Abstract
Bacteriophage present in wine can attack bacterial starter cultures and inhibit the malolactic fermentation. The possibility of starter culture failure due to phage attack was studied in a commercial dry red wine of pH 3·23, inoculated with a multiple strain starter culture. During two stages of malolactic fermentation, bacterial growth and malate degradation in the wine were inhibited. A phage capable of lysing isolates of Leuconostoc oenos was isolated from the wine. The isolated phage had an icosahedral head of 42–45 nm diameter and a flexible, regularly cross‐striated tail 197–207 nm long with a small baseplate. The results confirm that phage can attack bacterial starter cultures in wine at low pH. Copyright © 1986, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved
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CITATION STYLE
Henick‐Kling, T., Lee, T. H., & Nicholas, D. J. D. (1986). Inhibition of bacterial growth and malolactic fermentation in wine by bacteriophage. Journal of Applied Bacteriology, 61(4), 287–293. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2672.1986.tb04289.x
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