Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 11 de 11
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Molecules ; 29(11)2024 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38893385

ABSTRACT

Cabernet Sauvignon from the California Paso Robles AVA was processed with a contrasting array of cap management frequencies, consisting of punch-down (PD) frequencies (0, 1, 2, and 3 PD/day) over two vintages, one of which the fruit was harvested at two contrasting maturity levels. Wines followed with up to 3 years of bottle aging for basic and phenolic chemistry, and the wines of the second harvest of 2020 were submitted to sensory analysis. There were almost non-existent effects due to the frequency of punch downs on parameters such as ethanol, pH, titratable acidity, lactic acid, and glucose + fructose. In 2019, the chromatic differences between different PD regimes were subtle, and minor effects of the punch-down frequency were observed for tannins and total phenolics. During the early stages of alcoholic fermentation, higher levels of all anthocyanin classes were observed in 1 PD wines and the lowest levels in 0 PD wines. The anthocyanin content of the wines of the first harvest (unripe) was 27% higher than that of the wines of the second harvest (ripe), but these differences disappeared after 3 years of bottle aging irrespective of the vintage and harvest date. Acylated anthocyanins were preferentially lost during aging, especially in 2019 wines and, to a lesser extent, in 2020 wines. In 2020, the polymeric pigment content of the wines of the second harvest was higher than in the wines of the first harvest, with 3 PD wines showing higher polymeric pigments and yellow hues than 0 and 2 PD wines after 3 years of bottle aging. Sensory analysis of the second harvest of the 2020 wines showed that the wines of all four PD regimes were perceived as drying, signifying they were perceived as equally astringent, which is consistent with comparable tannin levels on said wines. The perception of bitterness increased with the frequency of punch downs; thus, 3 PD wines showed the highest bitterness perception. It was concluded that in sufficiently warm fermentations and small volumes, phenolic extraction occurs regardless of fruit maturity and under conditions of minimum mixing.


Subject(s)
Phenols , Vitis , Wine , Wine/analysis , Phenols/analysis , Vitis/chemistry , Anthocyanins/analysis , California , Taste , Fruit/chemistry , Humans , Fermentation
2.
Molecules ; 28(10)2023 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37241971

ABSTRACT

Grenache wines from the Central Coast of California were subjected to different alcoholic fermentation temperature regimes (Cold, Cold/Hot, Hot) and cap management protocols, namely, punch down (PD), or no punch down (No PD), to determine the effect of these practices on the color, aroma, and the retronasal and mouthfeel sensory characteristics of the resulting wines. Descriptive analysis (n = 8, line scale rating 0-15) results indicated that the combination of a hot fermentation temperature and no punch downs led to a significantly higher intensity in perceived color saturation (7.89) and purple hue (8.62). A two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed that cap management was significantly more impactful on the perception of orthonasal aromas than fermentation temperature. The reduction aroma was significantly higher in No PD wines (5.02) compared to PD wines (3.50), while rose and hot aromas had significantly higher intensity perception for PD wines (5.18, 6.80) than for No PD wines (6.80, 6.14). Conversely, analysis of selected volatile compounds indicated that fermentation temperature was more impactful than cap management regime. Cold/Hot wines had higher concentrations of important esters such as ethyl hexanoate (650 µg/L) and isoamyl acetate (992 µg/L). Cold wines had a higher concentration of ß-damascenone (0.719 µg/L). TCATA evaluation (n = 8) indicated that Cold/Hot PD wines had a significantly higher citation proportion of fruit flavor (1.0) and velvet astringency perception (0.80) without significant reduction flavors. Finally, the present study represents a contribution with the main volatile compounds (e.g., ß-damascenone and esters in the Cold and Cold/Hot fermented wines, respectively; hexanol in PD wines, which may be potentially responsible for a hot mouthfeel), and sensory characteristics (red fruit, tropical fruit, white pepper, and rose) of Grenache wines grown in the Mediterranean climate of the Central Coast of California.


