Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7587162 | Food Chemistry | 2016 | 32 Pages |
Abstract
The most important and negative effect of the global warming for winemakers in warm and sunny regions is the observed lag between industrial and phenolic grape ripeness, so only it is possible to obtain an acceptable colour when the ethanol content of wine is high. By contrast, the actual market trends are to low ethanol content wines. Flor yeast growing a short time under velum conditions, decreases the ethanol and volatile acidity contents, has a favorable effect on the colour and astringency and significantly changes the wine content in 1-propanol, isobutanol, acetaldehyde, 1,1-diethoxiethane and ethyl lactate. The Principal Component Analysis of six enological parameters or five aroma compounds allows to classify the wines subjected to different velum formation conditions. The obtained results in two tasting sessions suggest that the flor yeast helps to modulate the ethanol, astringency and colour and supports a new biotechnological perspective for red winemakers.
Keywords
Diethyl succinate (PubChem CID: 31249)Ethyl lactate (PubChem CID: 7344)Acetoin (PubChem CID: 179)2,3-Butanediol (PubChem CID: 262)Isobutanol (PubChem CID: 6560)1-Propanol (PubChem CID: 1031)EthanolEthanol (PubChem CID: 702)Ethyl acetate (PubChem CID: 8857)acetaldehyde (Pubchem CID: 177)Acetic acid (PubChem CID: 176)Aroma compoundsColourSaccharomyces cerevisiaeRed wineMethanol (PubChem CID: 887)Flor yeastGlycerol (PubChem CID: 753)
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Juan Moreno, Jaime Moreno-GarcÃa, Beatriz López-Muñoz, Juan Carlos Mauricio, Teresa GarcÃa-MartÃnez,