red wine chem nemc

52
The Chemistry of Red Wine: pH, SO 2 and Phenolics Al Verstuyft, Ph.D. Al Verstuyft Consulting LLC Fickle Fermenters Wine Club

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Page 1: Red Wine Chem NEMC

The Chemistry of Red Wine:

pH, SO2 and Phenolics

Al Verstuyft, Ph.D.

Al Verstuyft Consulting LLC

Fickle Fermenters Wine Club

Page 2: Red Wine Chem NEMC
Page 3: Red Wine Chem NEMC

What is wine ??????? “...bottled poetry.” Robert Louis Stevenson

“Liquid Music...”

“It puckers your mouth.” –Art Buchwald “the beverage of moderation”

The blood of Christ A fate worse than death!

Susan B. Anthony

Sunshine held together by water -Galileo

The most gentle and

efficaceous of medicines “Wisdom and wit to the wise” -Archimedes

“Wine is proof that God loves us and desires us to be happy.”

Benjamin Franklin

An expression of place

Page 4: Red Wine Chem NEMC
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Maceration

Page 7: Red Wine Chem NEMC

receiving

tank

How red wine is made

complete

(“dry”)

malolactic

fermentation

complete

(“dry”)

malolactic

fermentation

Elevage 6 -24

months

oak flavor extraction,

marriage & integration

mature

wines

fresh

wines

new wine

light,

simple

rich or

heavy

Page 8: Red Wine Chem NEMC
Page 9: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Mosel Cabernet

Riesling Sauvignon

fresh mature

pure sexy

focused fruit integrated voice

beautiful profound

crisp round

loves sunlight loves firelight

Page 10: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Sensible pH “Zones”

3.1 pH

Fresh wine styles

low tannin arrested ageing crisp acid taste

mature wine styles

high tannin guided maturity soft acid taste

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Why do some big red wines fail to age?

• Oxidized flavors (poor reductive strength)

– Vinegar (nail polish, sour finish)

– Aldehyde: sherry, nutty, lacking freshness

– Caramel, pruney, baked, dull

• Over-polymerized tannins (poor structure)

– Dry, grainy, dirty mouthfeel

– Precipitation of structure

– Aromatic disintegration unbalances flavors

Page 15: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Phenolic:

Any compound containing a benzene ring

which carries an -OH.

0H

Page 16: Red Wine Chem NEMC

The stability of anthocyanidins is dependant on pH. At a low pH (acidic conditions), colored anthocyanidins are present, whereas at a higher pH (basic conditions) the colorless chalcones forms are present.

Page 17: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Flavonoid:

Any of the class of three-ringed phenolics

extractable from skins

A C

B

Page 18: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Anthocyanin:

Any of the five red-colored

flavonoid monomers

A C

B

Malvadin, Delphinidin, Peonidin,

Page 19: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Flavilium ion:

Low pH red-colored form

of an anthocyanin

A C

B

15 – 30% visible

at wine pH

Page 20: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Anthocyanin monomers:

Subject to

bisulfite bleaching

A C

B

HSO3-

Page 21: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Good Stuff about monomeric anthocyanins:

• Reactive: capable of improving structure

Bad Stuff:

• Nearly insoluble in 13% alcohol

• Colored only at low pH: 15-30% visible in wine

• Bleachable by SO2

• Vulnerable to attack by enzymes

• Vulnerable to oxidation

Page 22: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Monomer:

A discrete small molecule which can serve

as a building block for a macromolecule

A C

B

A C

B

C4 – C8

Page 23: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Polymer:

A C

B

A C

B

A C

B

A macromolecule created by

linking monomers together.

Page 24: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Tannin:

A C

B

A C

B

A C

B

A polyphenol

with affinity for protein.

Page 25: Red Wine Chem NEMC

+ 02 + H202

0 0H 0 0H

Interpretation of principle of

oxydation of di-phenols Singleton , 1987

Page 26: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Example of polymerative regeneration (Singleton, 1986)

Page 27: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Anthocyanin

(color)

Contains no

vicinal diphenol

(terminates

polymer)

Flavanol

(tannin)

Contains a

vicinal diphenol

(can oxidatively

polymerize)

Building Blocks of Red Wine Structure

Page 28: Red Wine Chem NEMC

A C

B

A C

B

A C

B

A C

B

Polymeric Pigment:

Stable, unbleachable color which

is the basis of refined texture.

Page 29: Red Wine Chem NEMC

The Importance of Color

• Wine appearance itself

• Key indicator of ripeness

• Declines during ripening

• Polymerization chemistry:

pigment is critical to wine texture

Page 30: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Acknowledgements

Clark Smith, WineSmith

Mike Riddle, Fickle Fermenters

Tom Webber, Seguin-Moreau Copperage

George Shanks, Peripolli

U California Davis, Viticulture & Enology Dept.

Napa Valley Community College, V&E Dept.

Page 31: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Q&A

or

Shall We Get a Glass of Wine?

Page 32: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Reading List Technical Concepts in Wine Chemistry, Y. Margalit (1997);

Concepts in Wine Technology, Y. Margalit (200X)

Wine Analysis and Production, B.W. Zoecklin et.al.(1999);

Introduction to Wine Laboratory Practices and Procedures,

J.L. Jacobson (2010).

