| Literature DB >> 26675846 |
Rafaela Raposo1, María José Ruiz-Moreno2, Teresa Garde-Cerdán3, Belén Puertas1, José Manuel Moreno-Rojas2, Ana Gonzalo-Diago3, Raúl Guerrero1, Víctor Ortíz2, Emma Cantos-Villar4.
Abstract
This paper reports the use of a grapevine-shoot stilbene extract (Vineatrol®) as a preservative in red wine. Its effectiveness to preserve red wine quality under two different winemaking systems (traditional and Ganimede) was studied at bottling and after twelve months of storage in bottle. Enological parameters, color related parameters, volatile composition, sensory analysis and olfactometric profile were evaluated. At bottling wines treated with Vineatrol showed higher color related parameters and higher score in sensory analysis than those treated with SO2. The use of SO2 increased ester and alcohol volatile compounds in relation to the use of Vineatrol. Wine olfactometric profile was modified by Vineatrol addition. Two new odorant zones with high modified frequency appeared in wines treated with Vineatrol. After 12months of storage in bottle, wines treated with Vineatrol showed parameters related to oxidation. The weak point of the process seemed to be the evolution during the storage in bottle.Entities:
Keywords: Color; Olfactometry; Sensorial; Stilbene; Sulfur dioxide; Volatile compounds
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26675846 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2015.11.102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514