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	<title>WineWisdom &#187; reductive</title>
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	<link>http://www.winewisdom.com</link>
	<description>Sally Easton</description>
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		<title>Lees ageing</title>
		<link>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/lees-ageing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/lees-ageing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Oct 2009 12:22:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sally</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Technical themes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[autolysis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reduction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reductive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sparkling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[traditional method]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.winewisdom.com/?p=1159</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bits of winemaking stuff explained.

]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A version of this article first appeared in Wine and Spirit in 2007, since merged into Harpers Wine and Spirit.</em></p>
<p>Even when those little gods of wine, the yeast, have done their fermentation job, they still do good work on wine, adding flavour, aroma, body, structure texture, weight, complexity, even petillance (that’s a faint sparkle, not a petulant little wine), and both protein and tartrate stability.</p>
<p>It’s important to discuss the right lees. Wine should always be taken of the gross lees (from the French for heavy), which in wine terms are gross (from the English for gross).  It is only the fine lees that are potentially good for wine.  </p>
<h6 style="text-align: center;">sur lie means &#8216;on the lees&#8217;</h6>
<p>Essentially lees comprise dead yeast cells, and maybe some bits of grape skin and pulp that settle to the bottom of the vat at the end of fermentation.</p>
<p>This technique of leaving wine on fine lees mostly applies to white wines, but increasingly reds too are left on the fine lees for several months. The classic white wine example is Muscadet ‘sur lie’, from the Loire valley in France.  ‘Sur lie’ means simply ‘on the lees’, So this style should have a bit more weight, substance and character than a straight Muscadet.</p>
<p>Lees ageing is taken to its apogee in traditional method bubblies, such as Champagne, Cava, Franciacorta from Italy and Cap Classique from South Africa. </p>
<p>Yeast autolysis (auto-breakdown of yeast cells by their own enzymes), as it’s called when used with bubblies, confers rich flavours of biscuit, brioche, white nuts such as almonds and macadamias, toast, even marmite notes which add depth, breadth and savoury character to the wine. Flavour crudely depends on the length of time the wine is in contact with the lees. So a Cava that has had the minimum nine months on lees will taste more of the original fruit than vintage Champagne, with at least three years on lees.  Autolysis is also argued to give fineness and persistence to bubbles.  And some argue that a greater integration of bubbles occurs with longer lees ageing.</p>
<h6 style="text-align: center;">stirring the lees lessens the risk of reductive conditions</h6>
<p>Stirring the lees (battonage) in the barrel or vat is done to increase the effects of lees contact. This obviously cannot be done with traditional method bubbly, although some producers practise the art of poignettage where bubbly bottles are shaken to mix the yeast cells into the wine again, for example Gosset Champagne and Recaredo Cava. Stirring also minimises the risk of reductive flavours (think stink bombs and rotten eggs) occurring, which can develop under a thick layer of yeast cells. But slightly reductive conditions are good to help preserve primary fruit character, so it is a delicate balance to get the best from fine lees.</p>
<p>Mannoproteins are released naturally during lees contact. It is these that create a creamy, silky smooth mouthfeel, and a richer texture to the body of the wine. They are also important for wine stability.</p>
<p>A good, if expensive, comparison would be to choose a non-vintage and a vintage Champagne from the same producer.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p><em> </em></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Oxygen: the double edged sword</title>
		<link>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/oxygen-the-double-edged-sword/</link>
		<comments>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/oxygen-the-double-edged-sword/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Sep 2009 08:28:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sally</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Technical themes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[brettanomyces]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oxidation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oxygen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oxygenation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reduction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reductive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[volatile acidity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.winewisdom.com/?p=918</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bits of winemaking stuff explained.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A shorter version of this article first appeared in Wine and Spirit in 2007, since merged into Harpers Wine and Spirit.</em></p>
