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- Title
Bottle Aging Affected Aromatic and Phenolic Wine Composition More than Yeast Starter Strains.
- Authors
Garde-Cerdán, Teresa; Sáenz de Urturi, Itziar; Murillo-Peña, Rebeca; Iribarren, Miquel; Marín-San Román, Sandra; Rubio-Bretón, Pilar; Pérez-Álvarez, Eva P.
- Abstract
Volatile and phenolic compounds play a key role in the sensory properties of wine, especially aroma and color. During fermentation, yeasts produce enzymes that affect the skin's phenolic compounds extraction and synthesize some of the most important wine volatile compounds. Generally, selected yeasts of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc) strains are inoculated, which are responsible for carrying out the wine fermentation, enhancing and highlighting its sensory characteristics and contributing to help achieve the wine typicity, according to the winemaker's criteria. After fermentation, all wines require aging in a bottle to modulate their composition and stability over time. Thus, four different Sc strains (Sc1–Sc4) were inoculated into tanks with Tempranillo grapes to carry out, in duplicate, their fermentation and subsequent aging in bottles (9 months), comparing the aromatic and phenolic composition between them. Results showed differences in the fermentation process (kinetic, ethanol yield), CI, TPI and content of alcohols, esters, anthocyanins, flavonols and flavanols in wines from the different Sc strains studied. Moreover, in the content in wines of most groups of aromas and phenols, except for total acetate esters and flavonols, aging in a bottle had more influence than the yeast strain used for fermentation.
- Subjects
WINE aging; PHENOLS; FOOD aroma; YEAST; BOTTLING; FLAVONOLS; SACCHAROMYCES cerevisiae; SPARKLING wines
- Publication
Applied Sciences (2076-3417), 2022, Vol 12, Issue 9, pN.PAG
- ISSN
2076-3417
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/app12094478