Microorganisms of Juice: Managing Competition in the Tank
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Transcript Microorganisms of Juice: Managing Competition in the Tank
Microorganisms of Juice: Managing
Competition in the Tank
Lucy Joseph
U.C. Davis
Department of Viticulture and Enology
Managed Ecosystem
Ecological Succession in Wine
Fermentation
Which Microbes Are Found? –
Vineyard to Must
Factors Affecting Grape Microflora
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Moisture/Humidity
Insect Vectors and Damage
Temperature
Vineyard Management Practices
Variety of Grape
Geography
Environmental Conditions that Affect the
Microflora of Must
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pH - Low
Nutrients - high sugar, variable nitrogen
Temperature - fermentation creates heat
Oxygen - fermentation is low oxygen
Inhibitors - pesticides, sulfur, alcohol, acetic
acid, etc.
• Winery Practices - additions, sanitation,
stylistic considerations
Fungi found on Grapes
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Botrytis cinerea – bunch rot
Plasmopara viticola – downy mildew
Erysiphe necator – powdery mildew
Penicillium – green mold
Aspergillus – black mold
Alternaria – black smut
Cladosporium – post-harvest
Rhizopus – soft rot
Bacteria in the Vineyard
Lactobacillus
Lactococcus
Enterococcus
Weissella
Gluconobacter
Pediococcus
Oenococcus
Must
Lactobacillus
Pediococcus
Weissella
Gluconobacter
Acetobacter
Gluconacetobacter
Leuconostoc
Oenococcus
Yeast in the –
Vineyard
Harvested Grapes
Zygosaccharomyces
Hanseniaspora
Issatchenkia
Kluyveromyces
Metschnikowia
Pichia
Candida
Rhodotorula
Sporobolomyces
Sporidiobolus
Hanseniaspora
Metschnikowia
Candida
Yeast Found in Must
Hanseniaspora uvarum, guilliermondii, opuntiae
Metschnikowia pulcherrima
Candida zemplinina, glabrata, diversa
Pichia anomala, fermentans, guilliermondii
Clavispora lusitaniae
Zygosaccharomyces bailii
Kluveromyces thermotolerans
Kazachstania species
Issatchenkia occidentalis, orientalis, terricola
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Saccharomyces in the Vineyard
• Saccharomyces occurs in only about 1 sound
berry in 1000 tested
• In damaged berries that increases to about 1
in 4 berries tested
• The number of Saccharomyces cells on
damaged berries is about 104 to 105 cfu/ml
• The total microbial counts in damaged berries
is 106 to 107 cfu/ml
Typical Saccharomyces Growth Curve vs Typical
Wine Fermentation Curve
400
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Brix
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Saccharomyces and Non-Saccharomyces Growth
Curves vs Typical Wine Fermentation Curve
400
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350
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Brix
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How Certain Groups are Selected
Natural selection:
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Low pH
High sugar concentration – high osmolarity
Other nutrients
High phenolic content
Low oxygen
Alcohol concentration
How Certain Groups are Selected
Artificial Selection:
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Temperature
Potassium metabisulfite
pH - Tartaric acid
Lysozyme
Nutrients
What Are Some “Best Practices”?
• Harvest brix less than 27o brix
• Harvest acid content – pH 3.2 to 3.6, TA 0.6 to
0.8
• SO2 added at the crusher
• Temperatures less than 30oC
• Pump overs to manage temperature oxygen
levels
• Addition of nutrients only as needed
Why Do Best Practices Work?
What do they control?
Acid Adjustment
• High acid favors growth of yeasts early in
fermentation
• Most microbes, especially bacteria, are not
acid tolerant
• pH often increases during fermentation which
favors the ML fermentation
• pH greater than 3.6 encourages spoilage
lactics
• Brettanomyces is more tolerant to low pH
Addition of SO2
• Inhibits the growth of spoilage bacteria
• Inhibits growth of wild yeasts including
Brettanomyces
• Destroys thiamin
• Inhibits oxidation
Inoculation
• Directly adds the desirable organism in high
numbers
Engineering Practices
• Adjusting temperature
– Cold soaks
– Tank temperature, jacketed
– Pump overs
• Adjusting oxygen – Cap Management
– Pump overs – Rack and return
– Punch down
– Stirring or aeration
– Micro-ox
Temperature
• Cold soaks (15-20oC) encourage growth of
non-Saccharomyces yeast early in
fermentation
• Cool temperatures during fermentation inhibit
growth of spoilage bacteria and some yeasts
• Warm temperatures can favor ML bacteria
• Cool storage temperatures discourage
spoilage organisms during storage
Low Oxygen
• Strict aerobic organisms cannot compete
under low oxygen conditions
Filamentous fungi
Acetic acid bacteria
• Anaerobic and facultative anaerobes grow
under low oxygen
Saccharomyces
ML bacteria
Risks and Rewards
• Long hang times of fruit allow for
development of desirable flavor and color and
adds complexity
• Over doing it results in higher sugars that can
produce too much alcohol that can arrest
fermentation, leave residual sugars, and leave
nutrients for spoilage organisms
• Acidity may also suffer and be too low
allowing spoilage organism to flourish
Risks and Rewards
• Cold soaks can allow growth of wild yeasts
that produce desired esters and other flavor
compounds that add complexity
• Typically yeasts like Hanseniaspora, Pichia,
and Candida occur
• Wild yeasts can also produce acetic acid and
ethyl acetate in large amounts and this can be
particularly risky with damaged fruit
Risks and Rewards
• Low oxygen prevents the growth of strict
aerobic organisms like acetic acid bacteria and
filamentous fungi
• Too much oxygen allows a bloom of aerobic
organisms that often occur as a film on the
surface of the wine
• Micro-ox done incorrectly in the presence of
microbes, for example wood, results in the
bloom of atypical microbes in wine
Case Study 1
• A winemaker approached Dr. Bisson with a
wine that had a mousey taste and low
bacteria numbers by microscopic observation.
No bacteria were found by plating or QPCR.
• The wine was filtered and filters plated on
both bacterial (MLAB) and yeast (YM and WL)
media.
Grenache Wine
Grenache Filter on Plate
What Is Causing the Contamination?
• There are many sources of bacterial contamination
including: air, dust or soil, grapes, wood, water, and
corks.
• The wines were typical except that the SO2 level was
low to none.
• The wines showed contamination with many species
of bacteria.
• All of these wines were treated by micro-oxidation in
the presence of wood.
What Is Causing the Bacillus
Contamination?
•In bottling lines, Bacillus spores can survive
heat treatments that have replaced chemical
sanitation measures.
•Bacillus is a strict aerobe but is typically acid
sensitive
•Ethanol is effective at inducing sporulation in
Bacillus
Case Study #2
• Wine was returned from the distributor due to
high turbidity. Wine had no aroma or flavor
defect, only high turbidity in some bottles.
• Bacteria were visible under the microscope
but did not grow on plates and QPCR came
back negative.
What was in the wine?
• Initial plating indicated Bacillus but the
Bacillus didn’t look like what we saw under
the microscope
• It might be Bacillus spores
• Looking further we also found moderately
high levels of Staphylococcus pasteuri
The wine
• The wine was sweetened with added juice. I
don’t know if the juice was filtered.
• Synthetic corks were used.
• The pH of the wine was high.
• The bottling line was cleaned with only hot
water, bleach was no longer being used.
Best Practices
• Developed over time because they
work
• How and why they work has not
always been understood
• Significant deviation from the best
practices rarely goes well