Factors affecting Strecker aldehyde levels in alcoholic fermentation

Abstract

Strecker aldehydes (SAs) are volatile compounds that significantly influence wine aroma and quality, contributing notes such as “cooked vegetable” (methional), “honey” (phenylacetaldehyde), and “malt” (2-methylpropanal, 2-methylbutanal, 3-methylbutanal). Although traditionally linked to oxidative faults, recent evidence suggests that alcoholic fermentation itself can be a relevant source of SAs [1]. During fermentation, amino acids are metabolized via the Ehrlich pathway, generating aldehyde intermediates that are usually reduced to alcohols. However, incomplete reduction can occur [2-3], particularly in the presence of sulfite or polyphenols [4], leading to residual SAs that may bind SO2 as reversible adducts, potentially affecting aroma during aging [5]. This study evaluates the formation and accumulation of SAs under different fermentation conditions through five independent experiments. Three experiments used synthetic musts to investigate the effects of yeast strain, Zn2+ concentration, and SO2 levels. A fourth experiment examined SO2 interactions in polyphenol-enriched media, while the fifth monitored SAs in industrial fermentations. Results confirm that SAs are naturally produced during alcoholic fermentation and are predominantly present as SO2-bound adducts. Their accumulation strongly depends on yeast-mediated sulfite metabolism and the availability of SO2 during the Ehrlich pathway. Temporal formation patterns varied by compound and batch: 2-methylbutanal was produced in parallel with SO2 and hence acetaldehyde, whereas phenylacetaldehyde and methional formed earlier. Methional accumulation also showed strain-specific differences. Although yeast strain strongly influenced SO2 metabolism and aldehyde quenching, final concentrations of most SAs were only weakly strain-dependent, and the impact of added SO2 varied by compound, being negligible for methional. These findings demonstrate that wine shelf life may already be compromised during alcoholic fermentation, as shown by analyses in real musts and wines, and highlight the need to restructure fermentation practices to minimize Strecker aldehyde formation.

References

  1. Denat, M.; Ontañón, I.; Querol, A.; Ferreira, V. (2022). The diverse effects of yeast on the aroma of non-sulfite added white wines throughout aging. LWT 158, 113111.
  2. Perpète, P.; Collin, S. (2000). Evidence of Strecker aldehyde excretion by yeast in cold contact fermentations. J. Agric. Food Chem. 48(6), 2384–2386.
  3. Saison, D.; De Schutter, D. P.; Vanbeneden, N.; Daenen, L.; Delvaux, F.; Delvaux, F. R. (2010). Decrease of aged beer aroma by the reducing activity of brewing yeast. J. Agric. Food Chem. 58(5), 3107–3115.
  4. Perpète, P.; Collin, S. (2000). How to improve the enzymatic worty flavour reduction in a cold contact fermentation. Food Chem. 70(4), 457–462.
  5. Bueno, M. M.; Carrascón, V. C.; Ferreira, V. (2016). Release and formation of oxidation-related aldehydes during wine oxidation. J. Agric. Food Chem. 64(3), 608–617.
Publication date: June 25, 2026

Issue: WAC–IVAS 2026

Type: Poster

Authors

Mónica Bueno1,*, A. Manuel Aragón-Capone1, Vicente Ferreira1

1 Laboratorio de Análisis del Aroma y Enología (LAAE), Departament of Analytical Chemistry, Universidad de Zaragoza, Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón – IA2 (Universidad de Zaragoza-CITA) c/Pedro Cerbuna 12, 50009 Zaragoza, Spain

Contact the author*

Keywords

Strecker aldehydes, alcoholic fermentation, sulfur dioxide, yeast metabolism

Tags

IVES Conference Series | WAC–IVAS | WAC–IVAS 2026

Citation

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