Subject(s)
Vitis , Volatile Organic Compounds , Wine , Wine/analysis , Fermentation , Temperature , Odorants/analysis , Volatile Organic Compounds/analysis
3.
Molecules ; 27(4)2022 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35209059

ABSTRACT

Microwave technology (MW) was applied to musts and stems over three consecutive vintages in Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Syrah wines from California (USA). Stems were added to musts at a rate of 50 and 100% (50% Stems and 100% Stems), either as untreated or after MW (50% MW Stems and 100% MW Stems). Stem additions lowered ethanol (up to 1.15% v/v reduction), but increased pH (up to 0.16 units) and the tannin content of the wines. In 2016, tannins increased by 103% (100% Stems), and 124% (100% MW Stems). In 2017, tannins increased by 39% in stem-added Merlot wines and by 63% (100% Stems) and 85% (100% MW Stems) in Syrah wines. In 2018, tannins in Syrah wines increased by 250% (100% MW Stems) and by 743% (100% Stems). Wines made with 50% Stems exhibited intermediate tannin contents. Must MW increased flavonols (up to 278% in Syrah wines), monoglucosylated, acylated and anthocyanin-derived pigments. Stem additions reduced wine color and polymeric pigment formation in Syrah. Must MW decreased the perception of coarseness and herbaceous flavors in Merlot, whereas stem additions increased herbaceous aromas in Syrah. Despite higher tannin contents in stem-added wines, no concomitant increases in astringency were observed.


Subject(s)
Chemical Phenomena , Food Analysis , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Vitis/chemistry , Wine/analysis , Analysis of Variance , Chemical Fractionation , Microwaves , Phytochemicals/analysis , Phytochemicals/chemistry , Plant Extracts/isolation & purification
4.
Heliyon ; 8(12): e12332, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36590570

ABSTRACT

The effect of MW technology (1,200 Watts for 10 min) on the chemical and sensory composition of five monovarietal wines with different phenolic composition was studied relative to untreated Control wines. MW improved polymeric pigment content by 30, 22 and 31% in Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, and Syrah wines, respectively, and anthocyanin extraction and non-tannin phenolics by 24% in Malbec and Syrah wines, respectively. In Nebbiolo and Pinot noir, MW had no effect on phenolics or chromatic characteristics. Anthocyanins in Nebbiolo wines were the lowest and their pigment profile was composed of 18% pyranoanthocyanins, but tannins were the highest, resulting in a tannin to anthocyanin ratio of 16. Pinot noir and Nebbiolo wines had comparable polymeric pigment content, despite dissimilar tannin to anthocyanin ratios, suggesting different mouthfeel characteristics in their respective wines. Conversely, wines of comparable tannin to anthocyanin produced wines of vastly different polymeric pigment content. MW-treated Cabernet Sauvignon wines showed an improved sensory profile.

5.
Plants (Basel) ; 10(2)2021 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33562830

ABSTRACT

Unlike most crop industries, there is a strongly held belief within the wine industry that increased vine age correlates with quality. Considering this perception could be explained by vine physiological differences, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of vine age on phenology and gas exchange parameters. An interplanted, dry farmed, Zinfandel vineyard block under consistent management practices in the Central Coast of California was evaluated over two consecutive growing seasons. Treatments included Young vines (5 to 12 years old), Control (representative proportion of young to old vines in the block), and Old vines (40 to 60 years old). Phenology, leaf water potential, and gas exchange parameters were tracked. Results indicated a difference in phenological progression after berry set between Young and Old vines. Young vines progressed more slowly during berry formation and more rapidly during berry ripening, resulting in Young vines being harvested before Old vines due to variation in the timing of sugar accumulation. No differences in leaf water potential were found. Young vines had higher mid-day stomatal conductance and tended to have higher mid-day photosynthetic rates. The results of this study suggest vine age is a factor in phenological timing and growing season length.

6.
Food Chem ; 340: 127573, 2021 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33032144

ABSTRACT

Cabernet Sauvignon wines were aged for 15 months in used and new French 225 L oak barrels, followed by a period of 3 months in bottle. In addition to control barrels (3 years old), three bending/toasting protocols, including fire bent and fire toasted (fire-bent); water bent and fire toasted (water-bent); and a hybridized method based on fire bending and toasting followed by a 12 h fill with water at 80 °C (fire-bent + hot water), were trialed in triplicate. Parameters such as acetic acid and alcohol content (higher in control wines), and anthocyanins, color and polymeric pigments (higher in wines aged in the new barrels), were more affected by barrel use (new versus neutral) than by bending/toasting protocols. At the end of the study (day 602), only 4-vinyl-guaiacol, eugenol and cis-lactone showed odor activity values (OAV's) above 1, with the latter being the most relevant odor active compound across treatments whereas eugenol was 10-fold higher in the water-bent wines. Principal component analysis (PCA) including phenolics and volatile compounds suggested differences between wines aged in control and new barrels, but less clear-cut differences within wines aged in barrels produced with the different bending/toasting protocols.


