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Wine and Juice Oxidation

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How do you get from ethanol in wine to the oxidized aroma flaws? ... Stabilized or improved color, reduce phenols, reduce some aromas ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wine and Juice Oxidation


1
Wine and Juice Oxidation
  • Patricia Howe
  • March 2009

2
Part I
3
What is oxidative spoilage?
  • In grape juice and wine, oxidative spoilage can
    mean several things
  • Color becomes brown
  • Fruit flavors are masked or muted
  • Distinctive aromas are produced
  • Sample A
  • Sample B
  • Sample C
  • Sample D

4
Describe the compounds
  • Sample A Acetaldehyde
  • Bruised apple, apple-like, nutty, citrus-like

5
Describe the compounds
  • Sample A Acetaldehyde
  • Bruised apple, apple-like, nutty, citrus-like
  • Sample B Acetic acid
  • Vinegar, pungent

6
Describe the compounds
  • Sample A Acetaldehyde
  • Bruised apple, apple-like, nutty, citrus-like
  • Sample B Acetic acid
  • Vinegar, pungent
  • Sample C Ethyl acetate
  • Nail polish remover, fruity, acetone

7
Describe the compounds
  • Sample A Acetaldehyde
  • Bruised apple, apple-like, nutty, citrus-like
  • Sample B Acetic acid
  • Vinegar, pungent
  • Sample C Ethyl acetate
  • Nail polish remover, fruity, acetone
  • Sample D Ethanol
  • Warming, irritating, sweet, vodka-like

8
Oxidation in Juice and Wine
  • How is ethanol converted to these oxidized
    compounds?
  • What are the mechanisms in wine and juice?
  • How do these reactions and byproducts affect wine
    and juice?
  • Are these reactions always bad for the wine?
  • How do we prevent or encourage these reactions?

9
Generalized Sequence of Chemical Oxidation (a
review)
Alcohol
Aldehyde
Acid
Alkane
--CH2OH
--COOH
--CH3
--CHO
10
Generalized Series of Chemical Oxidation (a
review)
R any alkyl or aryl group
ROOH
RHO
RH2OH
RH3
Alcohol
Aldehyde
Acid
Alkane
CHO
COOH
CH2OH
CH3
Formaldehyde (Methanal)
Formic Acid (Methanoic Acid)
Methanol
Methane
CH3COOH
CH3CH3
CH3CHO
C2H5OH
Acetic Acid (Ethanoic Acid)
Acetaldehyde (Ethanal)
Ethane
Ethanol
11
Oxidation of Juice and Wine
  • How do you get from ethanol in wine to the
    oxidized aroma flaws?
  • Will a bottle of ethanol sitting on the counter
    with oxygen spontaneously turn into sherry or
    vinegar?

12
Oxidation of Juice and Wine
  • How do you get from ethanol in wine to the
    oxidized aroma flaws?
  • Will a bottle of ethanol sitting on the counter
    with oxygen spontaneously turn into sherry or
    vinegar?

13
Modes of Wine Juice Oxidation
  • Three distinctly different modes
  • Enzymic- (enzymes)
  • Chemical- (phenols and metals)
  • Microbiological- (specific microbes and
    nutrients)
  • Oxygen is initially required, but may be consumed
    during the process
  • These reactions will produce the oxidative flaws
    of browning, acetaldehyde, acetic acid, and/or
    ethyl acetate
  • These reactions can also be controlled or
    encouraged

14
Part II
15
Enzymic Browning
  • An enzyme is a large protein which can catalyze a
    chemical reaction they are biological molecules
    produced by living organisms, but can react
    independently.
  • The enzymes which cause browning in grape juices
    and wines facilitate reactions between oxygen
    dissolved in the liquid and a class of compounds
    known as phenols.
  • Enzymic reactions are temperature dependent, and
    will increase as the temperature increases

Learn more about enzymes and phenols in the
reading
16
Phenols
  • Phenols are a general class of aromatic compounds
    that contain one or more hydroxyl groups.
  • Phenolic substrates in grapes include catechin,
    chlorogenic acid, catechol, caffeic acid, DOPA,
    tannins, flavonols, protocatechuic acid,
    resorcinol, hydroquinone, phenol
  • In winemaking, phenolic compounds dictate the
    color, astringency, and bitterness of the wine.

The chemical structure term aromatic refers to
the ring structure with alternating bonds, (a
benzene ring) which may have been named for its
perfumy scent. The OH is called a hydroxyl
group The circle and the alternating bonds are
ways of showing the same thing.
17
Enzymic Browning
  • Inherent enzymes in the grape, polyphenol
    oxidases
  • Same enzyme which causes browning in apples
  • This enzyme is destroyed by alcohol and can be
    controlled with sulfur dioxide there is also a
    pH effect, with low pH slowing the reaction.
    High heat will denature the protein.
  • These enzymes can brown the juice of the grapes,
    but can not continue to brown in the wine.

