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Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 1

02/21/2020 TWGGA

Managing New Winemaking Challenges with Non-Conventional Yeasts

Federico Tondini, PhD Scientific Coordinator AEB USA

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 2

Expertise : Microbiology, Food Biotechnology, Fermentation Science

Current Research Topics: Indigenous Yeast, Wine Fermentation, Cell Physiology

Education:- 2018 - PhD in Wine Science - University of Adelaide, Wine Microbiology and

Microbial Biotechnology Laboratory- 2014 - Master’s degree in Industrial Biotechnologies - Heineken Netherlands /

University of Milan-Bicocca- 2011 - Bachelor’s degree in Biotechnology - University of Milan - Bicocca

Publications:- Chen, L., Capone, D. L., Tondini, F., & Jeffery, D. W. (2018). Chiral Polyfunctional Thiols and Their Conjugated

Precursors upon Winemaking with Five Vitis vinifera Sauvignon blanc Clones. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry,66(18), 4674-4682.

- Tondini, F., Jiranek, V., Grbin, P. R., & Onetto, C. A. (2018). Genome Sequence of Australian Indigenous Wine YeastTorulaspora delbrueckii COFT1 Using Nanopore Sequencing. Genome Announcements, 6(17), e00321-18.

- Tondini, F., Lang, T., Chen, L., Herderich, M., & Jiranek, V. (2019). Linking gene expression and oenological traits:comparison between indigenous Torulaspora delbrueckii and Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. International Journal ofFood Microbiology.

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 3

Saccharomyces

Non-Saccharomyces

Complexity

‘ Terroir expression’

No predictability

No reliability

Osmotic stress

Nutrient

Ethanol toxicity

Assess the risk

Predict the outcome

Introduction

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Research & Industry objects

1. Monitor the sequential succession on the different yeast species

2. Evaluate the impact of different species metabolism on the final wine composition

1. Improve fermentation processesi.e. high sugar fermentations)

2. Rational development of newprocedures

(i.e. mixed fermentations).

Introduction

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1- Non-Saccharomyces yeast selection

Where is it from?

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• Grapes : main natural reserve of indigenous wine yeasts.

• The species of yeasts present on the surface of theberries are limited.

• Yeasts population evolves during grape ripening.

• The population present on the grapes in over-ripeness or on grapes affected by mold (eg Botrytis) are higher and can reach 10^5 and 10^7 CFU/g (Barata et al., 2008; Nisiotou & Nychas, 2007).

• Succession of yeast species:- Increased surface of the grape- Depending on the availability and quantity of nutrients- Depending on the concentration of sugar, which increases with decreasing

acidity(Cadez et al., 2010; Combina et al., 2005).

ECOLOGY OF NON-SACCHAROMYCES YEASTS

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 7

Yeast population dynamics during fermentation

Figura 3 : Dynamics of yeast species during AF inWhite (A) and Red (B) (Xufre et al., 2006).

Yeast species succession during AF

Common dynamics

Saccharomyces cerevisiae takes dominance

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 8

Increased sugar consumption under osmotic stress

No growth and limited sugar consumption under ethanol stress

Growth ( IOD)

Adelaide.edu.au/tc-iwpARC Training Centre for Innovative Wine Production

Impact of high sugar content on the efficiency and sensory outcomes of uninoculated fermentations

Osmotic stress

Ethanol stress

Growth ( IOD)

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 9

Growth decreases – What are the effects on fitness? Who is advantaged?

Adelaide.edu.au/tc-iwpARC Training Centre for Innovative Wine Production

Impact of high sugar content on the efficiency and sensory outcomes of uninoculated fermentations

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 10

IMPACT OF NS YEASTS ON THE ORGANOLEPTIC CHARACTERISTICS OF WINES

• It increases the organoleptic potentials and qualities, confers greater aromaticcomplexity (Kim et al., 2008; Viana et al., 2008; Ciani et al., 2010; Comitini &Ciani, 2011; Medina et al., 2013) = increases the range of desirable flavors

• Some yeasts can be at the origin of olfactory defects produced during fermentation and / orduring refining.- detrimental yeasts: Pichia membranifaciens, Candida, Zygosaccharomyces andBrettanomyces, can produce compounds such as acetic acid, phenols, hydrogen sulfide(Chatonnet et al., 1995; Dias et al., 2003; Suárez et al., 2007).

