Flor yeast immobilization in microbial biocapsules for Sherry wine production: microvinification approach

View/ Open
Author
Pastor-Vega, Noelia
Carbonero-Pacheco, Juan
Mauricio, Juan Carlos
Moreno, Juan
García-Martínez, Teresa
Nitin, Nitin
Ogawa, Minami
Rai, Rewa
Moreno-García, Jaime
Publisher
SpringerDate
2023Subject
Sherry wineFlor yeast
Flor biofilm
Fortification
Microbial biocapsules
Glycerol consumption preacclimatization
METS:
Mostrar el registro METSPREMIS:
Mostrar el registro PREMISMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Sherry wine is a pale-yellowish dry wine produced in Southern-Spain which features are mainly due to biological aging when the metabolism of biofilm-forming yeasts (flor yeasts) consumes ethanol (and other non-fermentable carbon sources) from a previous alcoholic fermentation, and produces volatile compounds such as acetaldehyde. To start aging and maintain the wine stability, a high alcohol content is required, which is achieved by the previous fermentation or by adding ethanol (fortification). Here, an alternative method is proposed which aims to produce a more economic, distinctive Sherry wine without fortification. For this, a flor yeast has been pre-acclimatized to glycerol consumption against ethanol, and later confined in a fungal-based immobilization system known as “microbial biocapsules”, to facilitate its inoculum. Once aged, the wines produced using biocapsules and free yeasts (the conventional method) exhibited chemical differences in terms of acidity and volatile concentrations. These differences were evaluated positively by a sensory panel. Pre-acclimatization of flor yeasts to glycerol consumption was not successful but when cells were immobilized in fungal pellets, ethanol consumption was lower. We believe that immobilization of flor yeasts in microbial biocapsules is an economic technique that can be used to produce high quality differentiated Sherry wines.