<p>Oxygen, friend and foe: can’t live without it, eventually die with it. Managing highly reactive oxygen gas during winemaking and bottling is like walking the tightrope. At one end is reduction, at the other, oxidation, both to be avoided. Oxidation leads to loss of primary aromas and fruit flavours, with browning of colour and deadening of flavour.</p>
<p>This means a constant balancing act depending on the style of wine being made: at some point towards the reduction end for a pure varietal expression of unoaked sauvignon blanc; near the oxidation end for tawny port and Oloroso sherry. It’s all about using the right amount of oxygen, at the right times to make the desired style, and there are no linear equations that make the process easy.</p>
<h6>From the moment grapes are picked, oxidation is a threat</h6>
<p>From the moment grapes are picked, oxidation is a threat, but some processes need oxygen. It is essential for the efficient start and smooth completion of alcoholic fermentation. Other benefits of appropriately timed oxygen introductions are more commonly seen in reds: colour stabilisation, flavour intensification, the building up and softening of tannic structure, limiting reduction aromas such as those of onion, rubber, garlic and cabbage, and encouraging natural clarification as less stable phenols are precipitated. It is also thought to help with the amelioration of green characters.</p>
<p>Red wines are thus less susceptible than whites and rosés to oxidation. Red juice and must contains higher levels of phenols (colour, tannin). Oxygenation, the deliberate and wanted introduction of oxygen, usually via air, is important to the resulting quality of red wines. In the cellar, maturing wine in barrel (old if no new flavour is wanted), racking, with smaller or larger amounts of air, and topping up, are ‘oxygenation’ techniques. Leaving the barrel bung at 12 o’clock is a more oxygenating technique than at 2 o’clock, where the bung remains below the wine surface.  Micro-oxygenation is the modern apparition.</p>
<h6>microbial instability is an additional risk of too much oxygen </h6>
<p>Apart from direct oxidation, microbial instability is an additional risk of too much oxygen in contact with wine. Wine-spoiling acetic acid bacteria grow when there is enough oxygen. This is why volatile acidity can be a precursor of oxidation, though there are notable reds such as Château Musar and Grange, where otherwise high levels of volatile acidity are integral to the style. Also brettanomyces yeast multiply in must and wine in the presence of oxygen, producing medicinal, horsey, elastoplast aromas, a little of which add complexity, a lot of which is a fault.</p>
<p>At the opposite end of the spectrum, reductive winemaking aims to avoid oxygen all the way, and is mainly used on white wines, especially aromatic and semi-aromatic grape varieties. Oxygen reacts with phenolics, of which whites have fewer than reds, and whites need their few phenolics to contribute to aroma and mouthfeel. Dry ice, inert gases, closed winemaking kit, and regular sulphur dioxide monitoring are the hallmark of reductive winemaking. Low temperature is another tool of reductive winemaking, because reactions are slowed, but oxygen is absorbed more easily at low temperatures.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Sulphur-like odours (SLOs)</title>
		<link>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/sulphur-like-odours-slos/</link>
		<comments>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/sulphur-like-odours-slos/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 09:41:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sally</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Technical themes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DMS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hyrdogen sulphide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mercaptan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oxidative winemaking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[redox]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reduction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reductive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reductive winemaking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SLO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sulphide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thiol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[VSC]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.winewisdom.com/?p=821</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Reductive issues are at the opposite end of the continuum from oxidation. Too much reduction is a bad thing. But a little bit of reduction can give desired complexing characters to a wine. There's no easy answer to controlling a little from too much. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>This article first appeared in Drinks Business in 2007.</em></p>