Need to study and select N-S yeasts with positive oenological characteristics

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Isolation N-S

Isolation of non-Saccharomyces yeasts on

Lysine

Colonies frozen at - 80 ° C on YPD-glycerol (50-50%)

Total yeast isolation on YPD medium

Samples of Pinot noir and Chardonnay grapes (12 sites located in Côte de Nuits, Côte Chalônnaise, Mâconnais et Center loire) - Grape

harvest 2010

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Isolates identification

Identification of isolated strains confirmed by sequencing

18S 26s5.8sITS1 ITS2

ITS1

ITS4

Restriction profiles obtained after digestion

with endonucleases: Cfol, Haelll, Hinfl or DdeI

(Esteve-Zarzoso et al., 1999)

Dominio D1/D2

NL1

NL4

PCR ITS-RFLP and sequencing region D1/D2 26S

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Biodiversity

Ceppi isolati ed identificati Numero %Candida californica 05 0,5Candida ishiwadae 02 0,2Candida oleophila 12 1,2Candida zemplinina 58 5,6Cryptococcus flavescens 04 0,4Hanseniaspora uvarum 658 64,0Kluyveromyces thermotolerans 02 0,2Metschnikowia aff. fructicola 03 0,3Metschnikowia pulcherrima 02 0,2Metschnikowia sp. 93 8,9Metschnikowia viticola 01 0,1Pichia fermentans 03 0,3Pichia fluxuum 04 0,4Pichia membranifaciens 28 2,7Rhodotorula fijisanenesis 01 0,1Torulaspora delbrueckii 07 0,7

Totale NS 883 85,9Saccharomyces cerevisiae 145 14,1

Totale 1028

Number of strains identified as a function of genus and species

1028 strains isolated and identificated

16 genues and species

883 non-Saccharomyces

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Microvinification

S. cerevisiae106 cellule/mL

Non-Saccharomyces107 cellule/mL

Time 48h

90 mL Standarized grape Juice

Residual sugar, Etanhol, pH, TA, Acetic acid

Fermentation- Total population: YPD plate count- non-Saccharomyces : plate Lys- Sugars: glucose e fructose

Analysis

Triplicates

Sugars (g/L) 200

pH 3,5

N (mg/L) 350

YAN (mg/L) 220

L-malic (g/L) 3,5

Grape juice composition

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 15

PRIMAFLORA®

Bioprotection of the harvest,an alternative to SO2

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 16

Legislative rules, together with customerdemands, have encouraged the production of“ecological wines” which have recently gainedrelevant interest. These are produced byenvironmentally friendly sustainable andintegrated production methods, with lowerconcentration of S02

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 17

Sulphur dioxide (SO2)

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 18

Sulphur dioxide(SO2)

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Bioprotection, a new concept of wort protection

PRIMAFLORA® is a specific selection of microorganisms intended to be implanted in the must/ on the grapes from the first minute of harvest.

PRIMAFLORA® does not replace yeast, but replaces the must sulphite.

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

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o Non-Saccharomyces yeasts Metschnikowia pulcherrima

o Saccharomyces Yeasts (VR)

o Organic nutrient

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

For static sedimentation, flotation and pre-fermentation maceration, use PRIMAFLORA® VB BIO.

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 21

o Principle of operation: establish dominance as quickly as possible of goodmicroorganisms (with oenological interest) into the must and stop thedevelopment of unwanted indigenous microorganisms.

o When? As early as possible about the harvest.

o

o Technical objectives: Limit the time of non-protection of grapes and must.

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

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Manual harvestingPRIMAFLORA for the protection of

unloading funds

SO23 x 5 g/hl

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Protocol:

Rehydrate 500g from PRIMAFLORA® in 10 liters of mineral water or unchlorinated water at 77-87 F and add 50g/l of sugar for 15 minutes.

Double the volume with unsulfured must toextend the life of the solution by 3 hours.

Quintuple volume with unsulfured wort to extendthe life of the solution by 12 hours.

La bioprotección con PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 24

Raise your dose of PRIMAFLORA® as we would for SO2

The higher the risk of contamination and proliferation of native flora, the higher the dose of PRIMAFLORA®.

The dose of PRIMAFLORAIt has to be increased according to the temperature of the wortIt needs to be increased according to the pH of the wort

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 25

It preserves some of the native flora

Schizosaccharomyces

o Cryptococcus

o Metschnikowia pulcherrima

o Brettanomyces

o Saccharomyces

o Hanseniaspora

o Rhodotorula

o Torulaspora delbrueckii

o Candida

o Pichia

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 26

Study by Nicholas A. Bokulich of Davis University (published in 2013 , Journal of the US Academy of Sciences)

“ Microbial biogeography of wine is grapes conditioned by cultivar, vintage, and climate ”

The wines are also the product of a microbial soil, depending on the climate, the geography of the region, the vineyard and the grape variety. This study shows a composition of yeast, on the surface of the grapes, very characteristic of the terroir and the variety.