Wine Science: Principles and Application, R. Jackson (2007) 3rd ed.

Principles and Practices of Winemaking, R.B. Boulton et.al.(1999)

Handbook of Enology, Vol 1(2000a) & 2(2000b), Ribereau et.al

The University Wine Course, M. Baldy (1997)

Encyclopedia The Sotheby’s Wine Encyclopedia , Tim Stevenson (2007)

General An Ideal Wine, David Darlington (2011)

The Judgement, George Taber (2011)

Page 33: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Articles Cited

1. “Vintage Chemistry” S.L. Rovner, C&EN p.30-32 May 1, 2006

2. “The Chemistry of a 90+ Wine” D. Darlington, N.Y. Times p. 36-

39, August 7, 2005

3. “Wine Sniffers Are Inconsistent” K.M. Reese, C&EN p. 44

December 3, 2001

Page 34: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Maximum micro-oxygenation dose in clear red wine

0

1

2

3

4

5

43 45 46 48 50 52 54 55 57 59 61 63 64 66 68 70 72

T° F

ml/

l/m

oTEMPERATURE

as a major limiting factor

Maximum micro-oxygenation dose in clear wine

Page 35: Red Wine Chem NEMC
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Poor anthocyanins lead to long, dry polymers

Color Dryness Softness

salivary protein

Page 37: Red Wine Chem NEMC

High anthocyanins lead to short, soft polymers

Color Softness Longevity Dryness

Page 38: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Flavilium Anthocyanin

520 nm

when protonated

(low pH)

Page 39: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Boulton-modified Somers

• Good measure of visible flavilium at wine pH

• Poor anthocyanin molar estimator

Adams BSA precipitation / FeCl complexing

• Total phenol determination at A510

• Discriminates protein-precipitable polymer

• Good anthocyanin molar estimator

Page 40: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Malvidin-3 Glucoside Ionization

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

pH

% f

lav

iliu

m

Dilute Aqueous

13% EtOH

2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0

Molar error at pH 3.6

can exceed 50%

Page 41: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Adams method for molar estimation

of ionizable anthocyanin

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

pH

A 52

0

Malvidin

Delphinidin

2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0

FeCl A510 luminescence

at pH 4.9 replaces

Folin-Ciaocalteu

Baseline

polymer

subtracted

Increase at

pH shift =

flavilium

Page 42: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Maturity criteria

for optimum wine quality

• Berry inspection and tasting

• Skin anthocyanins (A520)

• Co-factor potential (A280 and A365)

• Browning from rot or oxidation (A420)

Page 43: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Anthocyanin

(color)

Apolar rings

(Sparingly soluble)

Positively

Charged

(repel each other,

so cannot stack)

Tannins

Uncharged

(can stack

between anthocyanins

to create colloids)

Co-Pigmentation during Red Wine Fermentation

Flavanols

(A280)

& Super-Cofactor Flavonols

(A280 & A365)

120o bond angle

A365

Page 44: Red Wine Chem NEMC

420 nm

Oxidative dimer cross-linkages:

correlates with browning,

i.e. general visible light

absorption by polyphenols

Page 45: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Winegrape Phenolic Maturity (Northern Hemisphere)

“polymeric” pigment

(A520)

July August September October

bleachable anthocyanins

(A520) Flavonol super-cofactors (A365) ??

oxidative dimers (A420)

Page 46: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Maturity criteria

for optimum wine quality

• Berry inspection and tasting

• Skin anthocyanins (A520)

• Browning potential (A280 and A365)

• Browning from rot or oxidation (A420)

• Hue = Browning from rot or oxidation (A420)

decline in A520

• Brix x berry weight detects sampling errors

Page 47: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Viewing List

A Walk in the Clouds (1995)

– K. Reeves, A. Sanchez-Gijon, A. Quinn

Sideways (2004)

- P. Giamatti, T. Hayden Church, V. Madsen

A Good Year (2006)

– R. Crowe, M. Cotillard, A. Finney

Bottleshock (2008)

– C. Pine, A. Rickman, B. Pullman

Page 48: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Listener’s

background

expectation of

musical genres

Performer Composer

Instrumental

Composition

MUSICAL APPRECIATION

STYLE

Page 49: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Taster’s

background

expectation of

historical genres

Origin Winemaker

Varietal

Composition

WINE APPRECIATION

STYLE

Page 51: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Madrona Vineyards

Page 52: Red Wine Chem NEMC

Selected anthocyanidins and their substitutions

Anthocyanidin R3' R4' R5' R3 R5 R6 R7

Aurantinidin −H −OH −H −OH −OH −OH −OH

Cyanidin −OH −OH −H −OH −OH −H −OH

Delphinidin −OH −OH −OH −OH −OH −H −OH

Europinidin −OCH3 −OH −OH −OH −OCH3 −H −OH

Luteolinidin −OH −OH −H −H −OH −H −OH

Pelargonidin −H −OH −H −OH −OH −H −OH

Malvidin −OCH3 −OH −OCH3 −OH −OH −H −OH

Peonidin −OCH3 −OH −H −OH −OH −H −OH

Petunidin −OH −OH −OCH3 −OH −OH −H −OH

Rosinidin −OCH3 −OH −H −OH −OH −H −OCH3