Objective 3: Develop and optimize winemaking practices to sustainably produce and market distinctive, high quality wines from cold climate cultivars.
Assess yeast strains for selected cold-hardy cultivars.
Enologists conducted trials with select cold-hardy grape varieties to determine which yeast strains will work best with unique juice chemistry, using yeasts known to enhance desirable wine aromas.
Yeast Trials for Improved Wine Quality in Cold Climate Cultivars. Seven cold-hardy grape cultivars (Brianna, Chancellor, Frontenac gris, Frontenac, La Crescent, Marquette, and Prairie Star) from Vermont and New York we fermented with different yeasts for 25 different wines. Finished wines were then evaluated for sensory properties.
Anna Katharine Mansfield
Resources
- Cook, K. Yeast selection trials for cold-hardy grapes. Pp. 11-13 in Northern Grapes News Vol 1: 3. August 2012.
- Cook, K. Using Selected Yeast Strains to Reduce Wine Total Acidity. Pp. 1-3 in Northern Grapes News Vol 2: 4. November 2013.
- Cook, K. How Yeast Selection can Influence Wine Characteristics and Flavors in Marquette, Frontenac, Frontenac gris, and La Crescent. Northern Grapes Symposium, February 2013, Rochester, New York.
- Yeast Selection for Wines made from Cold-Hardy Grapes, by Katie Cook, University of Minnesota PDF of slides
- Are you feeding your yeast? The importance of YAN in healthy fermentation, by Anna Katharine Mansfield, Cornell University PDF of slides Information about spectrometers
Optimize deacidification methods for cold climate cultivars.
High acidity of cold-hardy cultivars challenge even the most skilled winemakers. Enologists evaluated biological and chemical methods to reduce acidity (reduce malic acid and retain tartaric acid) during the winemaking process.
Using Malic Acid-Reducing Yeasts for Cold Climate Wine Grapes. Three yeast strains that purportedly metabolize malic acid at higher rates reduced total acidity in La Crescent wines and Frontenac rose wines.
James Luby and Andrew Horton, University of Minnesota.
Optimizing deacidification methods for cold climate cultivars. Studies indicate that pH has the greatest impact on malic acid loss. In a scaled-up wine production trial, malic acid loss was slightly higher at ambient temperature in Frontenac gris, but under refrigeration in La Crescent. No parameters were successful for preferential removal of malic acid.
Anna Katharine Mansfield and Chris Gerling, Cornell University
Resources
- Gerling, C. Necessary Evil: Chemical Deacidification for High Acid Wines. Pp. 1-2 in Northern Grapes News Vol 2: 3. August 2013.
- Cook, K. Using Selected Yeast Strains to Reduce Wine Total Acidity. Pp. 1-3 in Northern Grapes News Vol 2: 4. November 2013.
- Mansfield, A.K. and C. Burtch. Making quality wines from high acid grapes: Yeast selection and deacidification. Northern Grapes Symposium, February 2016, Kalamazoo, MI.
- Mansfield, A.K. Managing Acidity: Biological and Chemical Methods. Northern Grapes Symposium, February 2013, Rochester, NY.
- Managing Acidity in the Winery, by Anna Katharine Mansfield, Cornell University, and Murli Dharmadhikari, University of Iowa
Skin contact trials on aromatic white cold hardy cultivars.
While regional and viticultural variables impact wine aroma and flavor, the final sensory profile is also influenced by processing. Pre-fermentation skin contact treatments are used by winemakers to produce aromatic styles of white wines, but the effects of this have not been studied on cold climate varieties. The goal of this work is to determine if pre-fermentation skin contact treatments on La Crescent and Edelweiss grapes have a positive impact on wine aroma.
Skin Contact Trial in La Crescent. Researchers studied the effects of 24-hours pre-fermentation skin contact, at two temperatures, on the aroma intensity of La Crescent wines.
Murli Dharmadhikari, Jacek Koziel, Somchai Rice, Iowa State University, and Anna Katharine Mansfield, Cornell University
Edelweiss Skin Contact Trial. Murli Dharmadhikari, Erin Norton, Drew Horton, Iowa State University
Anthocyanins in red cold-hardy cultivars.
While extensive research has been performed on V. vinifera monoglucosides (anthocyanins, or pigments, that influence color in traditional red wine grapes), little is known about diglucoside anthocyanin types and quantities in interspecific cold-hardy red hybrid grapes. In these non-vinifera varieties, the structure of diglucoside anthocyanins make them less capable of binding in molecules that stabilize color, leading to atypical hues.
Characterizing anthocyanins in red cold hardy hybrids
While the color of cold-hardy red hybrids is different from that of traditional V. vinifera reds, little is known about the type and amount of anthocyanins in these cultivars. This study characterized hybrid grape anthocyanins and found that diglucoside concentrations are higher than monoglucosides in hybrid grapes. Higher diglucoside concentrations suggest different color hues of hybrid wines from traditional reds, and that color compounds are less likely to form expected stable, brick-red colors during aging.
Anna Katharine Mansfield, Cornell University
Resource
- Burtch, C and AK Mansfield. Interspecific Hybrid Red Wine Color. Pp. 1-2 in Northern Grapes News Vol 5: 2. May 2016.
Tannins
Resources
- Mansfield, AK. When Species Matters: All is not Equal in the World of Wine Tannins. Pp. 1-3 Vol 4: 2 in Northern Grapes News. May 2015.
- Dharmadhikari, M. What do Enological Tannins offer to Northern Grape Winemakers? Northern Grapes Symposium, February 2013, Rochester, New York.
- Building the Perfect Body: Tannin Strategies for Red Hybrid Wines, by Anna Katharine Mansfield PDF of slides
Winery operations
Resources
- Gerling, C. Equipment for Small Wineries. Pp. 6-9 in Northern Grapes News Vol 3:2. June 2014.
- Koeberle, A. Murli Dharmadhikari: Four Decades leading the Midwest Grape and Wine Industry. Pp. 5-8 in Northern Grapes News Vol 5: 3. August 2016.
- Mansfield, A.K. Enology: Developing Winemaking Practices and Styles Suited to Northern Grapes. Northern Grapes Symposium, February 2012, St. Paul, Minnesota.
- Put a cork in it? An update on wine closures, by Anna Katharine Mansfield PDF of Mansfield slidesStuck on You – Sulfur Spray Residues in the Vineyard and Winery, by Gavin Sacks and Jillian Jastrzembski PDF of slides
- Malolactic Fermentation, Sigrid Gertsen-Schibbye PDF of slides
- Keep a Cork in it: Stabilizing Sweet Wines for Bottling, by Chris Gerling, Cornell University
- Introduction to Winery Sanitation: Options and Applications, by Randy Worobo, Cornell University
- The ABCs of the FSMA: The Food Safety Modernization Act and Wineries, by Stephanie Groves PDF of slides
- Winery Policies across the U.S and in the Northern States Region, by Bill Gartner PDF of slides