18
Enzymic Browning
  • Enzymes from molds which can infest the grape -
    laccases
  • These enzymes can function in alcoholic solutions
    and so can brown a finished wine
  • Sulfur dioxide is not very effective against
    these enzymes
  • Dessert wines styles such as Sauternes and
    Ausleses (made from intentionally moldy grapes
    from nobel rot, Botrytis cineria) are usually
    noticeably brown

19
Chemical Oxidation of Wine
  • Occurs in
  • poorly sealed bottles or tanks
  • the production of baked sherries, which uses heat
    to speed these oxidative reactions
  • an open glass of wine sitting for extended
    periods (days or weeks), assuming no microbes
    begin to grow
  • The increased solubility of oxygen at colder
    temperatures can counteract the slower reaction
    rate at lower temperatures.
  • Does not involve enzymes or microbes

20
Chemical Oxidation in Wine
Acetaldehyde
Ethanol
21
Chemical Oxidation in Wine
Acetaldehyde
Ethanol
C2H6O
C2H4O
Text formulas
22
Chemical Oxidation in Wine
Acetaldehyde
Ethanol
C2H6O
C2H5OH
C2H4O
Text formulas
CH3CH2OH
CH3CHO
CH3CH2OH
23
Chemical Oxidation in Wine
Acetaldehyde
Ethanol
C2H6O
C2H5OH
C2H4O
Text formulas
CH3CH2OH
CH3CHO
CH3CH2OH
Lewis structures
24
Chemical Oxidation in Wine
Acetaldehyde
Ethanol
C2H6O
C2H5OH
C2H4O
Text formulas
CH3CH2OH
CH3CHO
CH3CH2OH
Lewis structures
Skeletal formulas
25
Chemical Oxidation in Wine
  • In wines, chemical oxidation occurs
  • When dissolved oxygen reacts with a specific type
    of compound (usually a dihydroxy phenol) to form
    a peroxide molecule
  • A coupled reaction involving the peroxide and
    ethanol results in the production of acetaldehyde
  • Copper or Iron ions are required as catalysts

Learn more about phenols and wine oxidation in
the reading. Active research continues in this
area
26
Auto-oxidation
27
About copper or iron.
  • Does a bottle of ethanol, with oxygen and with
    added phenolic compounds sitting on the counter
    spontaneously oxidize?


28
About copper or iron.
  • Does a bottle of ethanol, with oxygen and with
    added phenolic compounds sitting on the counter
    spontaneously oxidize?


29
About copper or iron.
  • Does a bottle of ethanol, with oxygen and with
    added phenolic compounds sitting on the counter
    spontaneously oxidize?



Cu or Fe
30
About copper or iron.
  • Does a bottle of ethanol, with oxygen and with
    added phenolic compounds sitting on the counter
    spontaneously oxidize?



Cu or Fe
31
Esters and Esterification
  • An ester is a molecule made by a reaction
    combining an Alcohol with an Acid.
  • This reaction is called esterification
  • Most esters are have fruity smells and are common
    in foods and beverages.

32
Common Esterification in Wine
Acetic Acid
At wine pH
Ethanol
Acetate ion
Ethyl acetate
H2O
33
Part III
34
Microbiological Oxidation
  • Several genera of yeast and bacteria can convert
    grape sugars (in juice) or ethanol (in wine) into
    acetaldehyde, acetic acid, and/or ethyl acetate.
  • Some of these microbes are sensitive to ethanol
    and do not grow in wine
  • Most are sensitive to sulfur dioxide
  • Most grow better at warm temperature than at
    cooler temperatures.

Kingdom-gt Phylum-gtClass-gtOrder-gtFamily-gt
Genus-gtSpecies
35
Surface films in wine
This is usually a sign that some type of
microbial oxidation is occurring, because of the
location at the air/liquid interface.
36
Oxidative Yeast Common in Wine and Juice
  • Alcohol tolerant
  • Saccharomyces (specifically Film species)
  • Candida (surface yeasts)/Metshnikowia
  • Saccharomycodes
  • Zygosaccharmyces
  • Brettanomyces/Dekkera
  • Shizosaccharomyces
  • Alcohol Sensitive
  • Kloeckera/Hanseniaspora
  • Pichia

