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IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Macrowine 9 Macrowine 2025 9 Wine, environment, health and sustainability 9 Effect of ozone treatments in wine production on colour traits, volatile composition, and sensory characteristics of young and short-term aged white wines

Effect of ozone treatments in wine production on colour traits, volatile composition, and sensory characteristics of young and short-term aged white wines

Abstract

The main aim of WiSSaTech project (PRIN P2022LXY3A),supported by the Italian Ministero dell’Università e della Ricerca and European Union-NextGenerationEU, is to investigate eco-friendly and safe alternatives to sulphur dioxide (SO2) in wine production. Three treatments were compared on two Italian white wines produced from grapes cv. Fiano and Vermentino: ozone treatment of grapes and cellar equipment either alone (O3) [1] or following the Purovino® method (PV) [2], and conventional use of SO2. Colour characteristics (CIELab coordinates [3]), total polyphenols (absorbance at 280 nm and Folin-Ciocalteu method [4]), antioxidant activity (DPPH, ABTS, FRAP, and CUPRAC methods [4]), and volatile organic compounds (HS-SPME-GC-MS method [5]) were determined. Moreover, sensory analysis was conducted using descriptive analysis [6]. All analyses were carried out on the obtained wines (T0), after accelerated aging at 35 °C for one week (T1),and after six months of conventional aging at 18 °C (T6).

Results showed that the antioxidant activity for Vermentino was higher in SO2-added wines at T0, T1, and T6 followed by O3-treated samples whereas total polyphenols were higher in the latter. Similar trends were observed for the antioxidant activity in Fiano wines, showing lower values for the PV treatment. Ozone treatments also influenced the VOCs profile. For Fiano, total free VOCs concentration decreased in PV and O3 wines at T0 compared to SO2 trial. Particularly, esters and acids diminished for PV treatment whereas benzenoids, terpenes, and norisoprenoids increased. However, benzenoids and terpenes decreased for O3-treated samples, as also occurred at T1 and T6, whereas norisoprenoids increased. All increasing trends were confirmed at T6. For Vermentino wines, higher concentrations of benzenoids, terpenes, and norisoprenoids were also obtained for both PV and O3 treatmentsat T0 and T1, but differences were observed between them at T6 leading to ahigher total VOCs concentration in PV-treated samples. Sensory analysis revealed higher fruity and floral notes (green apple descriptor at T1, pear, yellow pulp fruit, pineapple at T6) in O3 samples for Vermentino and Fiano, probably due to a higher citation of oxidation/reduction faults evidenced in the other wines. Higher sensory perceived colour hue in PV samples was in agreement with instrumental parameters (lower L* and higher b*), showing the highest colour differences (ΔE*) with SO2 treatments, that were perceived more green at the three sampling stages.

References

[1] Modesti, M., Macaluso, M.,Taglieri, I.,Bellincontro, A., Sanmartin, C. (2021). Foods, 10, 2934.

[2] Mencarelli, F., Catelli, C. (2013). Process for the Treatment and the Winemaking of Grapes. Italy Patent No. PCT/IB2012/000036.

[3] OIV (2016). Compendium of International Methods of Analysis of Wines and Musts. Organisation Internationale de la Vigne et du Vin, Paris, France.

[4] Vignault, A., González-Centeno, M. R., Pascual, O., Gombau, J., et al. (2018). Food Chem., 268, 210–219.

[5] Slaghenaufi, D., Ugliano, M. (2018). Front. Chem., 6, 66.

[6] Lawless, H. T., Heymann, H. (2010). Sensory Evaluation of Food: Principles and Practices. Springer, New York.

Publication date: June 4, 2025

Type: Poster

Authors

Giorgia Botta1,*, Beatrice Cordero1, Micaela Boido1, Negin Seif Zadeh1, Maria Alessandra Paissoni1,2, Gianmarco Alfieri3, Simone Giacosa1,2, Luca Rolle1,2, Francesca Borghini4, Stefano Ferrari4, Andrea Bellincontro3, Susana Río Segade1,2

1 Department of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences, University of Turin, Corso Enotria 2/C, 12051 Alba, Italy
2 Interdepartmental Centre for Grapevines and Wine Sciences, University of Turin, Corso Enotria 2/C, 12051 Alba, Italy
3 Department of Biological AgroFood and Forest Systems, University of Tuscia, Via De Lellis, 01100 Viterbo, Italy
4 ISVEA, Via Basilicata 1/3/5, 53036 Poggibonsi, Italy

Contact the author*

Keywords

ozone, white wines, aroma compounds, colour characteristics

Tags

IVES Conference Series | Macrowine | Macrowine 2025

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