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Impact of Brettanomyces on Wine Quality. Lucy Joseph Department of Viticulture and Enology U.C. Davis. Introduction. Brettanomyces is considered to be the primary spoilage yeast in finished wine
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Impact of Brettanomyces on Wine Quality Lucy Joseph Department of Viticulture and Enology U.C. Davis
Introduction • Brettanomyces is considered to be the primary spoilage yeast in finished wine • However, many consumers and critics like the complexity that is derived from Brett growth in wine
Compounds Produced by Brett in Wine • Signature spoilage compounds - ethyl phenols, vinyl phenols • Other spoilage compounds – acetic acid, ethyl acetate, fatty acid, carboxylic acid • Compounds that are positive – Esters, higher alcohols, terpenes
Initial Screen • Defined medium was used • Supplemented with amino acids • All strains will make 4EP and 4EG with coumaric and ferulic acids
Selection for Test in Wine • Descriptors, intensity, and likability used to score strains • Out of the initial 83 that were successfully screened in the initial screen, 17 were chosen as “positive” and 5 as “negative”
SPME-GCMS • These strains were also screened chemically • Used defined medium supplemented with • Aromatic amino acids • Cinnamic acids and aromatic amino acids • Goal was to identify strains that produced low negative characters
Important Compounds That Determine DifferencesWith Amino Acids
Relative Concentration of Compounds in “Most Liked” Strains – Amino Acid Supplemented • Phenethyl acetate – Sweet, honey, floral rosy • Ethyl decanoate – sweet, waxy, fruity, apple • Ethyl hexanoate – sweet, fruity, pineapple, waxy green banana • Ethyl octanoate – fruity, wine, waxy, sweet • 2-phenylethanol – floral, rose, rose water • Octanoic acid – fatty, rancid oil, cheesy • Ethyl acetate – nail polish remover, solvent • 3-methylbutanoic acid – sour, stinky feet, sweaty, cheese • Decanoic acid – rancid, sour, fatty, citrus • 2-phenylacetaldehyde – honey, sweet, rose, green, grassy
Important Compounds That Determine DifferencesWith Cinnamic and Amino Acids
Relative Concentration of Compounds in “Most Liked” Strains – Amino Acid and Phenolic Acid Supplemented • Ethyl octanoate – fruity, wine, waxy, sweet • 2-phenylethanol – floral, rose, rose water • Ethyl decanoate – sweet, waxy, fruity, apple • 4-ethylphenol – medicinal, Band-Aid, barnyard • 4-ethylguaiacol – spicy, smoky, phenolic, clove • Octanoicacid – fatty, rancid oil, cheesy • Decanoicacid – rancid, sour, fatty, citrus • Phenethyl acetate – Sweet, honey, floral rosy • Ethyl acetate – nail polish remover, solvent • Decanol – waxy, floral, orange, sweet
Wine Descriptions (under $25) • rose petal and earl grey tea, baking spices • pepper, baking spices, flowers • violets and spices • bittersweet iris-like, brioche as well as butter • black licorice and roasted herbs • mocha and anise • spice, licorice and wild bush, mineral • peppery spice, dust • fruit with nutty, savory complexity • popcorn, brioche, grilled nuts • smoke-accented aromas, cola and spices
Wine Descriptions ($25 to $50) • forest floor, black pepper, moss covered tree bark and game • potpourri and orange zest, with a subtle smoky overtone; spicy floral, loamy earth, cedar and savory herb • Sappy, spice-accented, medicinal cherry note, with clinging spicecake and cracked pepper • musky aromas, smoked meat, bacon fat and licorice and chocolate flavors • smoky, savory; smoke and bacon with chocolaty finish; violets and baking spices • bread crust, coffee and dark chocolate and a touch of spices • crushed rock, camphor, and a hint of pen ink • smoked meat, cracked pepper, tobacco and masses of crushed stone / mineral • creosote, minerals, and toasty oak • incense and rose oil; sandalwood and tea leaf
Wine Descriptions ($50 to $75) • black truffles, roasted meats, charcuterie, incense, roasted herbs and licorice; spice-accented aromas and potpourri, hint of spicecake; charcoal notes, long, tarry finish • graphite, savory herbs, white flowers, orange peel, spices, nutmeg, clove; mineral and cedar; violet, grilled meat and tar, cassis and licorice • bay leaf, sage, anise, toast and chocolate, mineral and earth; roasted coffee, herb; earthy black currant and fig, and charcoal-infused fruit • exotic, smoky oak; sage and underbrush, even a touch of gun oil
Using Descriptors • Wines were purchased from an online site by searching using descriptors from the aroma wheel • These wines were tested for the presences of microbes by plating, microscopy, and qPCR • Wines were also analyzed for 4EP and 4EG
What We Found • 35 wines were selected • 17 had viable lactic acid bacteria by plating (49%) • 9 had viable Brett by plating • An additional 5 had Brett by qPCR • Another 4 had Brett by 4EP and 4EG levels • A total of 18 showed evidence of Brett (51%) • All of the wines were positive for microbial contamination