4.7 Article

Colour features and pigment composition of Italian carbonic macerated red wines

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 113, Issue 2, Pages 651-657

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2008.07.055

Keywords

Wine; Carbonic maceration; Anthocyanins; Pyranoanthocyanins; Colour; HPLC/ESI-MS

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Thirty commercially available Italian carbonic macerated young red wines, have been analysed by HPLC-DAD-MS with the aim to characterise their pigment composition and find possible correlations with the colour features evaluated by means of spectrophotometric measurements. The composition in anthocyanin monoglucosides, acetates, p-coumarates as well as that in pyranoanthocyanins and direct and ethyl-bridged adducts with flavanols, was studied. Because of the peculiar maceration process, carbonic macerated wines demonstrated to be qualitatively rich in pyranoanthocyanins and pigment adducts. A number of ethyl-bridged anthocyanin isomers was found, together with significant contents of vitisin A and vitisin B (up to 15.5 mg/L as a sum). Malvidin-3-glc-4-vinylphenol was the main pyranoanthocyanin-vinylphenol adduct (up to 1.10 mg/L). The colour features of the wines were broadly distributed as a consequence of the percentage of carbonic macerated wine present in the marketed product. The statistical treatment of the entire data set revealed that pyranoanthocyanins are positively correlated with colour density (while no correlation was found for monoglucosides) and that direct adducts and/or ethyl-bridged compounds can play a role for what concerns the hue of carbonic macerated wines. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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