Wine Chemistry and Biochemistry

(Steven Felgate) #1

5 Use of Enological Additives for Colloid and Tartrate Salt Stabilization 131


protein clouding. Many wine proteins are not free but bounded to a minor quantity


of grape phenolics (flavonoids).


White wines contain relatively large amounts of insoluble proteins that slowly


precipitate from the solution (the initial protein precipitation begins during press-


ing). Most white wines are to deficient in phenolics, causing a quick and complete


protein precipitation. Protein haze may be due to the fraction of residual wine pro-


teins that have been rendered prone to precipitation by their interaction with reactive


phenolics (from the grape, and also rarely from the cork). Bentonite removes differ-


ent amounts of grape protein fractions (Moine-Ledoux and Dubourdieu 1999).


5.1.1.2 Electric Charges of Wine Proteins


At a certain pH, the positive and negative charges of each protein fraction are


equal and the protein is less soluble. This pH value is known as the isoelec-


tric point, or isoionic point, of the protein. The lower the difference between


the juice or wine pH and the isoelectric point of the protein fraction, the lower


the net charge on that protein fraction and the lower the solubility of that frac-


tion. If the juice or wine pH values are substantially different from that of the


protein isoelectric point, the protein charge is high and thus the higher will be


the ability of that protein to bind electrostatically to fining agents. Therefore, the


isoelectric properties of proteins influence not only their natural tendency to pre-


cipitate but also their affinity to be removed with various agents. The relation-
ships between wine pH and isoelectric points can be illustrated in the following


example. The Champagne base wine pH is 3.2. Then the protein fractions having


apI>3.2 will be all positively charged and those with a pI<3.2 will be nega-


tively charged. The positively charged proteins will react with a fining agent of


mainly the opposite charge (–) such as bentonite. In this case, there would remain


in wine the protein fractions which, due to their negative charges, are not easily


removed by the use of bentonite. Those protein fractions with isoelectric points


closest to pH 3.2 have a limited charge and are not able to bind electrostatically to


bentonite.


Protein clouding in white wines seems to be a greater problem when the wine pH


is close to the isoelectric point of the various protein fractions. This is due to the fact


that bentonite will remove, preferentially, the most positively charged proteins. The


electrostatic charge of various protein fractions explains the observable phenomena


of not being able to stabilize certain wines with the use of bentonite alone, or only


with excessive amounts that can strip the wine character. But the pI of proteins only


partially explains wine haze formation. It is also important to note that other factors,


as yet not clearly identified, can intervene.


5.1.1.3 Methods for Bentonite Preparation


The method of preparation significantly affects the ability of bentonite to remove


wine or juice proteins. Bentonite is made up of small platelets that are separated by


a layer of water molecules. During hydration, the charged platelets repel each other
and pop apart. As this occurs, swelling begins. Water molecules partially neutralize

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