Foods (Jun 2020)

Effect of Isomixing on Grape Must Fermentations of <i>ATF1</i>–Overexpressing Wine Yeast Strains

  • Niël van Wyk,
  • Florian Michling,
  • Dennis Bergamo,
  • Sylvia Brezina,
  • Isak S. Pretorius,
  • Christian von Wallbrunn,
  • Jürgen Wendland

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9060717
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 717

Abstract

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Speeding up grape must fermentation would be of great economic benefit. We subjected Saccharomyces cerevisiae VIN13 and two recombinant VIN13-strains expressing ATF1 alleles under two different promoters (either PGK1 or HXT7) to four styles of grape must fermentations; we then assessed the effect of constantly stirring a must fermentation (isomixing). The four different fermentation setups were as follows: isomixed, closed in an ANKOM Rf Gas productions system; isomixed, open in a stirred tall tube cylinder; static, closed constituting a conventional fermentation in a wine bottle equipped with an airlock and static; and static, open in a tall tube cylinder (without stirring). We report on major fermentation parameters and the volatile aroma compositions generated in the finished wines. The primary fermentations of the strains subjected to constant stirring finished after 7 days, whereas the static fermentations reached dryness after 19 days. The wines derived from isomixed fermentations produced approximately 0.7% less ethanol compared to the unstirred fermentations. The speed that the isomixed fermentation took to reach completion may provide an alternative to static fermentations in the preparation of base wines for sparkling wine production. The observed increase of volatiles of isomixed fermentations merits further investigation.

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