<p>The issue of ‘reduction under screwcap’ is taken out of the clutches of the closure camps, and the science laid bare.</p>
<h3>Stink bombs and the grail of thiol</h3>
<p>Oxidation is one thing.  But at the opposite end of the spectrum is ‘reduction’ and wine faults at this end of the continuum have just got trickier.</p>
<p>We’re all familiar with the reductive-state stink-bomb, rotten egg odour of hydrogen sulphide (H2S) and the garlicky, onion and rotten cabbage odours of mercaptans, These are expressions of faulty wines.   </p>
<p>Both of these groups of compounds are sulphur-containing off-odours. As we’ve started to understand more of the chemistry about these and other volatile sulphur compounds (VSCs), some are being implicated as positive flavour attributes in some wines.</p>
<h3>Sulphur terminology:</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>Sulphides</strong>: the sulphides and disulphides. (Though the term is loosely used to mean the off-odour VSCs)  </li>
<li><strong>Thiols:</strong>  A group of compounds previously known as mercaptans. These are susceptible to oxidation.</li>
<li><strong>H2S:</strong> hydrogen sulphide</li>
<li><strong>VSC or sulphur-like odours (SLOs):</strong> Any of the sulphur compounds which can contribute positively or cause reductive off-flavour in wine.</li>
</ul>
<p> </p>
<p>VSCs, and their management, are trendy, because they’re not all bad. Something like a bit of the devil you know does you good. There are some important issues for wine flavour and correctness to be understood:</p>
<ol>
<li>VSCs are related to yeast fermentation, with aroma precursors in grapes</li>
<li>Winemaking can clear up some VSCs, but not all</li>
<li>There not all bad.  Some VSCs can be good, actively sought-after, complexing components in a wine</li>
<li>VSCs are thought to be more frequently seen under closures which have a negligible air ingress  </li>
</ol>
<p> </p>
<h3>The Redox Potential</h3>
<p>Wine contains sulphides.  The form that these take changes.  And that form is dependent on how much or how little oxygen is around. </p>
<h6>Think of the tightrope walker’s balancing pole.  At one end is ‘reduction’ and at the other is oxidation.</h6>
<p>Balance is achievable somewhere along the middle section of the pole. With a bit of oxygen a wine may move a bit towards the oxidation end (high redox potential).  With less and less oxygen, a wines moves towards the reduction end (low redox potential).</p>
<p>Depending on various vineyard and winemaking circumstances, the balance may be tipped a little too much one way or the other, i.e. towards oxidation or reduction.</p>
<h6>The lower the redox potential the greater the risk of reduction. The greater the opportunity to form VSCs – good ones and bad ones.</h6>
<p>Adrian Coulter, senior oenologist at the <a href="http://www.awri.com.au" target="_blank">AWRI</a>, specialises in off-odour VSCs. He explains the basics part one &#8211; chemistry: “One of the ways mercaptans are thought to be formed is by reaction of H2S with wine components. Mercaptans can oxidise to disulphides. Disulphides can be reduced back to mercaptans”.</p>
<p>Dr Alan Limmer, owner of a PhD in chemistry and <a href="http://www.stonecroft.co.nz" target="_blank">Stonecroft</a> winery in New Zealand, explains the basics, part two &#8211; smell: “Mercaptans oxidise to disulphides. The sensory impact is very different. Disulphides are 20 to 40 times less smelly than mercaptans. So the sulphides have not gone away, with racking for example, just changed to disulphides which smell less. Disulphides can revert back to mercaptans (under reducing conditions). The smell profile changes as soon as you do this. Mercaptans and H2S stink.”</p>
<h6>The reversibility of most redox reactions is where some of the problems arise. Non-smelly disulphides can be ‘reduced’ back to very smelly thiols.</h6>
<h3>Some of the more common VSCs</h3>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="445">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom"><strong>sulphur containing compound</strong></td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom"><strong>smell</strong></td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom"><strong>threshold μg/litre</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Hydrogen sulphide (H2S)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">rotten eggs, sewers, rubbery</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">0.5</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">diethyl sulphide (DES)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">ether, garlic, rubber</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">0.9</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Diethyl disulphide (DEDS)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">raw