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Posted by on Apr 20, 2016 in TellMeWhy |

How Do Green Tomatoes on the Vine Turn Red When Ripe?

How Do Green Tomatoes on the Vine Turn Red When Ripe?

How Do Green Tomatoes on the Vine Turn Red When Ripe? When tomatoes are growing on the vine, they’re not bright red like they are when they’re ripe and ready to eat. Instead, they’re green. Two of the pigments they use for photosynthesis are responsible for the color-changing transformation: chlorophyll and lycopene. Chlorophyll is green, and lycopene is red.

When tomatoes first begin to grow, they contain mainly chlorophyll. This gives them their green color you see when they’re on the vine. As they mature, however, a change begins to take place.

As harvest time approaches, days get shorter and temperatures fall. When this happens, chlorophyll starts to dissolve and lycopene takes over. You can watch this process unfold from the outside, as the lycopene’s red coloring slowly turns tomatoes from green to red.

Tomatoes must be at the mature green stage for this transformation to begin. At that point, tomatoes start to produce an odorless, tasteless, and invisible chemical gas called ethylene. Ethylene gas triggers the ripening process in tomatoes and other fruits.

For example, it is the reason bananas bruise. In addition to turning red, tomatoes also get softer as their sugar levels rise and their acid levels fall, making them ready to eat.

While it may take months for tomatoes to grow, the ripening process occurs quickly during a fairly-short period of time. That’s why most farmers harvest tomatoes when they’re still green on the vine. As they’re sent to market, they’re treated with ethylene gas to jump-start the ripening process, so that they arrive at stores ripe and ready to eat.

Not all tomatoes will turn red at the same rate. Scientists have learned that smaller varieties of tomatoes, such as cherry tomatoes, tend to ripen faster than larger varieties, like beefsteak tomatoes.

Temperature also plays a role in the ripening process. Lycopene will not develop easily in either very cold or very hot temperatures. For tomatoes to ripen properly, the temperature needs to stay approximately 50-85º F.

Content for this question contributed by Tryna Wilson, resident of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA