4.6 Article

Evaluating the Potential for Smoke from Stubble Burning to Taint Grapes and Wine

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26247540

Keywords

grapevines; particulate matter; smoke taint; volatile phenols

Funding

  1. Department of Primary Industries and Regions South Australia as part of the South Australian Wine Industry Development Scheme
  2. AWRI and through funding from the Australian Government Department of Agriculture
  3. Water and the Environment as part of its Rural R&D for Profit program and Wine Australia

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The study found that smoke from barley straw combustion can lead to increased volatile phenols in grapes, affecting their composition, while combustion of pea stubble only resulted in minor smoke effects on grapes. However, wine made from grapes exposed to burning pea stubble did show a slight smoke aroma and burnt rubber flavor, providing sensory evidence of smoke taint.
It has been well established that bushfire/wildfire smoke can taint grapes (and therefore wine), depending on the timing and duration of exposure, but the risk of smoke contamination from stubble burning (a practice employed by some grain growers to prepare farmland for sowing) has not yet been established. This study exposed excised bunches of grapes to smoke from combustion of barley straw and pea stubble windrows to investigate the potential for stubble burning to elicit smoke taint. Increased levels of volatile phenols (i.e., chemical markers of smoke taint) were detected in grapes exposed to barley straw smoke (relative to control grapes), with smoke density and the duration of smoke exposure influencing grape volatile phenols. However, the sensory panel did not perceive wine made from grapes exposed to low-density smoke to be tainted, despite the presence of low levels of syringol providing compositional evidence of smoke exposure. During the pea stubble burn, grapes positioned amongst the burning windrows or on the edge of the pea paddock were exposed to smoke for ~15-20 and 30-45 min, respectively, but this only resulted in 1 mu g/kg differences in the cresol and/or syringol concentrations of smoke-affected grapes (and 1 mu g/L differences for wine), relative to controls. A small, but significant increase in the intensity of smoke aroma and burnt rubber flavor of wine made from the grapes positioned amongst the burning pea stubble windrows provided the only sensory evidence of any smoke taint. As such, had vineyards been located immediately downwind from the pea stubble burn, it is unlikely that there would have been any smoke contamination of unharvested grapes.

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