Terroir 2020 banner
IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Unraveling vineyard site from vintage contributions: Elemental composition of site-specific Pinot noir wines across multiple vintages

Unraveling vineyard site from vintage contributions: Elemental composition of site-specific Pinot noir wines across multiple vintages

Abstract

Understanding vineyard site contribution to elemental composition of wines has, historically, been limited due to lack of continuity across multiple vintages, as well as lack of uniformity in scion clone and lack of controlled pilot-scale winemaking conditions.  We recently completed our fifth vintage, and have elemental composition characterizing wines from four vintages (2015–2018). The experimental design minimizes sources of potential variation by using a single scion clone of Pinot noir and by using automated 200 L fermentation vessels at the UC Davis Teaching and Research Winery, in which fermentations are highly controlled across vineyard replicates, vineyards, and vintages.  The work aims to begin to unravel vineyard site from vintage contributions in elemental composition of wines.   

Grape clusters were hand-harvested from vineyards which span a distance of more than 1400 km.  Eight American Viticultural Areas (AVAs) are represented in this work: Santa Rita Hills, Santa Maria Valley, Arroyo Seco, Carneros, Sonoma Coast, Russian River Valley, Anderson Valley and Willamette Valley.  Fruit was destemmed only and inoculated with Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast. Upon completion of inoculated MLF, wines were stored in stainless steel vessels until sampling for characterization.  Forty-seven elements were profiled in a mass range of 7 to 238 m/z by using inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (ICP-MS).  

Thirty elements have been quantified in the wines from at least half of the sites by ICP-MS. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to characterize vineyards using only significant elements identified by an analysis of variance (ANOVA) measuring effects of vineyard.  Across multiple vintages, wines from some AVAs were consistently clustered by elemental composition profile, such as those within Santa Maria Valley and Arroyo Seco.  Other vineyard locations, however, were reproducibly more similar in elemental composition to sites in other AVAs than those within their AVA.  Differences in profiles within an AVA suggest that factors such as distinctive soil composition or conditions, or microclimate have an effect.  Overall, separation and clustering of wines by elemental composition appears consistent across vintages in this experiment. These results quantitatively demonstrate reproducibility and differentiation of chemical composition of wines across multiple vintages, which is an important component of terroir. Details continue to be unravelled in future work to elucidate consistency of elemental profile from sites across vintages, such as correlations with soil composition and site microclimate.

DOI:

Publication date: March 17, 2021

Issue: Terroir 2020

Type: Video

Authors

Maisa Lima, Desmon Hernandez, Ron Runnebaum*

University of California – Davis, Davis, United States

Contact the author

Keywords

Wine elemental composition, Pinot noir, American Viticultural Areas, terroir

Tags

IVES Conference Series | Terroir 2020

Citation

Related articles…

Towards an ecological architecture inspired by underground cellars: An example of the thermal inertia of Moldovan underground cellars and new geothermal and Canadian well approaches

The search for underground shelters is one of the oldest forms of human habitation, providing refuge in extreme environments such as deserts and polar regions.

Gamma-ray spectrometry In Burgundy vineyard for high resolution soil mapping

Aim: A soil mapping methodology based on gamma-ray spectrometry and soil sampling has been applied for the first time in Burgundy. The purpose of this innovative high-resolution mapping is to delimit soil areas, to define elementary units of soil for terroir characterization and vineyard management. The added value of this integrated approach is a continuous geophysical mapping of the soil with an investigation depth of 60cm.

Balearic varieties of grapevine: study of genetic variability in the response to water stress

The photosynthetic characteristics of twenty varieties of grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) from Mallorca (Balearic Islands, Spain) and two widespread varieties

Autochthonous yeasts: a microbiological tool to exalt the quality of the apulian sparkling wine

The selection, characterization, and recruitment of autochthonous yeast strains to drive the alcoholic fermentation process is a highly researched practice because it allows the differentiation of the organoleptic properties of wines, assuring process standardization, reducing fermentation times and improving the quality and safety of the final products [1, 2]. Sparkling wines are “special wines” obtained by secondary fermentation of the base wine. ​In the traditional method (Champenoise method), the re-fermentation takes place in the bottle after the addition to the base wine of the so-called tirage solution. This step, also known as prise de mousse, is followed by an aging period characterized by the release of compounds from the yeast cells that affect the organoleptic properties of the final product. The use of autochthonous yeasts as starter cultures for secondary fermentation is one of the recent innovations proposed to enhance and differentiate these wines’ sensory quality [3,4]. Apulia is the second Italian wine-producing region, and its productive chain is now going through a qualitative evolution by implementing the employment of innovative approaches to exalt the peculiar properties of regional wines.

Staying hydrated – not easy when it’s hot!

Heat and drought episodes during the growing season are becoming more frequent and more severe in many of the world’s grape‐growing regions