20 research outputs found

    Impact of Yeast Strain on Ester Levels and Fruity Aroma Persistence during Aging of Bordeaux Red Wines

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    The impact of yeast and lactic acid bacteria strains on the fruity aroma of red wines was investigated by sensory and analytical strategies. The ester composition of four different Bordeaux red wines was quantified by HS-SPME-GC/MS. These wines, made with selected yeast and bacteria strains, were investigated at the end of alcoholic fermentation and regularly until 12 months of aging, during 2011 and 2012 vintages. Sensory analyses of wines after 3 and 12 months of aging revealed significant differences with regard to yeast strains. Bacteria seemed to have only a slight impact on changes in aromatic profile. Ester levels were strongly influenced by yeast strain and very little affected by malolactic fermentation and aging. Differences and similarities between sensory data and ester profile are discussed. This study highlights the importance of yeast strains in red winemaking. Their sensory impact remains despite the other vinification steps after alcoholic fermentation

    Selective determination of volatile sulfur compounds in wine by gas chromatography with sulfur chemiluminescence detection

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    Volatile sulfur compounds can be formed at various stages during wine production and storage, and some may impart unpleasant "reduced" aromas to wine when present at sensorially significant concentrations. Quantitative data are necessary to understand factors that influence the formation of volatile sulfur compounds, but their analysis is not a trivial undertaking. A rapid and selective method for determining 10 volatile sulfur-containing aroma compounds in wine that have been linked to "off-odors" has been developed. The method utilizes static headspace injection and cool-on-column gas chromatography coupled with sulfur chemiluminescence detection (GC-SCD). Validation demonstrated that the method is accurate, precise, robust, and sensitive, with limits of quantitation around 1 microg/L or better, which is below the aroma detection thresholds for the analytes. Importantly, the method does not form artifacts, such as disulfides, during sample preparation or analysis. To study the contribution of volatile sulfur compounds, the GC-SCD method was applied to 68 commercial wines that had reductive sensory evaluations. The analytes implicated as contributors to reductive characters were hydrogen sulfide, methanethiol, and dimethyl sulfide, whereas carbon disulfide played an uncertain role.Tracey E. Siebert, Mark R. Solomon, Alan P. Pollnitz and David W. Jeffer

    Characterization and amino acid metabolism performances of indigenous Oenococcus oeni isolated from Chinese wines

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    Oenococcus oeni is a multiple physical stress-tolerant lactic acid bacterium that plays an important role in wine making. It is often added as a starter culture to carry out malolactic fermentation (MLF). In this study, a total of 22 out of 127 lactic acid bacteria, isolated from Chinese wines undergoing MLF, were identified as O. oeni by species-specific PCR and 16S rRNA sequencing. Single-enzyme amplified fragment length polymorphism (SE-AFLP) analysis showed that all strains could be typed under these conditions, and three main groups were determined by cluster analysis, which showed intraspecific homology higher than 69ïżœ %. Eight strains, representative of SE-AFLP clusters, were tested for malolactic activity. Significant differences were observed among strains with regard to the amount of malic acid consumed. Seventeen amino acids in different wines that were inoculated by 4 O. oeni strains, respectively, were analyzed before and after MLF. The results indicated that the amino acid metabolism of the 4 strains was significantly different between each strain.Gang Jin, Hua Wang, Chunhui Zhang, Cuixia Li, Liye Du, Paul R. Grbin and Hua L
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