onion, garlic,  burnt rubber</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">4.3</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Dimethyl sulphide  (DMS)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">quince, truffle, canned corn, beetroot, molasses</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">10</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Dimethyl disulphide  (DMDS)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">quince, asparagus, cabbage, cooked cabbage</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">15</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Ethanethiol(EtSH)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">raw onion, rubber, burnt match, earthy, fecal</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">1.1</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Methanethiol(MeSH)</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">stagnant water, rotten cabbage, putrefaction </td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">1.5</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="145" valign="bottom">Methionol</td>
<td width="204" valign="bottom">boiled cabbage, potato, meat-like</td>
<td width="96" valign="bottom">
<p align="center">1200</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p> </p>
<h3>The good, the bad and the ugly</h3>
<p>Generally thiols are both bad and ugly.  H2S and mercaptans definitely stink and cause problems in wine.  But, Limmer says: “The sensory effect of them changes markedly as we add on atoms. For example, figuratively speaking from sewer to lavender with a one-atom change. We get complex flavour compounds which have characters that we associate with being positive. Fresh cut hay for example.”</p>
<h6>But there’s no way (yet) to keep the good ones and remove the bad ones.</h6>
<p>So much for the bad and the ugly. Some thiols confer attributes we consider positive flavour aromas. Dimethyl sulphide  (DMS) is a case in point.  Coulter said: “At low concentrations, DMS has a blackcurrant aroma and might contribute toward the body of aged white wines. At higher concentrations it is generally regarded as a fault, with cooked corn, cooked tomato and molasses notes.”</p>
<p>A Rhône study into DMS in syrah and grenache showed DMS was released during bottle ageing, giving flavours of ‘truffle, undergrowth, black olive’ usually associated with maturing wines.</p>
<p>But it’s from sauvignon blanc, notably work done by Professor Denis Dubourdieu in Bordeaux, that much new understanding has arisen.  Sauvignon blanc would be nothing without VSCs, plus, of course, a healthy dollop of that defining green pepper note, methoxypyrazine.</p>
<h3>VSCs and sauvignon blanc</h3>
<table border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="103" valign="top">Theabbreviation</td>
<td width="228" valign="top">The smell</td>
<td width="271" valign="top">The sulphurcontaining compound</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="103" valign="top">4MMP</td>
<td width="228" valign="top">cat urine, broom, boxwood</td>
<td width="271" valign="top">4-mercapto-4-methylpentan-2-one</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="103" valign="top">3MH</td>
<td width="228" valign="top">passion fruit, grapefruit</td>
<td width="271" valign="top">3-mercaptohexan-1-ol</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="103" valign="top">3MHA</td>
<td width="228" valign="top">boxwood, broom, passionfruit</td>
<td width="271" valign="top">3-mercaptohexyl acetate</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="103" valign="top">4MMPOH</td>
<td width="228" valign="top">citrus zest</td>
<td width="271" valign="top">3-Mercato-4-methylpentan-2-ol</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="103" valign="top">BM</td>
<td width="228" valign="top">flint, smoky, mineral</td>
<td width="271" valign="top">Benzenemethanethiol</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>Some of these VSCs, for example, 4MMP, 3MH and 3MHA, also play a role in the flavour of other grape varieties such as chenin blanc,  gewürztraminer, manseng, muscat and riesling. </p>
<h3>The grail of thiol &#8211; control and management</h3>
<p>VSCs are in wine. Full stop. Yeast make H2S and other reductive odours. The amount of nitrogen during fermentation is a fundamental driver of VSC development.  Limmer said: “Throughout fermentation wines accumulate a range of sulphide compounds. What varies is the amounts of these compounds. And the pattern varies from wine to wine. If there is insufficient nitrogen, yeast use sulphur-containing amino acids as a nitrogen source. There also appears to be an underlying yeast genetic link to the sulphide profile.”  So nitrogen is just one of the determining components.   </p>
<p>Keeping yeast happily fed with nitrogen keeps down the volume of VSCs.  Aerating wine oxidises mercaptans to disulphides, and ‘blows off’ H2S, which is oxidised to elemental sulphur.  Regularly stirring lees avoids reducing conditions building up.  Leaving lees without stirring builds up reducing conditions.</p>
