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Acidification of musts in warm regions with tartaric acid and calcium sulfate at industrial scale

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/17525

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ACIDIFICATION OF MUSTS WITH GYPSUM AND TARTARIC ACID IN WARM REGIONS.pdf (353.2Kb)
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Author/s
Gómez Benítez, Juan; Lasanta Melero, CristinaAuthority UCA; Palacios Santander, José MaríaAuthority UCA; Cubillana Aguilera, LauraAuthority UCA
Date
2015-01-01
Department
Ingeniería Química y Tecnología de Alimentos; Química Analítica
Source
BIO Web of Conference Volumen 5, 2015 10.1051/bioconf/20150502007
Abstract
Acidification of musts is necessary in warm areas where high temperatures during ripening accelerate breathing combustion of tartaric acid and, in particular, malic acid in the berries. L(+) tartaric acid, L(-) or D,L malic acid and lactic acids are the only chemical acidifiers authorized by the OIV and European Community regulations. The use of calcium sulfate (gypsum: CaSO4·2H2O) is also authorized in the European Community as a complementary acidifier in generous and generous liquor wines from Spain (a practice known as plastering), provided that the residual sulfate content in the wine does not exceed 2.5 g/L expressed as potassium sulfate. However, this practice is not yet approved by OIV. To predict the effect on pH of different acidifiers, several chemical modeling approaches have been described in the literature, in particular a simplified model where the acidity of wine is considered to be due to a monoprotic acid. The aim of this work is to verify this model at pilot and industrial scale in the acidification of musts with tartaric and calcium sulfate, added either individually and in combination, using doses up to 3 g/L and to study the modifications that these practices produce on the compositions of the resulting wines. This work supplies useful information to study this practice in OIV in order to consider its approval.
Subjects
Acidification; musts; Gypsum; Sherry wines
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
This work is under a Creative Commons License Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional

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