D1C11 Wine Components Flashcards
1.3.1 Explain how wine components contribute to wine style.
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
How much of wine is water?
85%
What is the predominant alcohol in wine?
Ethanol – formed during fermentation
What are the principal acids in wine?
Tartaric and malic – both come from grape itself
What acids are produced during malolactic fermentation?
Lactic and acetic
What is the link between total acidity and pH?
Linked but not correlated – a wine with high acidity would normally have a high pH and vice versa
How is acidity measured and what is the normal range?
- in “total acidity” and expressed “g/l” in tartaric acidity
- normal range is 5.5-8.5 g/l
How is pH measured and what does a low pH mean for the wine?
- measured on logarithmic, inverse scale
- 3-4 is typically the range
- low pH increases microbial stability, increases effectiveness of SO2, gives red wines a bright colour and enhances aging
What are examples of aromas from the grapes? (2)
1) methoxypyrazines
2) rotundone
What are methoxypyrazines?
Occur in SB and give grassy, green pepper aroma
What is rotundone?
Produces pepper aroma in Gruner and Syrah
What are aroma precursors?
Compounds that are not themselves aromatic but are building blocks which become aromatic during fermentation (ex. thiols and terpenes)
What are thiols?
Aromatic compounds released during fermentation
What are terpenes?
Another aromatic compound released during fermentation giving floral and fruity aromas (ex. grapey in Muscat)
What are esters? What is the most common?
- aromas formed through action of yeasts and fermentation process (responsible for fresh and fruity aromas)
- the most common is isoamyl acetate (banana, pineapple. apple)