Subject(s)
Food-Processing Industry/instrumentation , Quercus , Vitis , Wine/analysis , Anthocyanins/analysis , Color , Eugenol/analysis , Food Analysis/statistics & numerical data , Food Handling , Food-Processing Industry/methods , Guaiacol/analogs & derivatives , Guaiacol/analysis , Lactones/analysis , Odorants/analysis , Phenols/analysis , Principal Component Analysis , Volatile Organic Compounds/analysis
7.
Food Chem ; 300: 125147, 2019 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31349098

ABSTRACT

Pinot noir and Zinfandel wines were produced with traditional maceration (Control), and extended maceration for one (1 month-EM), and six months (6 months-EM). Addition of an extra amount of pomace during EM was also evaluated through a treatment referred to as Double pomace. The application of EM and Double pomace decreased the chromatic as well as the anthocyanin and anthocyanin-derived pigment composition of the wines. Large polymeric pigments were favored in EM and Double pomace wines, but the total polymeric pigment content was not improved by any of the winemaking treatments. The 6 months-EM wines showed a 13-fold (Pinot noir) and a 1.6-fold increase (Zinfandel) in tannins, respectively, relative to Control wines. However, the 1 month-EM and Double pomace treatments did not affect tannin levels, suggesting that in these wines, the extraction of tannins during EM may depend upon desorption of previously extracted tannins during extended contact time.


Subject(s)
Anthocyanins/analysis , Food Handling , Tannins/analysis , Wine/analysis , California , Color , Fermentation , Vitis/chemistry
8.
PLoS One ; 11(2): e0149666, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26919614

ABSTRACT

Grapevine leafroll disease (GLD) is an economically important virus disease affecting wine grapes (Vitis vinifera L.), but little is known about its effect on wine chemistry and sensory composition of wines. In this study, impacts of GLD on fruit yield, berry quality and wine chemistry and sensory features were investigated in a red wine grape cultivar planted in a commercial vineyard. Own-rooted Merlot vines showing GLD symptoms and tested positive for Grapevine leafroll-associated virus 3 and adjacent non-symptomatic vines that tested negative for the virus were compared during three consecutive seasons. Number and total weight of clusters per vine were significantly less in symptomatic relative to non-symptomatic vines. In contrast to previous studies, a time-course analysis of juice from grapes harvested at different stages of berry development from symptomatic and non-symptomatic vines indicated more prominent negative impacts of GLD on total soluble solids (TSS) and berry skin anthocyanins than in juice pH and titratable acidity. Differences in TSS between grapes of symptomatic and non-symptomatic vines were more pronounced after the onset of véraison, with significantly lower concentrations of TSS in grapes from symptomatic vines throughout berry ripening until harvest. Wines made from grapes of GLD-affected vines had significantly lower alcohol, polymeric pigments, and anthocyanins compared to corresponding wines from grapes of non-symptomatic vines. Sensory descriptive analysis of 2010 wines indicated significant differences in color, aroma and astringency between wines made from grapes harvested from GLD-affected and unaffected vines. The impacts of GLD on yield and fruit and wine quality traits were variable between the seasons, with greater impacts observed during a cooler season, suggesting the influence of host plant × environment interactions on overall impacts of the disease.


Subject(s)
Closteroviridae/isolation & purification , Fruit/chemistry , Plant Diseases/virology , Vitis/chemistry , Wine , Anthocyanins/analysis , Fruit/virology , Phenols/analysis , Vitis/virology
9.
Food Chem ; 174: 110-8, 2015 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25529659

ABSTRACT

Six red grape cultivars, Barbera D'Asti, Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Merlot, Pinot Noir and Syrah, were produced with or without prefermentative cold soak (CS). Cold soak had no effect on the basic chemical composition of the wines. At pressing, CS wines were more saturated and with a higher red component than control wines. After 1 year of bottle aging, CS wines retained 22% more anthocyanins than control wines, but tannins and total phenolics remained unaffected. Both saturation and the red component of colour were slightly higher in CS wines. From a sensory standpoint, CS only enhanced colour intensity in Barbera D'Asti and Cabernet Sauvignon wines, whereas it diminished colour intensity in Pinot Noir. Cold soak had no effect on perceived aroma, bitterness, astringency, and body of the wines. Principal Component Analysis suggested that the outcome of CS is contingent upon the specific cultivar to which the CS technique is applied.