The composition of the bacterial population is less typical of the terroir and variety.

This study does not say that there is a strain of yeast specific to a terroir, but it shows that they are different genera and species depending on the origin (and that Saccharomyces cerevisae is a minority)

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 27

Development of native flora after harvest

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Harvest Time (h) Yeast Inoculum

Num

ber

of c

ells

per

ml

LactobacilliBrettanomyces

GluconobactersSpoilage yeastsAcetic bacteria

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Succession of 3 populations of yeast

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Flora autóctona Saccharomyces sp.

Depending on the nature and intensity of bioprotection, it is possible to leave more or less room for the expression of the native flora

PRIMAFLORA® is a microbiological protection

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 29

Why use Primaflora instead of SO2?o Limits the combination of SO2 during fermentation.

o Avoid the selection of SO2-resistant microorganisms

o Add complexity of the wines and the aromatic quality: there is less production of H2Sand natural enzyme systems are preserved.

o This biomass will provide nutrient to the yeast (e.g. sterols).

o Unlike SO2, PRIMAFLORA® does not participate in extractions of bitterness, vegetableflavor and, if the harvest is rotten, moldy or mushroom flavor. In addition, treatments aremore effective.

o It facilitates co-inoculation and implantation of bacteria if you want malolactic co-fermentation.

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 30

After several years of practice, we confirm that Primaflora® is so safe that SO2 in the harvest.

His action against Brettanomyces, for example, is more effective than SO2.

Is Primaflora as safe as SO2?

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 31

The question of oxygen and oxidation remains...

o Red wines need less antioxidant protection

o Most white musts tolerate oxidation

o Only musts with a low concentration in polyphenols, such as the «

cuvés champenoises » need protection

o Use gallotannin (Gallovin) with Ascorbic acid (Gallovin C), yeast

hulls rich in glutathione (Elevage Glu)

Bioprotection with PRIMAFLORA®

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Bioprotection is a safe and approved method

Going from « SO2, without yeasts » to « no SO2, withPRIMAFLORA® », there is always an improvement of safety andaromatic quality.

But bacteria can develop more easily at the end of fermentation ifthey take time to finish (the total SO2 resulting from the harvesthas an antibacterial action).

So be careful with malolactic fermentation for white wines.

La bioprotección con PRIMAFLORA®

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 33

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15960

980

1000

1020

1040

1060

1080

1100

1120

Densité TempératureDensity Temperature

Duration of alcoholic fermentation: 8 days

Fermol® EXCEPTION / Fermol® MEDITERRANÉE

Example

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1.00E+04

1.00E+05

1.00E+06

1.00E+07

1.00E+08

29/09/15 30/09/15 01/10/15 02/10/15 03/10/15 04/10/15 05/10/15 06/10/15 07/10/15 08/10/15

Levures totales Levures non-SaccharomycesTotal yeasts Non-saccharomyces yeasts

Example

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1.00E+04

1.00E+05

1.00E+06

1.00E+07

1.00E+08

29/09/15 30/09/15 01/10/15 02/10/15 03/10/15 04/10/15 05/10/15 06/10/15 07/10/15 08/10/15

Levures totales Levures non-SaccharomycesLevaduras no saccharomyces

94% of non-Saccharomyces yeast florais Primaflora® VB BIO

6% are native yeasts (Metschnikowia pulcherrima and Candida zemplimine).

Ejemplo

Levadurastotales

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 36

Ejemplo

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0 g/hL 5 g/hL 3,5 g/hL 8,5 g/hL

15 g/hL5 g/hL 5 g/hL 5 g/hL

Example

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Example

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The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

Levulia Alcomeno

Ensenada 2019

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Trends in wines

Australian reds; adapted from Godden et al. 2015

12

12.5

13

13.5

14

14.5

15

1984

1987

1990

1993

1996

1999

2002

2005

2008

2011

2014

Alco

hol (

% v

/v)

3.35

3.40

3.45

3.50

3.55

3.60

3.65

3.70

19…

19…

19…

19…

19…

19…

20…

20…

20…

20…

20…

pH

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• Several ways can be used to control pH:

1. Direct addition of tartaric acid2. Use of cation excanghers3. Biological acidification

The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 42

• Several ways can be used to control pH:1. Direct addition of tartaric acid

NOT EFFICIENT ENOUGH because of the precipitation of potassium salt

Sensory profile is affected: NON NATURAL SOUR TASTE

The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 43

• Several ways can be used to control pH:2. Use of ion exchanger - AEB STABYMATIC

MORE EFFICIENT

CHEAPEST

The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 44

• Several ways can be used to control pH:3. Biological acidification

USE OF YEAST to NATURALLY INCREASE ACIDITY

The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 45

The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

S. cerevisiae: selected strain can increase malic acid production of 0.5-1 g/L -> NOT ENOUGH to significantly affect pH and later DEGRADED by MLF.

