Short answer: active bubbles right after opening canned tomatoes are a red flag—assume spoilage and don’t eat them.
Here’s the full, detailed explanation 👇
What does bubbling in canned tomatoes mean?
When you open a can and bubbles immediately rise without stirring, that usually means gas built up inside the can. In canned foods, that gas is most often produced by microbial activity.
Two possibilities people think of:
- Fermentation
- Spoilage (dangerous)
In commercially canned tomatoes, fermentation = spoilage. There’s no safe, intentional fermentation happening inside a sealed can.
Why this happens (the science, but readable)
Commercial canning uses heat to kill microbes and create a vacuum seal. If everything works properly:
- No microorganisms survive
- No gas is produced
- No bubbling occurs
If you see bubbling, one of these likely happened:
- The can wasn’t heated enough during processing
- The seal failed (even microscopically)
- The can was damaged or stored improperly
Microbes (yeast or bacteria) then:
- Consume sugars in the tomatoes
- Produce carbon dioxide gas
- Increase pressure inside the can
That gas escapes as bubbles when opened.
Is it “just” fermentation?
No—and this part is important.
While fermentation in other foods can be safe when controlled, fermentation inside a can is uncontrolled and unsafe. You don’t know:
- What organism caused it
- What toxins may be present
Some dangerous bacteria (like Clostridium botulinum) do not always cause obvious spoilage, but gas production is still a serious warning sign.
What if it smells or looks okay?
Still don’t eat it.
For canned foods, any one of the following means discard immediately:
- Bubbling or fizzing
- Hissing sound on opening
- Bulging lid or bottom
- Spurting liquid
- Off smell (even mild)
Taste-testing is never safe with suspected canned-food spoilage.
What you should do now
- ❌ Do not taste
- ❌ Do not cook to “fix” it
- ✅ Wrap the can and contents in a plastic bag
- ✅ Dispose of it in the trash (not compost)
- ✅ Wash hands and any surfaces the liquid touched
If the can came from a recent purchase, you can usually:
- Return it to the store
- Or contact the manufacturer (they often want the lot number)
One exception people ask about
Tiny bubbles that appear only after stirring can sometimes be trapped air, especially in thick tomato products.
But bubbles rising immediately on opening without agitation = unsafe.
Bottom line
If canned tomatoes bubble on opening, that’s spoilage, not safe fermentation. When it comes to canned food, when in doubt, throw it out.
If you want, tell me:
- Was the can bulging at all?
- Glass jar or metal can?
- Any unusual smell?
I can help you judge the risk level more precisely.