Subject(s)
Food Handling/methods , Taste , Vitis/chemistry , Wine/analysis , Anthocyanins/analysis , Color , Fermentation , Humans , Phenols/analysis , Principal Component Analysis , Smell , Tannins/analysis
10.
Annu Rev Food Sci Technol ; 5: 83-109, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24422589

ABSTRACT

We review the extraction into wine and evolution of major phenolic classes of sensory relevance. We present a historical background to highlight that previously established aspects of phenolic extraction and retention into red wine are still subjects of much research. We argue that management of the maceration length is one of the most determining factors in defining the proportion and chemical fate of phenolic compounds in wine. The extraction of anthocyanins, flavonols, flavan-3-ols, and oligomeric and polymeric proanthocyanidins (PAs) is discussed in the context of their individual extraction patterns but also with regard to their interaction with other wine components. The same approach is followed to present the sensory implications of phenolic and phenolic-derived compounds in wine. Overall, we conclude that the chemical diversity of phenolic compounds in grapes is further enhanced as soon as vacuolar and pulp components are released upon crushing, adding a variety of new sensory dimensions to the already present chemical diversity. Polymeric pigments formed by the covalent reaction of anthocyanin and PAs are good candidates to explain some of the observed sensory changes in the color, taste, and mouthfeel attributes of red wines during maceration and aging.


Subject(s)
Flavonoids/chemistry , Food Handling/methods , Sensation , Wine/analysis , Anthocyanins/chemistry , Anthocyanins/isolation & purification , Cell Wall/chemistry , Color , Fermentation , Flavonoids/isolation & purification , Flavonols/chemistry , Flavonols/isolation & purification , Fruit/chemistry , Humans , Polymers/chemistry , Proanthocyanidins/analysis , Proanthocyanidins/chemistry , Taste , Vitis/chemistry
11.
J Agric Food Chem ; 61(26): 6446-57, 2013 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23789791

ABSTRACT

The impact of extended maceration (EM) was studied in Cabernet Sauvignon grapes sourced from a vineyard subjected to four regulated deficit irrigation (RDI) treatments: (I) 100% replenishment of crop evapotranspiration (100% ETc), (II) 70% ETc, (III) 25% ETc until véraison, followed by 100% ETc until harvest, and IV) 25% ETc. Each vineyard replicate was made into wine with two replicates designated as controls (10-day skin contact) and two as extended maceration (EM, 30-day skin contact). The mean degree of polymerization (mDP), size distribution, concentration, and composition of wine proanthocyanidins (PAs) and monomeric flavan-3-ols of 90 fractions were characterized by preparative and analytical HPLC techniques. The maceration length imparted a larger effect on most chemical parameters. The RDI treatment had no effect on the extraction patterns of anthocyanins, PAs, and/or on the origin of the PAs extracted into the wines. Conversely, EM led to anthocyanin losses and increased PA extraction during maceration, with ~73% of seed-derived PAs. Accordingly, the concentration of monomeric flavan-3-ols, oligomeric (2 ≤ mDP < 5) and polymeric PAs (mDP ≥ 5) was higher in EM wines. The size distribution of the wines' PAs revealed two major peaks as a function of concentration at mDP 2 (22-27% of total PAs mass) and at mDP 6-7 (12-17% of total PAs mass) and was found to follow a non-normal Rayleigh-type distribution.


Subject(s)
Agricultural Irrigation , Anthocyanins/biosynthesis , Food Handling , Fruit/growth & development , Proanthocyanidins/biosynthesis , Vitis/growth & development , Wine/analysis , Anthocyanins/analysis , Anthocyanins/chemistry , Fruit/chemistry , Fruit/metabolism , Proanthocyanidins/analysis , Proanthocyanidins/chemistry , Vitis/chemistry , Vitis/metabolism , Washington , Water/metabolism
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...