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Alan Marks

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Varietal aroma/flavour. herbal, green jammy. Skin tannin quality ... Clean, complex aromas & flavours. Fullness & concentrated flavours ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alan Marks


1
Cool Climate Winemaking Tools
  • Alan Marks
  • Scott Laboratories Ltd.

2
Subtitled
Okay, were really talking about unripe grapes
3
Topics to discuss
  • Chemical Deacidification
  • Acid reducing yeast strains
  • Co-inoculation (yeast mlf bacteria)
  • Red wine options
  • Tannin use abuse
  • Rosé production
  • Sparkling Wine

4
Defining Grape Quality
  • Varietal aroma/flavour
  • herbal, green gtgtgtgt jammy
  • Skin tannin quality
  • harsh, astringent gtgtgtgtgtsoft, supple
  • Seed tannin development
  • Brix, total acidity, pH
  • Fruit condition and berry size

5
Defining Wine Quality
  • Clean, complex aromas flavours
  • Fullness concentrated flavours
  • Balance of acid/alcohol/residual sweetness
  • Refinement, lack of harshness, astringency or
    bitterness
  • Colour quality (intensity hue) in reds
  • Long finish

6
Chemical Deacidification
  • Single salt
  • potassium carbonate
  • calcium carbonate
  • potassium bicarbonate
  • Double salt
  • Acidex/Neoanticid
  • generally preferred method for juices

7
Single Salt Deacidification
  • Only remove tartaric acid
  • if high acid/high pH use calcium carbonate
  • if high acid/low pH use potassium (bi)carbonate
  • reduction of 1.0 g/L acid needs 0.9 g/L
  • K-bicarbonate and 0.62 g/L K-carbonate
  • beware calcium tartrate formation

8
Double salt deacidification
  • Keep same ration of tartaric malic
  • Normally only used on must, not wine
  • Part of the wine treated based on initial acid,
    final desired acidity and volume
  • Treated fraction blended back into total

9
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10
Practical Considerations
  • Always stir the must into the Acidex with mixing,
    NEVER in the reverse
  • Added must into the vortex of a mixer
  • Let precipitate for 4-24 hours
  • higher brix musts take longer to react
  • Separate crystals before adding back treated
    must, racking or filtering

11
Acid Reducing Yeast Strains
  • Schizosaccharomyces pombe (ProOenol)
  • uses L-Malic as carbon source
  • Lallemand 71B
  • partially metabolizes L-Malic
  • ML01 gmo yeast with MLF gene inserted
  • low/no biogenic amines produced
  • has to be present in large amounts to have MLF

12
Coinoculation, Yeast MLB
  • Prior History, mainly with red wines
  • Bacteria grow slowly until yeast death phase
  • Yeast growth not affected by bacteria
  • Yeast autolysis gives bacteria nutrients
  • Bacteria consume malic first, then citric,
    fumaric, then sugars if pH gt 3.5

13
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14
Coinoculation (cont.)
  • German research with Riesling
  • Diacetyl degraded by active yeast
  • Final coinculated wines, fruitiness preserved
  • For high pH reds
  • Primary fermentation must complete

15
Practical Considerations
  • Dont use high SO2 producing yeast
  • Bacteria added 1-2 days after yeast, when things
    start warming up
  • MLB added at half normal rate
  • Careful monitoring of fermentation, malic by
    chromatography and VA
  • Sulfite added quickly after MLF completes

16
Red Wine Production
  • Fermentation Tannins
  • Proanthocyanidins (from grapes)
  • Ellagic Tannins
  • Blends of above two
  • Gallotannins (from oak galls)
  • Aging /Finishing Tannins
  • Some fermentation tannins can be used for aging
    finishing

17
Tannin Benefits
  • Help stabilize colour
  • Enhance structure (mouthfeel)
  • Inhibit laccase activity (grapes with botrytis)
  • Enhance aging potential

18
Inactivated Yeast Products
  • Main use is bodybuilding whites reds
  • Opti-White, Opti-Red, Noblesse, Boosterrouge
  • Provide polysaccharides for binding with grape
    polyphenolics
  • rounder mouthfeel
  • color intensity
  • Peptide products
  • Biolees, Biolees instant

19
Rosé Winemaking--Goals
  • Stable, pleasant colour, no orange hues
  • Bright fruit aromas, no vegetal notes
  • No sulfur odours/flavours (H2S Co.)
  • Good mouthfeel, low astringency

20
Rosé Winemaking Key Points
  • SO2 to crushed grapes at 40 ppm total
  • Ascorbic acid 50 ppm to juice after pressing
  • Initial juice 150 NTU or lower
  • Choose low sulfur odour producing yeast strain
  • Rehydrate yeast with sterols (GoFerm, Dynastart)
  • Add nutrient (Fermaid O) to juice at
    inoculation, rate of 20-30 g/hl
  • Add inactive yeast product (OptiWhite,
    BoosterBlanc) to juice at time of inoculation

21
Rosé Key Points cont.
  • Add 6 mg/l oxygen (macro) at 2 brix depletion
    from the starting brix
  • Add 6 mg/l oxygen (macro) at 4 brix depletion
  • Add nutrient 40-80 g/hL at 7 brix depletion
  • Keep temp. at 16-18 C from 17 brix to 0 brix
  • Regular mixing (Guth or pumpover, no O2)
  • Add SO2 20-40 ppm and ascorbic acid 50 ppm right
    after dryness and rack 24 hrs after.

22
Thanks for your attention and to the WIGA for
this invitation!
Alan Marks Scott Laboratories Technical Sales
Representative phone 250-769-9463 fax
250-769-9477 cell 250-859-6466 amarks_at_scottlabslt
d.com
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