Beverages (Sep 2022)

Impact of Two Commercial <i>S. cerevisiae</i> Strains on the Aroma Profiles of Different Regional Musts

  • Francesca Patrignani,
  • Gabriella Siesto,
  • Davide Gottardi,
  • Ileana Vigentini,
  • Annita Toffanin,
  • Vasileios Englezos,
  • Giuseppe Blaiotta,
  • Francesco Grieco,
  • Rosalba Lanciotti,
  • Barbara Speranza,
  • Antonio Bevilacqua,
  • Patrizia Romano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/beverages8040059
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
p. 59

Abstract

Read online

The present research is aimed at investigating the potential of two commercial Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains (EC1118 and AWRI796) to generate wine-specific volatile molecule fingerprinting in relation to the initial must applied. To eliminate the effects of all the process variables and obtain more reliable results, comparative fermentations on interlaboratory scale of five different regional red grape musts were carried out by five different research units (RUs). For this purpose, the two S. cerevisiae strains were inoculated separately at the same level and under the same operating conditions. The wines were analyzed by means of SPME-GC/MS. Quali-quantitative multivariate approaches (two-way joining, MANOVA and PCA) were used to explain the contribution of strain, must, and their interaction to the final wine volatile fingerprinting. Our results showed that the five wines analyzed for volatile compounds, although characterized by a specific aromatic profile, were mainly affected by the grape used, in interaction with the inoculated Saccharomyces strain. In particular, the AWRI796 strain generally exerted a greater influence on the aromatic component resulting in a higher level of alcohols and esters. This study highlighted that the variable strain could have a different weight, with some musts experiencing a different trend depending on the strain (i.e., Negroamaro or Magliocco musts).

Keywords