Two commercially available maceration enzymes and two enological tannins were tested in Monastrell wines to determine their suitability for improving the chromatic characteristics, colour stability and sensory properties of the resulting wines. The greatest differences for all the wines, when comparing with the control wine, were observed at the beginning of the winemaking process, any differences diminishing in the finished wines. One of the enzymetreated wines was used showed hardly any difference from the control wine, whereas the other enzyme-treated wine showed an improvement in their chromatic and sensory characteristics. The use of two different enological tannins did not provide any improvement in the chromatic and sensory characteristics of the wines, imparting a higher yellow colour and resulting in lower scores in the colour and aroma sensory characteristics, accompanied by a higher astringency, dryness and bitter sensory sensations.
The influence of the oak origin, volume, and age of the barrel on the volatile composition of a red wine after six months of maturation have been studied. Major volatile compounds in wine were determined using liquid-liquid extraction with dichloromethane, and those volatiles being due to the oak were determined by extraction with pentane-ether using deuterated analogues as internal standards. The results show that there is little difference between the volatile composition of wines matured in French oak barrels and those matured in American oak barrels. The concentration of cis-oak lactone was the most significant difference. The greatest instrumental and sensory differences were found between new and used barrels, with important decreases in lactones and vanillin concentration in used barrels. When studying the effect of the volume of the barrel, the characteristics of the wine matured in 220-L new barrels versus those matured in 1000-L new barrels were very different. In new barrels, the larger the volume of the barrel, the lower the concentrations of those compounds responsible for the oaky aroma. These differences were less evident when comparing wines matured in used barrels with different capacities.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.