terclim by ICS banner
IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Macrowine 9 Macrowine 2025 9 Analysis and composition of grapes, wines, wine spirits 9 Colour, phenolic, and sensory characteristics of commercial monovarietal white wines produced with maceration

Colour, phenolic, and sensory characteristics of commercial monovarietal white wines produced with maceration

Abstract

White wines produced with skin and seed contact are of great interest in the wine sector. Maceration, whether performed prior to or concurrently with alcoholic fermentation, or even extended beyond its completion, significantly impacts the chromatic, mouthfeel, and aroma characteristics of these wines [1]. However, little information is available in the scientific literature on macerated white wine characteristics. This research is a descriptive study of the physicochemical and sensory parameters of 36 commercial Italian monovarietal white wines (cv. ‘Arneis’, ‘Catarratto’, ‘Erbaluce’, ‘Malvasia Istriana’, ‘Vermentino’) produced with different maceration times: short (≤3 days), medium (4-7 days), long (8-30 days), “orange wine” style (>1 month), and non-macerated controls (2 for each cultivar). The sensory analysis was conducted with an expert panel that generated the terminology and was trained on 20 aroma and 5 mouthfeel descriptors. The formal evaluation was performed using the Rate-All-That-Apply (RATA) technique [2]. Panellists also evaluated turbidity, colour intensity and hue. Instrumental analysis involved basic composition parameters, total polyphenols index (TPI), condensed tannins (methylcellulose precipitation assay, MCP), and colour by CIELab coordinates [3]. Among the investigated aroma descriptors, 15 differentiated the samples. The intensity of Citrus, Pineapple, and White flowers was evaluated higher in control samples compared to macerated ones, regardless of the variety. In contrast, Prune, Dry figs, Clove, and Liqueur were rated higher in macerated wines. White pepper was a characterising note of “orange wines”. Varietal effects were significant for Vanilla, Toasted, and Kerosene descriptors. The effect of maceration time on aroma descriptor intensity was variable, with wines presenting the longest maceration time showing non-linear changes. This pattern was also observed in mouthfeel descriptors, where Astringency increased from non-macerated to long-macerated wines but was lower in “orange wines”. Sensory results were supported by instrumental TPI and MCP. The same tendency was observed in Colour hue, evaluated from straw (0) to brown (10), and a*, b*, and absorbance at 420 nm instrumental parameters, with “orange wines” showing decreasing trend when compared to medium and long macerated samples. These first outcomes will be supplemented with volatile organic compounds analysis by GC-MS and individual phenolic composition by HPLC-UV, providing further insights into the changes occurring with maceration of different lengths.

References

[1] Buican, B. C., Colibaba, L. C., Luchian, C. E., Kallithraka, S., & Cotea, V. V. (2023). Agriculture, 13(9), 1750.

[2] Ares, G., Bruzzone, F., Vidal, L., Cadena, R.S., Giménez, A., Pineau, B., Hunter, D.C., Paisley, A.G., & Jaeger, S.R. (2014). Food Qual. Prefer., 36, 87-95.

[3] De Paolis, C., Zava, A., Paissoni, M.A., Río Segade, S., Motta, G., Škrab, D., Beria D’Argentina, S., Ferrero, L., Giacosa, S., Gerbi, V., & Rolle, L. (2025). Food Chem., 465, 142058.

Publication date: June 4, 2025

Type: Poster

Authors

Anastasiia Kasianova1*, Micaela Boido1, Lorenzo Ferrero1, Giorgia Botta1, Susana Río Segade1,2, Simone Giacosa1,2, Luca Rolle1,2, Maria Alessandra Paissoni1,2

1 Department of Agricultural, Forest, and Food Sciences, University of Torino, Corso Enotria 2/C, 12051 Alba, Italy
2 Interdepartmental Centre for Grapevines and Wine Sciences, University of Torino, Corso Enotria 2/C, 12051 Alba, Italy

Contact the author*

Keywords

white wine, maceration, RATA, sensory analysis

Tags

IVES Conference Series | Macrowine | Macrowine 2025

Related articles…

Impact of yeast strain and aging time on the secondary metabolites, macromolecule composition, and sensory attributes of sparkling wines elaborated by the traditional method

The occurrence of aroma and macromolecule constituents in sparkling wines, directly influencing their organoleptic characteristics, is affected by several factors, including the grape cultivar, base-wine particularities, inoculated yeasts, the aging time, and winemaking practices [1].

Understanding aroma loss during partial wine dealcoholization by vacuum distillation

Dealcoholization of wine has gained increasing attention as consumer preferences shift toward lower-alcohol or
alcohol-free beverages. This process meets key demands, including health-conscious lifestyles, regulatory
compliance, and the expanding non-alcoholic market [1-3].

Quality assessment of partially dealcoholized and dealcoholized red, rosé, and white wines: physicochemical, color, volatile, and sensory insights

The global non-alcoholic wine market is projected to grow from USD 2.7 billion in 2024 to USD 6.97 billion by 2034, driven by health awareness, lifestyle shifts, and religious factors [1-3]. Consequently, the removal of alcohol can significantly alter the key quality parameters of wine.

First disclosure of eugenol precursors in Vitis genus: analytical development and quantification

The main aim of this work was to develop an analytical method to disclosure the
molecular form of eugenol precursor. Indeed eugenol is an important contributor to
Armagnac spirits typicity made with Baco blanc.

METAPIWI: unveiling the role of microbial communities in PIWI grapes for sustainable winemaking

The METAPIWI project advances viticulture research by examining microbial communities in PIWI (fungus-resistant) grapevines compared to traditional Vitis vinifera. It investigates how these microbes influence spontaneous fermentation and the production of distinct metabolites and aromas.