<p>Copper sulphate fining can remove H2S and, to a certain extent, mercaptans, but will not touch the disulphides. Coulter said: “You have to create reducing conditions to get disulphides back to mercaptans.  Then you can copper fine. If a wine is in barrel, put it in tank, add SO2, wait a week and do a copper trial.”</p>
<h6>Additionally, copper sulphate fining doesn’t distinguish between the desirable thiols and the undesirable ones.  It takes them all.</h6>
<p>Prevention is always better than cure.  Professor Dr Doris Rauhut, specialist in off flavours in wine at <a href="http://www.campus-geisenheim.de" target="_blank">Geisenheim Research Centre</a> said: “Bad thiols mask the good ones. If you can minimise the bad ones, the good ones are more noticeable. Positive thiols occur in precursors (in the grape) which are not volatile. They are released during yeast activity.  </p>
<p>“It’s often better to avoid the development of bad thiols early enough, then you don’t need further treatment in the wine” such as copper fining. This way the overall flavour of some varieties can be optimised. </p>
<p>Rauhut is working on early detection systems so that with the right yeast strain and optimal initial nutrient composition the fermentation can be controlled early to prevent off flavour VSCs from forming. Leaving the good ones on centre stage.</p>
<h3>Genie in the bottle</h3>
<p>While aeration and copper sulphate fining are useful tools for bulk wine, once the wine is bottled chemical reactions don’t stop.  They are dependent on the redox potential – how much oxygen is available post bottling, or can ingress post bottling, for the oxidation of smelly thiol back to non-smelly disulphide.  They’re also dependent on the amount of reducing agent – free SO2.</p>
<p>In the opposite vein, if non-smelly disulphides are bottled these are then free to reduce back to smelly mercaptans. (under reducing conditions).  Changes keep going over time, which explains why some wines are clean and fresh, fine and dandy one moment, but 12 to 24 months later, under reducing conditions, smelly thiols have taken over the front seat.</p>
<p>It’s not just the aroma that’s affected. Limmer said: “The biggest effect of VSCs is on the palate. Sulphide components affect the palate more than the aroma. In whites, the palate is shortened, with a clunky, hard, bitter, finish. The wine doesn’t finish in accordance to expectation.</p>
<p>“In good reds there is a silky integration of structural tannin. When sulphides are on top of this, the tannins get hard, sometimes with a green tannin edge. When you take out the sulphur, the velvety texture of tannin comes through again, which is how the winemaker intended.”</p>
<h3>Desperately seeking VSCs</h3>
<p>A number of Australian producers are looking to gain complexity in their wines by retaining some of these VSCs.  Steve Webber, manager and winemaker at <a href="http://www.debortoli.com.au" target="_blank">De Bortoli </a>said he’s looking for “minerality, texture and the right kind of mercaptans”.  He said it’s about “extracting the right phenolics from the stems and the skins – sulphur-containing amino acids.”</p>
<p>But get this wrong you lose mineral definition on the palate and you get bad mercaptans. “Good mercaptans” he said “highlight mineral, flinty, gunsmoke characters” in sauvignon blanc.  He also talked of the mealy, mineral characters he’s looking for in chardonnay. </p>
<h3>The six million dollar question &#8211; are screwcaps implicated? </h3>
<p>This is emotive and politically charged territory. The arguments currently revolve around air ingress, which is not necessarily a closure-specific aspect, and there is not yet a definitive answer.</p>
<p>Limmer said: “When the wine is bottled the compounds (disulphides) are still in there, you just can’t see them. Over time they break down and revert (reduce) to thiols.  There is an accumulation of smelly thiols in bottle.  And we’re seeing a difference under screwcap and cork. The same problem has been created under cork by sealing the top of the cork. Trials show the biggest problem is in wine sealed under ampoule.  It is suggested to be an oxygen ingress issue, but we don’t know this for certain.”</p>
<p>At the Geisenheim Research Centre in Germany, closure specialist Dr Rainer Jung said: “Our experience is that it hasn’t happened here.  We have used screwcaps since the 1970s for experimental wines and I never had the problem that wine with screwcap has a reductive character.”</p>
<p>Jung speculated why, saying: “In Germany few people put inert gas in the headspace so there is more oxygen in the headspace. In the first year of storage the loss of SO2 is little bit higher for screwcap-bottled wine because of the bigger headspace (in comparison to cork). Except if you add CO2 or nitrogen in the headspace. And it equalises after a time because screwcap is more dense.”</p>
<p>Coulter said: “Winemakers work hard to avoid sulphur off-odours, however, given that we don’t yet understand all the reactions that occur and the factors that influence them, the formation of these compounds is sometimes beyond winemakers’ control.”</p>
<h3>In the end</h3>