AEB Solution:

Non-Saccharomyces: LachanceathermotoleransInteresting properties:Softing and improving sensory qualities Decreasing pH due to the production of lactic acid

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 46

The use of heterofermentative yeast to lower pH and alcohol in must

LachanceaTermotolerans

ferments glucose and fructose

Improves wine acidity by the

production of lactic acid

Enzyme lactate dehydrogenases:

converts pyruvate to lactic acid (with

NAD+ regeneration)

LDH

PDC

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0 2 4 4 8 7 2 9 6 1 2 0 1 4 4 1 6 8 1 9 2 2 1 6 2 4 0 2 6 4 2 8 8 3 1 2 3 3 6

0

5 0

1 0 0

1 5 0

2 0 0

2 5 0

T i m e ( h o u r s )

Su

ga

r (

g/L

)

Oenological characterisation of 94 LT strains in Chardonnay ferments (236 g/L sugar; pH 3.5)

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13.4

13.2 13

.3

13.3

13.3 13

.4

13.4

13.4

13.4

13.6

13.2

13.0 13

.1

13.3

13.1 13

.2

13.7

12.8

12.8

13.3

13.0

13.2

13.3

13.1 13

.3

13.5

12.7

12.6

12.0

12.2

12.4

12.6

12.8

13.0

13.2

13.4

13.6

13.8

LT1 LT2 LT3 LT4 LT5 LT6 LT7 LT8 LT9 SC

Etha

nol (

% v

/v)

≤ 1% lower EtOH than SC

Mixed culture ferments – ethanol modulation

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3.34

3.27 3.29 3.

35

3.31 3.

35 3.44

3.31 3.32

3.53

3.15

3.02 3.04

3.17

3.04

3.13

3.42

2.93 2.90

3.19

2.99 3.

07

3.18

3.06 3.

12

3.2

2.88 2.86

2.50

2.70

2.90

3.10

3.30

3.50

3.70

LT1 LT2 LT3 LT4 LT5 LT6 LT7 LT8 LT9 SC

pH

≤ 0.67 lower pH than SC

Mixed culture ferments – pH modulation

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 50

LEVULIA ALCOLMENO

• COMPOSITION AND TECHNICAL CHARACTERISTICS• Strain: LACHANCEA THERMOTOLERANS• Alcohol tolerance: 7% vol.• GMO-free and not subjected to ionizing treatments

Wild Isolate from Burgundy

1% reduction alcohol v/v

8 g/L Lactic acid

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Vintage test benches

Open-cage pneumatic press

Capacity of 30 hL

Static settling thermoregulated

tank

10 °c

Homogeneous distribution of the

must4 stainless steel

tanks of 1hL

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 52

Vintage test benches

Control

Inoculation after settling with yeast of the species S. cerevisiae (LEVULIA® ESPERIDE) at a dose of 20 g/hL.

L. T (Lachancea thermotolerans)

Inoculation after settling with yeast of the species Lanchacea thermotolerans (LEVULIA® ALCOMENO) at 30 g/hL.Then after 72 hours, inoculation with yeast S. cerevisiae (LEVULIA® ESPERIDE) at 20 g/hL.

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Characteristics of the grape must of Pinot Auxerrois

213

12,67

3,41

3,43

2,02

181

Vintage test benches

Duration of alcoholic fermentation

Control: 14 daysL. T: 17 days.

Difference due to the sequential inoculation of 72 h with yeast S. cerevisiae in the control modality.

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 54

Dosage of lactic acid on Pinot Auxerrois

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Acid

ela

ctiq

ue(g

/L)

Jours

Témoin 1 Témoin 2 K.T 1 K.T 2

Test results

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 55

PH measurement on Pinot Auxerrois

Test results

3

3.05

3.1

3.15

3.2

3.25

3.3

3.35

3.4

3.45

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

pH

Jours

Témoin 1 Témoin 2 K.T 1 K.T 2

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Analytical assessment of wines after bottling

Test results

T- 1 T- 2 T.K 1 T.K 2 Assemblage

Acidité totale (g/L H2SO4) 3,84 3,72 7,79 8,12 5,23

pH 3,27 3,28 3,01 2,99 3,13

Glucose Fructose (g/L) 0,0 0,0 0,0 0,0 0Titre Alcoométrique Volumique (% Vol.) 13,87 13,81 12,46 12,48 13,16

