The occurrence of a substantial pool of cysteinylated and glutathionylated forms of polyfunctional thiols has been evidenced for several dual-purpose hop varieties, and so is the ability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast to release free thiols from these forms through fermentation. The present work aimed to investigate the effect of temperature, wort density, maturation time, and strain on the efficiency of free thiol release by S. cerevisiae yeasts. Model media at 12, 15, or 17°P were spiked with three cysteinylated (Cys-) or three glutathionylated (G-) sulfanylalkyl alcohols (Cys-or G-3-sulfanylpentan-1-ol, 3-sulfanyl-4-methylpentan-1-ol, and 3sulfanylhexan-1-ol), fermented for 7 days at 18, 24, and 28 °C, and kept at 4 °C for varying number of days. The released sulfanylalkyl alcohols and their corresponding acetates were extracted with a Ag-ion SPE cartridge and analyzed by gas chromatography−pulsed-flame photometric detection. The wort density and yeast strain greatly affected the acetate/alcohol ratio. This ratio varied from 1 to 80% according to the yeast strain and was at its highest at 17°P and 24 °C. Maturation appeared as the crucial step for free thiol excretion from yeast cells (no thiol was recovered in the fermented worts without maturation). Among the five yeasts tested, the yeast strain SafAle K-97 released the highest level of sulfanylalkyl alcohols into the medium (up to 0.45% of the added cysteinylated adducts and 0.08% of the glutathionylated adducts), whereas S-33 or S-04 should be preferred when release of esters is sought out (release efficiencies up to 0.35% from cysteinylated adducts and 0.02% from glutathionylated adducts are observed if both the alcohol and its acetate are considered).
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