<p>VSCs are the new frontier of winemaking.  We don’t yet know how to keep the good ones and remove the bad ones. We don’t know how much oxygen is just the right amount, but it varies with grape variety, viticulture and winemaking. We don’t know what is a good closure.  And we don’t know how much VSC is a good thing or how to keep it at an optimum level in bottle.  It’s a little akin to the volatile acidity issue or the brett issue, where a little bit can add complexity and too much is a fault. And views on when one moves from good to bad vary with the individual.</p>
<p><strong>Excess sulphur dioxide is not considered to be an off-odour VSC</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>SO2 is an antimicrobial and antioxidant.</li>
<li>SO2 is not a sulphide.</li>
<li>Enough needs to be added to prevent the wine from oxidising, but not so much as to destroy flavour.</li>
<li>Too much free SO2 smells sulphury, like burnt match, a sharp, acrid smell.</li>
<li>However, being a reducing agent SO2 can help break down non-smelly disulphides to smelly thiols.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Light-struck wines?</title>
		<link>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/light-struck-wines/</link>
		<comments>http://www.winewisdom.com/articles/techie/light-struck-wines/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Jul 2009 13:58:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sally</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Technical themes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[amino acids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bottles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mercaptans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[off flavour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reductive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thiol]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.winewisdom.com/?p=609</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We are used to being star struck, but what about our beers and wines being light-struck? What degree of fault is this?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>A version of this article first appeared in Harpers Wine and Spirit, March 2006, updated July 2009.</em></p>
<p>Light is well known to promote chemical changes in foodstuffs.</p>
<p>Brewers have know about the flavour impact of light on beer for many years.  It&#8217;s widely reported in the beer industry that beer goes &#8217;skunky&#8217; when it&#8217;s exposed to light, even just in the time it takes you to nurse your beer on a lazy summer&#8217;s afternoon. </p>
<p>Beer off flavour in the presence of light was noted as long ago as 1875, which is why, until the marketeers got involved, pretty much all beer was bottled in dark glass, amber having been found to be the best at filtering out most of the harming wavelengths.  </p>
<p>For wines, it is much more of an issue for whites and rosés. In reds the high tannin content offers a protective veil, binding riboflavin (more below).  And the issue can pretty much be avoided by using amber bottles, but with the marketing of any product, many considerations are important, not least the packaging, and we are seeing an increasing number of packaging options including clear glass, in both the beer and wine aisles.</p>
<p>A photochemical reaction occurs in both beer and wine. The responsible light wavelengths are between 350-500 nm, but activity is noted to peak at 370 and 440 nm, so in the near-ultraviolet and part of the visible wavelengths. Amber bottles filter out 97-98% of these wavelengths, which is why they&#8217;re the best. Dark green glass filters out just 63% of these critical wavelengths, while white flint (clear) glass filters a meagre 10%, so it&#8217;s only when we put beer and wine into clear glass (either bottles for the shop or pints/wine glasses for the garden) that the light degradation issue arises.</p>
<p>Light penetrating the glass excites riboflavin (vitamin B2, present in beer in concentrations around 1mg/litre, and in wine at concentrations at 0.4mg/litre), which acts as a catalyst, cleaving the compounds responsible for the classic bitter flavours in beer.</p>
<p>In wine, riboflavin, found naturally in must, reacts with cysteine and methionine (amino acids). Wine naturally contains 1-4g/l of amino acids. This reaction forms hydrogen sulphide and mercaptans, notably 3-methyl-2-butene-1-thiol (MBT).  MBT is the skunky thiol (mercaptan), smelling pungently of leek, onion, cooked cabbage, wet wool, soy etc. It is highly flavour and aroma active, and humans can smell it at concentrations similar to TCA, namely about 4 ng/l. In pale beer concentrations as low as 1ng/l can make the beer unpalatable. </p>
<p>Paul Hegarty, head of communications for Coors brewers, has 15 years technical experience for brewers where &#8217;sunstruck&#8217; was high on the agenda. He was prosaic about the issue for beer, saying &#8221;light struck has a skunky character, and rubbery &#8211; the flavour of beer when you&#8217;re sitting in the garden on a sunny afternoon.  Experts might define it as a fault, but consumers might quite like it.  It reminds them of sunny holidays.&#8221;  </p>
