4.6 Article

Chemical and Physical Implications of the Use of Alternative Vessels to Oak Barrels during the Production of White Wines

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26030554

Keywords

concrete vessels; polyethylene vessels; clay jars; stainless-steel tanks; oval-shaped tanks; Sauvignon Blanc; white wine; aging on lees

Funding

  1. ANID-Chile
  2. [FONDECYT-11160510]
  3. [FONDECYT-1190301]
  4. [FONDEQUIP EQM-140007]
  5. [FONDEQUIP EQM-130129]

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By comparing Sauvignon Blanc wines made with different vessels, it was found that wines produced in concrete vessels had the highest pH and lowest titratable acidity, while wines made in clay jars had the highest turbidity and soluble polysaccharide content. The vessels showed little effect on wine color and phenolic composition, but did impact the content of volatile compounds. Despite differences, all vessels tested were suitable for white wine production based on meeting quality standards for Sauvignon Blanc wines.
Recently, the use of alternative vessels to oak barrels during winemaking has become increasingly popular, but little is known about their impact on the chemical composition of the resulting wines. To address this issue, a Sauvignon Blanc wine was elaborated from the same grape juice by using cylindrical stainless-steel tanks, oval-shaped concrete vessels, oval-shaped polyethylene vessels, and clay jars in triplicate. Each vessel was used for alcoholic fermentation and the aging of wines over its own lees. Wines elaborated in concrete vessels showed the highest pH and the lowest titratable acidity, most likely related to the observed release of inorganic compounds from the concrete walls. Little effect of the vessels was seen on the wine color and phenolic composition. Wines elaborated in clay jars showed the highest turbidity and the highest content of soluble polysaccharides, while those made using cylindrical stainless-steel tanks showed the highest content of volatile compounds. Despite the observed differences, all of the vessels tested seem suitable for white wine production since every wine showed chemical features that corresponded with the quality standards of Sauvignon Blanc wines.

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