Color Characterization of Bordeaux Red Wines Produced without Added Sulfites

Nowadays, the development of naturalness as a concept is illustrated in the oenological field by the development of wine produced with lower inputs, sometimes even without any addition of SO throughout the winemaking process, up to the bottling stage. Despite the increase in the offer of these wines...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Foods Vol. 12; no. 12; p. 2358
Main Authors: Pelonnier-Magimel, Edouard, Chira, Kléopatra, Teissèdre, Pierre-Louis, Jourdes, Michaël, Barbe, Jean-Christophe
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland MDPI AG 13-06-2023
MDPI
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Nowadays, the development of naturalness as a concept is illustrated in the oenological field by the development of wine produced with lower inputs, sometimes even without any addition of SO throughout the winemaking process, up to the bottling stage. Despite the increase in the offer of these wines, they remain poorly explored in the literature and require characterization. This study was developed to evaluate the color of Bordeaux red wines without SO addition using colorimetric and polymeric pigments analysis. From a batch of commercial Bordeaux red wines with and without SO addition, and experimental wines produced from homogenous grapes according to different winemaking processes, colorimetric analyses (CIELab and color intensity (CI)) revealed a large difference in wine color depending on the presence or absence of SO . Indeed, wines without SO were significantly darker and presented with a deeper purplish color. According to these observations, polymeric pigments were quantified using UPLC-DAD/ESI QTof, and a higher concentration of polymeric pigments bound by the ethylidene bridge was observed in wines without SO This correlated with differences observed for CIELab and CI. Finally, a comparison with polymeric tannins bound by ethylidene bridge was made and revealed that no differences were observed between wines with and without added SO . This underlines the affinity difference between tannins and anthocyanins to react with acetaldehyde to form ethylidene bridges.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:2304-8158
2304-8158
DOI:10.3390/foods12122358