<p>Dr Ellen Norman, head of  analytical development and Brewing Research International said: &#8220;Research has suggested that consumers do not agree on whether they view lightstruck as a negative flavour in beer &#8211; some actually prefer it. We have also seen studies where consumers are unable to pick up differences between a beer before and after the beer has sat in the light.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, hop cones can be extracted using supercritical CO2 (of late renowned in the wine industry for reducing TCA levels in cork granules). The MBT-forming compounds undergo another process to make them light-stable, enabling the resulting beer to be stored safely in clear glass.  It is thought the number of brands produced using these processed hop products is relatively low.</p>
<h2>Wine&#8217;s propensity to reductive flavours</h2>
<p>But wine never got that &#8217;skunky&#8217; aroma. Peter Godden, group manager of industry development and support, at AWRI, said: &#8220;the formation of lightstruck flavour is exacerbated by low oxygen in both beer and wine, where the wine already has a propensity to develop reductive characters, but the reasons for this are different for beer and wine, because the compounds thought to be responsible in beer do not exist in wine.  However, lees-aged sparkling wine may be an exception, containing more methionine, and other compounds, than other wines, and so may therefore be susceptible to formation of lightstruck flavour through a mechanism that is similar to that in beer.&#8221;</p>
<p>We know some grape varieties and wine styles are more susceptible to reductive characters than others. Not every wine reacts the same way.  It also depends on how the wine is made, and how many amino acids it contains. Given the right (or wrong) light conditions, mercaptans develop. Gerd Stepp, who was winemaker for Marks and Spencer at the time (now consulting to them), explained: &#8220;mercapans are relevant in winemaking.  A lot of the precursor in wine is hydrogen disulphide (H2S). H2S has a high threshold, but it can continue to mercaptans, and these have a low threshold [4 ng/l].  So tiny amounts of H2S, almost undetectable, [can go into the bottle] but once the bottle is closed, the wine can develop hints of mercaptan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the case of lightstruck cysteine and methionine amino acids come from yeast autolysis, the time spent on lees. Thus it is not so common to find champagne in clear glass. For wine with low amino acid content, so without lees contact, the chance for wine  to get lightstruck is much smaller. But, Stepp added: &#8220;You taste it much more easily in aromatic or neutral white wine, onion flavours come through.  With red wines there is more air, oak, open rackings, so H2S is lower.&#8221;</p>
<p>Paolo Bisol of Ruggeri said: &#8220;Our rosé has been in clear glass since 1950, but pinot bianco and pinot nero are less sensitive.  It might be better in dark glass, but you can see the colour. However, it is important for prosecco to be in dark glass because prosecco is sensitive to light.  It is light, fresh, young and fruity.&#8221; </p>
<h2>Sparklers</h2>
<p>Wines such as traditional method sparklers, with their long lees ageing and consequently high amino acid content are susceptible to light struck.  Jean-Baptiste Lécaillon, director of vineyards and wines, and chef de caves at Champagne Louis Roederer said: &#8220;amino-acids such as cysteine are very important in wine as they are responsible for aromatic structure of the wines. In the case of sparkling, a large part of the aromatic profile is due to autolysis of yeast proteins. During the autolysis, some enzymatic reactions separate the proteins into thousands of amino-acids that are aromatic and responsible for the &#8220;yeasty&#8221;, &#8220;nutty&#8221; characters.&#8221;</p>
<p>He offered a number of solutions.  &#8220;Our only focus is to protect the wine from UV. You can do it by using green bottles that filter 92% of the UV, which is enough to protect the wine during a reasonable sun exposure. A strong sun exposure would be bad for any compounds of the wine&#8230;. so it is to be avoided.  For Cristal we protect the clear bottles with coloured cellophane. This cellophane is specially designed to filter 98% of the UV, which means, if the bottles stay wrapped, it is better protected than a green bottle. This is why we add in all our cases of Cristal a leaflet which recommends keeping the cellophane until the last moment.&#8221;  Of course this doesn&#8217;t mean the retailer or consumer will keep the cellophane on. The bottle looks pretty stylish without the foil, even with a warning note.</p>
<h2>Marks &amp; Spencer</h2>
<p>Marks &amp; Spencer use no clear glass at all for their wine range.  Five or six years ago all the wines were moved to green or amber glass. Stepp said: &#8220;If wine is in a presentation box then it might be in clear glass e.g. champagne, but the box protects the wine.&#8221;</p>
