retorting) when used in a high sugar-containing product. Some color regeneration has been reported following heating, so it is important that the final product be allowed some rest time before measurement is taken of the final color. Betanin is also susceptible to oxidation, color loss being most noticeable with products having high water activity or containing cations (i.e., iron and copper). Use of ascorbic acid and/or sequestrants may slow down the oxidation reaction. Betanin solution is degraded by light. The spray-dried form, however, is very stable even in the presence of oxygen.

Products successfully colored with beet juice would be ones with short shelf-life requirements (such as ice cream, cake icings, mixes, yogurt); sold in a dry state (such as gelatin desserts, fruit chews, gravies, and sauces); packaged to reduce light exposure, oxygen and humidity (such as foil pouched soups, powdered health beverages), and do not require prolonged heating such as frozen products, chewable tablets and pharmaceutical elixirs.

Molecular Structure

(A) Betanidin

(B) Isobetanidin

(C) 2-Decarboxybetanidin

(D) Indicaxanthin



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