Yeast and bacterial modulation of wine aroma and flavour
Australian Wine Research Institute
Abstract
Wine is a highly complex mixture of compounds which largely define its appearance, aroma, flavour and mouth-feel properties. The compounds responsible for those attributes have been derived in turn from three major sources, viz. grapes, microbes and, when used, wood (most commonly, oak). The grape-derived compounds provide varietal distinction in addition to giving wine its basic structure. Thus, the floral monoterpenes largely define Muscat-related wines and the fruity volatile thiols define Sauvignon-related wines; the grape acids and tannins, together with alcohol, contribute the palate and mouth-feel properties. Yeast fermentation of sugars not only produces ethanol and carbon dioxide but a range of minor…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 100
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Flavour
- Malolactic fermentation
- Wine
- Aroma
- Aroma of wine
- Food science
- Chemistry
- Fermentation in winemaking