“…With wine, numerous studies have been carried out with non Saccharomyces yeasts, and most have focuses on improving or enriching of aroma profiles, whereas others have focused more on controlling the final product concentration of specific compounds, such as ethanol or acetic acid (Andorrà et al, 2012 ; Rantsiou et al, 2012 ; Medina et al, 2013 ; Contreras et al, 2014 ; Izquierdo Cañas et al, 2014 ; Zara et al, 2014 ; Canonico et al, 2015 , 2016 ; Rodrigues et al, 2016 ). However, fewer studies have been published about fermentation characterization by combining Saccharomyces strains or using uncommon Saccharomyces species (Cheraiti et al, 2005 ; Howell et al, 2006 ; King et al, 2010 ; Arroyo-López et al, 2011 ; Barrajón et al, 2011 ; Saberi et al, 2012 ; Williams et al, 2015 ; Gustafsson et al, 2016 ). Just as some of these investigations have suggested, our results showed that the final product composition of co-fermented musts cannot always be predicted from those of mono-fermentations.…”