Acidité volatile (g/L H2SO4) 0,20 0,20 0,52 0,58 0,32

Acide malique (g/L) 2,04 2,01 1,33 1,28 1,76

Acide lactique (g/L) 0,01 0,01 7,12 7,43 2,49

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Sensory analysis of wines after bottling

0

1

2

3

4

5Préférence

Intensitéaromatique

Qualité arôme

Moelleux

alcoolAcidité

amertume

Qualité enbouche

Qualitéd'ensemble

Témoin T.K Assemblage

Sensory analysisby tasting

Jury of Oenologists

composed of 15 people in order to

obtain sensory descriptors for each of them.

Test results

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Conclusion

o The use of a non-Saccharomyces yeast with a particular metabolism is now an interesting technological breakthrough.

o Lachancea (Kluyveromyces) thermotolerans allowed to obtain a wine with a decrease in the alcohol content of 1.37% vol.

o Uses some of the glucose available in the must to produce lactic acid (lactic fermentation) which is a particularity peculiar to this non-Saccharomyces yeast.

o Very significant increase in the total acidity of the wine of 4.1 g/L H2SO4 in favor of the L.T. wines

o Complementary aromatic signature of S. cerevisiae.

o Vintage 2019: Fermentation trials in red wines with ROC, Uni Fresno, UoBC, Casa Madero

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 59

Yeasts co-fermentation to increasy aromatic complexity and mouthfell

Levulia Torula

Ensenada 2019

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 60

• LEVULIA® TORULA is a yeast strain belonging to the species Torulaspora delbrueckii. It contributes positively to the organoleptic complexity of the wine while limiting the production of volatile acidity.

• It contributes to reduce the sensations of astringency in the mouth by the release of polysaccharides.

• LEVULIA® TORULA is suitable for all types of grape varieties, rich in terpenes and / or thiols (Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Gewurztraminer, Colombard, Riesling, Muscat, Sémillon, etc.) because of its high enzymes production (glucosidase and sulfur-lyase). + TERPENES +THIOLS

• LEVULIA® Torula can ensure the alcoholic fermentation at least up to 9% of the volume and can be used alone, in co-inoculation or sequential inoculation (24 to 48h) with the desired S. cerevisiae.

• Tips&Tricks: Levulia Torula has very low acetic acid production in high sugar must making it ideal for sweet/late harvest wines.

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T. delbrueckii is missing multiple genes (higher alcohols, Acetate esters)

FAS1/2 transcripts expression lower (Ethyl esters)

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 62

2 4 h 1 4 0 h 2 4 0 h

H X T 1

H X T 6

G L K 1

P G i 1

P F K 1

P F K 2

F B A 1

T P I 1

T D H 1

T D H 2

T D H 3

P G K 1

G P M 1

E N O 1

E N O 2

C D C 1 9

P Y K 2

P D C 1

P D C 5

P D C 6

A D H 7

A D H 6

A D H 5

A D H 4

A D H 3

A D H 2

A D H 1

B - S a c c h a r o m y c e s c e r e v i s i a e

5 0 0 0

1 0 0 0 0

1 5 0 0 0

2 0 0 0 0

2 4 h 1 4 0 h 2 4 0 h

H X T 1

H X T 2

G L K 1

P G i 1

P F K 1

P F K 2

F B A 1

T P I 1

T D H 1

T D H 2

T D H 3

P G K 1

G P M 1

E N O 1

E N O 2

C D C 1 9

P Y K 2

P D C 1

P D C 5

P D C 6

A D H 7

A D H 6

A D H 5

A D H 4

A D H 3

A D H 2

A D H 1

C - T o r u l a s p o r a D e l b r u e c k i i

5 0 0 0

1 0 0 0 0

1 5 0 0 0

2 0 0 0 0 • Missing paralog genes

• PGI1, TPI1, ENO2 = Candida glabrata

• PYK2 = Lachancea thermotolerans

• PDC1 = Kluyveromyces sp

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 63

T. delbrueckii expresses ADHs >8 times higher than ALDs

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 64

NO BAP2

NO ATF1-2

LOW FAS complex expression

Saccharomyces Torulaspora

Ethyl esters Acetate esters Higher alcohols

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 65

65

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 66

Piano di Comunicazione e Marketing 2019 • Valentina Corti • Brescia, 20 maggio 2019 67

Thank you for your attention

Questions?

Federico Tondini | Scientific Adviserfederico@aebusa.com