Ketchup thickens naturally from tomatoes' pectin
Ketchup's iconic thickness comes from pectin, a natural fiber in tomatoes, transforming juicy fruit into a clingy sauce without artificial additives, a clever trick of plant biochemistry.
Ketchup's signature thick texture comes from pectin, a natural fiber in tomatoes. When tomatoes are cooked for ketchup, heat releases this pectin, which then forms a gel-like network with sugars and acids. This clever plant biochemistry creates that perfect pourable-yet-sticky consistency without needing artificial thickeners, a process refined over centuries.
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