Title: Oxygen Treatments Pre- and During Fermentation
1Oxygen Treatments Pre- and During Fermentation
- Linda F. Bisson
- Department of Viticulture and Enology
- University of California, Davis
2Oxygen During Juice Fermentation
- Low level exposure in juice during pressing
operation - Hyperoxygenation to get rid of browning potential
- Deliberate addition to fermentation to stimulate
yeast
3Intended Goals of Aeration
- Mixing
- Providing oxygen as nutrient for yeast or ML
bacteria - Stimulation of non-Saccharomyces organisms
- Aroma maturation
- Color maturation
- Tannin/mouth feel maturation
4Unintended Goals of Aeration
- Stimulation of spoilage organisms
- Loss of aromatic characters
- Creation of off-characters due to oxidation
reactions
5Mixing
- Avoid stratification
- Enhance extraction
- Remove inhibitory Carbon Dioxide
- Provide oxygen for metabolism
6Mixing
- Avoid stratification
- Distribute Ethanol Levels
- Mix Yeast
- Bring in new nutrients
- Distribute inhibitory non-volatile end products
- Enhance extraction
- Remove inhibitory Carbon Dioxide
- Provide oxygen for metabolism
7Providing Oxygen as a Nutrient
- Oxygen enables adaptation
- Allows aerobic organisms to make energy for
adaptation of cell to juice conditions - Oxygen is a survival factor
- Allows formation of desired lipid/phospholipid
composition - Enables formation of sterols
- Maintains cytoplasmic redox status
- Catalyst in biochemical reactions
8Timing of Oxygen Addition
- Grape surface microbes tend to be aerobes and
will deplete oxygen - Organisms need oxygen to survive
- Organisms need oxygen to metabolize
- Grape and mold oxidases will consume molecular
oxygen as substrate - Phenolic compounds in juice will react with oxygen
9Timing of Oxygen Addition
- To benefit yeast
- Need to add oxygen once fermentative yeast
populations are established - Use of sulfite to inhibit enzymatic consumption
of molecular oxygen - Use of heat treatments to inhibit enzymatic
consumption of molecular oxygen
10Stimulation of non- Saccharomyces Organisms
- Acetic Acid bacteria on fruit
- Lactic Acid bacteria on fruit
- Non-Saccharomyces yeasts
- Aerobes on surfaces of winery equipment
- Enables transition to fermentative modes of
metabolism - Generation of complexity
11Aroma Maturation
- Manipulation of juice chemistry
- Challenging because of multiple possible fates of
added O2 - Redox reactions difficult to predict and control
- Loss of volatile aromas
12Color Maturation
- Formation of stable pigments
- Browning reactions
13Tannin/Mouth Feel Maturation
14Stimulation of Spoilage Organisms
- Oxygen is essential to most organisms
- Needed for oxidative metabolism or respiration
- Needed as electron acceptor in many reactions
- Chemical catalyst
- Can enable survival not just growth
15Loss of Aroma Characters
- Loss due to volatility
- Loss due to chemical reactivity
- Loss due to microbial activity
- Loss due to enzymatic activity
16Creation of Off-Characters
- Aldehydes from chemical reactions
- Off-colors from oxidative reactions
- Stimulation of oxidative organisms
17Timing of Aeration
- Pre-fermentation
- During fermentation
- Post-fermentation ML
- Post-fermentation aging
18Pre-Fermentation Aeration
- Fates of oxygen in Juice
- Microbial consumption
- Enzymatic consumption
- Chemical consumption
19Fates of Oxygen During Fermentation
- Microbial consumption
- Ethanol inhibition of PPO, not of laccase
20Aeration Winery Trials
- Impact of aeration during pumpover in Grenache
- Impact of oxygen treatments in commercial
Chardonnay
21The Grenache Trial
- Pumpovers were twice daily with sufficient time
to pump over one tank volume - Three treatments
- Normal Pumpover with no added air
- Pump with constant aeration via insertion of air
into stream - Insertion of nitrogen instead of air in to the
stream - Used different closures on the three treatments
22Confounding Variables
- Impact of oxygen versus simple mixing (thus the
Nitrogen control) - Impact of microbes stimulated in control and
aeration treatments (secondary effects)
23Grenache Juice Analysis
Initial Must Analysis Initial Must Analysis
Brix 22.2
pH 3.4
TA 5.08 g/L
24(No Transcript)
25Findings
- All fermentations completed
- Nitrogen-sparged sample fermented slightly faster
- Air-sparged sample showed a lag consistent with
growth of other organisms - Air-sparged sped up as ethanol increased,
consistent with oxygen as survival factor
26Commercial Chardonnay Trial
- Five Treatments
- Control
- Nitrogen-sparged juice
- Aeration pre-inoculation
- Aeration at 18-20 Brix
- Aeration of wine as control
27Fermentation Curves
28Fermentation Curves
29Conclusions
- Yeast strains showed differences
- No differences noted by treatment of fermentation
- Wines available on side table
30Grenache Tasting
- Glass 1 Control, no sparge
- Glass 2 Air sparge
- Glass 3 Nitrogen sparge
- Glass 4 Cork closure
- Glass 5 Synthetic Closure
- Glass 6 Synthetic Closure