A Minimally Invasive Approach for Preventing White Wine Protein Haze by Early Enzymatic Treatment

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Abstract

Protein stability in bottled white wine is an essential organoleptic property considered by consumers. In this paper, the effectiveness of an early enzymatic treatment was investigated by adding a food-grade microbial protease at two different stages of winemaking: (i) at cold settling, for a short-term and low temperature (10 °C) action prior to alcoholic fermentation (AF); (ii) at yeast inoculum, for a long-lasting and medium temperature (18 °C) action during AF. The results reveal that protease sufficiently preserved its catalytic activity at both operational conditions: 10 °C (during cold settling) and 18 °C (during AF). Furthermore, protease addition (dosage 50–150 μL/L) raised the alcoholic fermentation rate. The treatment at yeast inoculum (dosage 50 μL/L) had a remarkable effect in preventing haze formation, as revealed by its impact on protein instability and haze-active proteins. This minimally invasive, time and resource-saving enzymatic treatment, integrated into the winemaking process, could produce stable white wine without affecting color quality and phenol content.

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APA

Benucci, I., Lombardelli, C., Muganu, M., Mazzocchi, C., & Esti, M. (2022). A Minimally Invasive Approach for Preventing White Wine Protein Haze by Early Enzymatic Treatment. Foods, 11(15). https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11152246

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