D1 Wine components Flashcards

1
Q

Wine components

A
  • Water (approx. 85%)
  • RS residual sugar
  • Acids (typically 5.5-8.5 g/L)
  • Phenolics (anthocyanins and tannins)
  • Aromatics
  • Alcohol
  • Glycerol
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Sugar - EU classification of Sweetness level

A

The classification for still wines take into account:
- level of residual sugar
- optionally higher level of residual sugar with higher total acidity

  1. Dry/sec/trocken.
    Up to 4 g/L RS.
    or not exceeding 9 g/L if total acidity is not more than 2g below RS content.
  2. Medium dry/demi-sec/halbtrocken.
    Between 4 g/L RS and 12 g/L RS.
    or not exceeding 18 g/L RS if total acidity is not more than 10g below RS content.
  3. Medium or medium sweet/molleux/lieblich.
    Between 12 g/L and 45 g/L.
  4. Sweet/doux/suss
    More than 45 g/L.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Acids

A

Acidity makes the wine taste refreshing, and should be balance with fruit concentration and residual sugar.

  • Tartaric and Malic acids comes from the grapes.
  • Lactic and acetic are produced in malolactic conversion or fermentation.
  • Volatile acidity refers to acetic acid (vinegar smell), when react with alcohol becomes ethyl acetate (nail varnish remover smell).

Total acidity is measured by g/L in tartaric acid.

pH is a scale of measurement for the concentration of the effective acidity in a solution. (typically 3-4, inverse scale)
A low pH:
- increases the microbiological stability
- increase effectiveness of SO2
- gives red wine a bright colour
- enhances a wine’s ability to age well

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Phenolics

A

Include anthocyanin and tannins.

Contribute to structure and balance of the wine.
Tannins binds with proteins in the mouth, giving a drying sensation on the palate.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Aromatics

A

Wine aromatics may comes from:

  1. Compounds in Grapes
    - Mathoxypyrazines (grassy, green pepper)
    - Rotundone (Pepper aroma)
  2. Compounds in grapes that become precursors (aromatic) during fermentation
    - Thiols (box tree aroma)
    - Terpenes (fruiti, floral aroma)
    - Linalool and geraniol (grapey aromas)
  3. From fermentation and its products
    - Easter (fresh, fruity aroma) created by the action of yeast.
    - Easter Isoamyl acetate (banana, pineapple)
    - Acetaldehyde (stale smell) (fino sherry) occurs due to oxidation of ethanol.
    - Diacetyl (buttery aroma) produced during malolactic conversion.
    - Yeast can produce reductive sulfur compounds during fermentation and lees ageing (struck match, rotten egg)
  4. Other sources
    - Oak barrel (vanillin)
    - Eucalyptol near vineyards
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Alcohol

A

Ethanol forms during fermentation.

Contributes to a sense of oral warmth, fullness of the body and mouthfeel.

High alcohol level may reduce aromas perception, therefore alcohol level must balance the fruit concentration.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Glycerol

A

Is derived from sugar in grapes.
It is higher in botrytis wines and carbonic maceration made wines.

Contributes to smoothness to the texture and fullness of the body.

It has a slight sweet taste.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly