11. Wine Components Flashcards

1
Q

What does Volatile Acidity refer to?

When does it become a fault?

What aroma is associated with this fault?

A

Mainly refers to acetic acid, which reacts with alcohol = ethyl acetate.

Considered a fault when present in excess.

Vinegar (acetic acid) / Nail Polish Remover (ethyl acetate)

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2
Q

How much of wine is water?

A

Approx. 85%, depending on abv / RS / other factors.

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3
Q

What are the 4 components of Vinente Ferreira’s model for wine aromas?

A

1) compounds common to all wine (sweet, pungent aromas produced by fermentation -e.g. ethanol)
2) impact aromas (specific aromas that can be recognized – ex. rotundone (pepperiness) in Syrah)
3) contributory aromas (aroma compounds that are normally imperceptable but contribute when combined with other compounds – ex. vanillin from new oak)
4) nonvolatile wine matrix (nonvolatile components of wine that affect the way the aromatic compounds are sensed)

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4
Q

What are the 7 main components of wine?

A

1) water
2) alcohol
3) acids
4) wine aromatics
5) residual sugar(s)
6) glycerol
7) phenolics

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5
Q

What are the EU classifications for sweetness levels in still wine?

A

1) dry / sec / trocken = up to 4 g/l
2) medium-dry / demi-sec / halbtrocken = 4-12 g/l
3) medium / medium-sweet / moelleux / lieblich = 12-45 g/l
4) sweet / doux / süss = at least 45 g/l

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6
Q

How is acidity most commonly measured / expressed and what is the normal range?

A
  • in “total acidity” (sum of all acids) and expressed “g/l” in tartaric acidity
  • normal range is 5.5-8.5 g/l
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7
Q

What are methoxypyrazines?

A

Aroma compound found in e.g. Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, and give grassy, green bell pepper aroma

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8
Q

What are the 4 main categories of aromas found in wine?

Give 1 example of each:

A

1) Aromas from grapes, e.g. Methoxypyrazines
2) Aroma-precursors present in must (aromas created by fermentation) e.g. Thiols
3) Aromas originating from fermentation + its by-products e.g. Diacetyl
4) Aromas from other sources e.g. Vanillin from oak

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9
Q

What are terpenes?

Identify 2 specfic examples and describe how they manifest themselves:

A

An aromatic compound released during fermentation giving floral, “grapey” aromas

e.g. Linalool + Geraniol = grapey aromas in Muscat.

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10
Q

What effect do tannins have on the palate?

What factors can influence the effect of tannins (3)?

How does tannin quality affect the quality of a wine?

A
  • Tannins bind with proteins in saliva, producing the drying sensation on the palate.
  • Perception of tannins can be influenced by other compounds in wine, e.g. RS can make them seem softer / high acidity can make them feel astringent.
  • Tannins can react w/compounds during winemaking + maturation, changing their composition.
  • Unripe tannins = bitter, undesirable.

Level/ripeness of tannins = key part of quality in red wines.

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11
Q

What kind of scale is pH measured on and what is a typical range for wine?

What are some benefits of having a low pH (4)?

A
  • measured on logarithmic, inverse scale
  • 3-4 is typically the range
  • increases microbial stability
  • increases effectiveness of SO2
  • gives red wines a bright colour
  • enhances aging pontential
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12
Q

What is glycerol?

Where does it come from (2)?

What does it contribute to the wine (3)?

A
  • 3rd most abundant part of wine after water and alcohol
  • derived from sugars in grapes, esp. Botrytis-affected + carbonic wines e.g. Tokaji, Beaujolais
  • contributes smoothness to texture of wine, perception of fullness of body, slightly sweet taste.
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13
Q

What are the 2 principal acids in wine and where do they come from?

What are 2 secondary acids in wine and where do they come from?

A

Tartaric and malic – both come from grape itself

Lactic and Acetic – produced in malolactic conversion or fermentation.