<p>But it&#8217;s not always  easy to get the most protective colour of glass. Stepp said: &#8220;UVAG green [a type of bottle colour] has a higher UV protective quality, they use a different oxide for colouring. But it is limited by availability, so we have to see if we can find it on the local market, and if not we go with the normal green.&#8221; He said it costs too much to transport empty UVAG bottles to the country of bottling.</p>
<p>The M&amp;S policy makes it difficult to draw attention to their rosé wines, which many other retailers and brand owners market in clear glass to draw attention to their attractive colour and mood suggestions.  The M&amp;S technical team insist on green glass to protect the wine, and this outweighs any marketing considerations. To signify rosé to consumers, the bottles all have overtly pink labels and distinctive pink capsules of the same hue to illustrate the wine&#8217;s tint.</p>
<p>Stepp said: &#8220;Commercially and presentationally it is quite a challenge. The rosé wine colour is less visible, and the colour of rosé is one of the key features of selling a rosé. Green glass is less attractive.&#8221;</p>
<h2>Clear glass coating</h2>
<p>There has been some experimentation with coatings over clear glass which filter the UV and allow the presentational benefits of clear glass. Godden said: &#8220;In 2001 we conducted a trial using a clear plasticised coating for the outer surface of clear glass bottles. Its purpose was to block UV light from damaging wine. A chardonnay wine was packaged in coated bottles, and also in the same bottle without the coating. The bottles were then exposed to UV light (approximately 50 cm from the light source of approximately 360 nm) for 21 days.</p>
<p>&#8220;During sensory evaluation the wine in the coated bottles was rated higher for freshness and for fruit characters, and lower for a whole range of reductive descriptors (reduced sulphur, smoky, burnt rubber, bacon, burnt match, gunsmoke etc.). The results were highly statistically significant &#8211; the coating appeared to work extremely well.&#8221;</p>
<p>Stepp explained why M&amp;S had not pursued this option.  &#8220;A UV protective coating can be applied once the bottle is finished.. The coating has to be completely transparent on clear glass, otherwise it defeats the purpose. But if the coating is 100% clear, its protection only goes to 400nm. So the 440nm peak was not covered.  And to get protection over 400nm, the protective coating becomes coloured.&#8221;</p>
<p>Greater UV protective capabilities give a cloudy quality to the film, which may explain a lack of progression with this technology. Stepp suggested this avenue may still be worth exploring if there is some kind of bottle coating that is an improvement on what&#8217;s currently avail in the industry. </p>
<h2>The in-store environment</h2>
<p>In a store environment under some types of fluorescent lighting wine in clear glass can develop noticeable degradation flavours after just a few hours.  Stepp said: &#8220;Green glass protection is not 100%, so store lighting is also important, as is stock rotation.  It doesn&#8217;t take long for mercaptans to form.  Generally the degradation of quality on shelf in clear glass would be quite high. Rosé is slightly more unstable because colour can turn. We&#8217;ve done a lot of work in store lighting, we&#8217;ve done tests with filters on certain light. We are using lights now that are better. And this is also relevant for other products, chocolate sensitive to light. </p>
<p>Howard Winn, who was quality manager for beers, wines and spirits at Sainsbury&#8217;s, said: &#8220;We have a few wines in flint glass, mainly the usual suspects, rosé, sweet Bordeaux. It is an ongoing project to move away from fluorescent lighting, reducing the lighting in the BWS [beers, wines and spirits] aisles and moving to lower energy lights positioned away from the fixtures.  Deeper steel shelves have also helped reduce the exposure of bottles to light.  Our lighter sherry styles have recently been moved to different glass which offers higher UV protection.  Similarly our rosé Champagne moved to green glass a couple of years ago.  It&#8217;s all about protecting the wine.</p>
<p>Lecaillon was optimistic about the trade&#8217;s level of knowledge: &#8220;there is the question of bottle shops and fridges, It is obvious that if the wine is under full light for a while, there is an important risk of light struck, but I believe the trade is aware of that problem and take all necessary measures to protect the wine.&#8221;</p>
<p>With all the right precautions, light struck need not be a big issue, but the creative tension between brand image and positioning, and technical precision, means the issue is still relevant.  Stepp offers yet another option, saying: &#8220;There is quite a bit of work from our side on the wine making.  If we did progress on clear glass with rosé we would want to make the wines in a way that they are less prone to mercaptans, for example, have less of the amino acids cysteine and methionine; have a slightly faster fermentation, focusing on fresh fruit flavours with less lees contact. Our experiments are ongoing.&#8221;</p>
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