11. Wine Components Flashcards
What does Volatile Acidity refer to?
When does it become a fault?
What aroma is associated with this fault?
Mainly refers to acetic acid, which reacts with alcohol = ethyl acetate.
Considered a fault when present in excess.
Vinegar (acetic acid) / Nail Polish Remover (ethyl acetate)
How much of wine is water?
Approx. 85%, depending on abv / RS / other factors.
What are the 4 components of Vinente Ferreira’s model for wine aromas?
1) compounds common to all wine (sweet, pungent aromas produced by fermentation -e.g. ethanol)
2) impact aromas (specific aromas that can be recognized – ex. rotundone (pepperiness) in Syrah)
3) contributory aromas (aroma compounds that are normally imperceptable but contribute when combined with other compounds – ex. vanillin from new oak)
4) nonvolatile wine matrix (nonvolatile components of wine that affect the way the aromatic compounds are sensed)
What are the 7 main components of wine?
1) water
2) alcohol
3) acids
4) wine aromatics
5) residual sugar(s)
6) glycerol
7) phenolics
What are the EU classifications for sweetness levels in still wine?
1) dry / sec / trocken = up to 4 g/l
2) medium-dry / demi-sec / halbtrocken = 4-12 g/l
3) medium / medium-sweet / moelleux / lieblich = 12-45 g/l
4) sweet / doux / süss = at least 45 g/l
How is acidity most commonly measured / expressed and what is the normal range?
- in “total acidity” (sum of all acids) and expressed “g/l” in tartaric acidity
- normal range is 5.5-8.5 g/l
What are methoxypyrazines?
Aroma compound found in e.g. Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, and give grassy, green bell pepper aroma
What are the 4 main categories of aromas found in wine?
Give 1 example of each:
1) Aromas from grapes, e.g. Methoxypyrazines
2) Aroma-precursors present in must (aromas created by fermentation) e.g. Thiols
3) Aromas originating from fermentation + its by-products e.g. Diacetyl
4) Aromas from other sources e.g. Vanillin from oak
What are terpenes?
Identify 2 specfic examples and describe how they manifest themselves:
An aromatic compound released during fermentation giving floral, “grapey” aromas
e.g. Linalool + Geraniol = grapey aromas in Muscat.
What effect do tannins have on the palate?
What factors can influence the effect of tannins (3)?
How does tannin quality affect the quality of a wine?
- Tannins bind with proteins in saliva, producing the drying sensation on the palate.
- Perception of tannins can be influenced by other compounds in wine, e.g. RS can make them seem softer / high acidity can make them feel astringent.
- Tannins can react w/compounds during winemaking + maturation, changing their composition.
- Unripe tannins = bitter, undesirable.
Level/ripeness of tannins = key part of quality in red wines.
What kind of scale is pH measured on and what is a typical range for wine?
What are some benefits of having a low pH (4)?
- measured on logarithmic, inverse scale
- 3-4 is typically the range
- increases microbial stability
- increases effectiveness of SO2
- gives red wines a bright colour
- enhances aging pontential
What is glycerol?
Where does it come from (2)?
What does it contribute to the wine (3)?
- 3rd most abundant part of wine after water and alcohol
- derived from sugars in grapes, esp. Botrytis-affected + carbonic wines e.g. Tokaji, Beaujolais
- contributes smoothness to texture of wine, perception of fullness of body, slightly sweet taste.
What are the 2 principal acids in wine and where do they come from?
What are 2 secondary acids in wine and where do they come from?
Tartaric and malic – both come from grape itself
Lactic and Acetic – produced in malolactic conversion or fermentation.
What is acetaldehyde?
AKA
What is its effect and where is it commonly found?
- aroma occurring in wine due to oxidation of ethanol
- AKA “ethanal”
- masks fruit aromas and regarded as fault in most wines (nutty, briny aroma of Fino sherry)
What are phenolics?
What are 2 specific examples?
Important group of compounds occuring in skins, stems and seeds of grapes.
- anthocyanins + tannins.