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14
Q

What is acetaldehyde?

AKA

What is its effect and where is it commonly found?

A
  • aroma occurring in wine due to oxidation of ethanol
  • AKA “ethanal”
  • masks fruit aromas and regarded as fault in most wines (nutty, briny aroma of Fino sherry)
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15
Q

What are phenolics?

What are 2 specific examples?

A

Important group of compounds occuring in skins, stems and seeds of grapes.

  • anthocyanins + tannins.
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16
Q

Give 3 examples of typical wines that will have distinctly different levels of RS (and their sugar content in g/L):

A

Dry wine (e.g. Chablis) : ~2-3g/l

Sauternes: ~150g/l

PX Sherry: ~400g/l

17
Q

What is the link between total acidity and pH?

Why is this a link and not an exact correlation?

A

Linked but not correlated due to buffering effect of other mols. e.g. Potassium

– a wine with high acidity would normally have a low pH and vice versa.

18
Q

What are thiols?

Identify a specfic example and describe it:

A

Aromatic compounds released during fermentation (aroma precursors)

e.g. 4MMP = box tree aromas in Sauvignon Blanc

19
Q

What are 2 examples of aromas from sources other than the grapes and fermentation?

How do they manifest themselves in wine?

A

1) vanillin - gives aromas of vanilla, comes from aging wine in new oak
2) eucalyptol - abosorbed by waxy layer of skins from nearby eucalyptus trees

20
Q

How are acidity and perception of dryness related?

E.g. that illustrates this point:

A
  • Perception of acidity + dryness is affected by level of acidity + balance btw/acidity and RS.
    e. g. some German Rieslings taste dry despite containing significant levels of RS (~9g/l) because the acidity is elevated.
21
Q

What are 2 examples of aroma compounds that originate in the grapes and what do they smell like?

Give 2 examples of varietals that contain these:

A

1) methoxypyrazines = grassy, green bell pepper; Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon.
2) rotundone = black/white pepper; Syrah, Grüner Veltliner.

22
Q

What does acidity contribute to the structure of a wine (2)?

How does high/low acidity affect a wine’s profile (3)?

e.g. of how specific acidities affect the wine’s profile:

A

Acidity makes wine refreshing / balances out fruit concentration and (if present) RS.

  • High acidity makes a wine seem “leaner” on the palate.
  • Excessive acid creates tartness.
  • Deficit of acid creates flabiness.
    e. g. higher levels of malic acid = firm acidity which contributes to style, e.g. cool climate Chardonnay where MLC has been blocked.
23
Q

What is the predominant type of alcohol in wine and when is it formed?

What does this contribute to the wine (3)?

A

Ethanol – formed during fermentation

  • sense of sweetness / bitterness.
  • oral warmth.
  • fullness of body + mouthfeel.
24
Q

What is diacetyl?

How does it manifest itself in wine?

A
  • aroma produced during MLF
  • contributes buttery aromas common in rich styles of Chardonnay.
25
Q

What are esters?

What is the most common, what are its characteristics and where is it often found?

A
  • aroma compounds formed through action of yeasts in the fermentation process (responsible for fresh and fruity aromas)
  • the most common is isoamyl acetate (banana), commonly found in Beaujolais Nouveau.
26
Q

What are aroma precursors?

What are 2 examples?

A

Compounds that are not themselves aromatic but are building blocks which become aromatic during fermentation

(ex. thiols and terpenes)

27
Q

What is rotundone?

A

Aroma compound that produces a white/black pepper aroma in wines such as Gruner Veltliner and Syrah.

28
Q

How do high alcohol levels affect the flavor/aroma profile of a wine?

What must a winemaker do to ensure a high quality wine?

A

High abv (>14.5%) reduce volatility of wine aromas, increase sense of bitterness.

Winemakers must ensure wine has sufficient fruit concentration to be in balance w/alcohol.