37
Yeast Metabolism
38
Some Common Wine Yeasts100x magnification
Courtesy of UC Davis Dept VEN
Dekkera
Brettanomyces
Saccharmomyces
Pichia
Kloeckera
39
Oxidative Bacteria in Wine and Juice
  • Acetic Acid Bacteria
  • Strict Aerobes
  • Acetobacter aceti
  • Acetobacter pasteurianius
  • Gluconobacter oxydans (mostly fruit and juice)
  • Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB)
  • Facultative Aerobes
  • (Hetero Homo Fermentative)
  • Oenococcus oeni
  • Lactobacillus species
  • Pediococcus species

40
Homo- and Hetero- Fermentative LAB
  • homofermentative
  • produce more than 85 lactic acid from glucose.
  • heterofermentative (type I)
  • produce only 50 lactic acid and considerable
    amounts of ethanol, acetic acid and carbon
    dioxide.
  • heterofermentative (type II)
  • produce DL-lactic acid, acetic acid and carbon
    dioxide.

41
LAB Metabolism
Oenococcus slightly aerated lactate and ethanol
aerated lactate and acetate
42
Some Common Wine Bacteriaelectron microscope
photos from Jeff Broadbent Utah State University
Lactobacillus casei
Oenococcus oeni
Lactobacillus delbrueckii
Pediococcus pentosaceus
43
Part IV
44
Primary Sources of Wine and Juice Oxidation
byproducts
  • Browning
  • Enzymic and Chemical
  • Acetaldehyde
  • Chemical and Microbiological
  • Ethyl Acetate
  • Chemical and Microbiological
  • Acetic acid
  • Microbiological
  • there is another source of acetic acid in wine
    which we will learn more about when we discuss
    oak barrels

45
Preventing Oxidation Juice
  • Process fruit free of molds and rots
  • If mold is present, sort fruit to remove moldy
    clusters
  • consider a juice treatment to remove/denature the
    laccase enzymes (ie bentonite or pasteurization)
  • Control juice O2 levels if browning is a concern
  • Maintain SO2 levels appropriate to pH
  • Control temperature (colderslower reactions)
  • Avoid higher pHs (phenol chemistry)
  • Use good cleaning sanitation practices
  • Monitor microbe levels

46
Preventing Oxidation Wine
  • Maintain SO2 levels appropriate to pH
  • Control temperature (colderslower reactions but
    higher potential dissolved oxygen)
  • Avoid higher pHs (phenol chemistry)
  • Use good cleaning sanitation practices
  • Monitor microbial levels
  • Reduce O2 levels in wine,
  • During storage, keep containers full
  • During bottling, use inert gases or other methods
    to reduce O2 pickup
  • Use inert gases during transfers and other wine
    work.

47
The distribution of species of sulfurous acid at
various pH values. (From Ough,
1984)                
48
Free SO2 to reach molecular SO2 by pH
49
What is Controlled Oxidation?
  • Deliberate (or intended, or not prevented)
    addition of air or oxygen to juice
  • Deliberate (or intended but not controlled) very
    slow and minor additions of air or oxygen
  • Stabilized or improved color, reduce phenols,
    reduce some aromas
  • Reduction in astringency, harshness, or green
    and unripe tannin flavors.
  • Possible reduction in green or vegetal aromas

50
Controlled Enzymic Oxidation?
  • In grape juice, controlled enzymic oxidation can
    result in several things
  • Brown pigments become too large to remain
    soluble phenol levels are lower in the wine
  • Undesired aromas may be changed, masked, or
    eliminated
  • May affect pinking precursors

51
Controlled Chemical Oxidation
  • In wine, controlled chemical oxidation is a slow
    addition of extremely low levels of oxygen
  • It must not manifest as a flaw
  • Traditional Barrel Aging with resulting slow
    exposure to oxygen through bungs or staves
  • Traditional Bottle aging, with resulting slow
    exposure through residual oxidation or permeation
    through closure, resulting in bottle bouquet
  • Controlled micro-oxidation or MOX systems
  • Heating with air to produced baked sherries

52
Controlled Microbial Oxidation
  • The bacteria Acetobacter aceti converts ethanol
    into acetic acid in the vinegar process.
  • Balsamic vinegar is produced by growing
    Zygosaccharomyces bailii in concentrated grape
    juice (not wine). The yeast converts the sugar
    in the juice directly into acetic acid.
  • Flor style sherries are produced by growing
    special Saccharomyces cerevisea (beticus,
    cheresiensis, montuliensis or rouxii) yeasts in
    higher alcohol wines the alcohol is converted
    into acetaldehyde.

Genus species
53
Wine and Juice Oxidation
  • Patricia Howe
  • March 2009
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