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      Fermentation behaviour and metabolic interactions of multistarter wine yeast fermentations.

      International Journal of Food Microbiology
      Acetates, analysis, metabolism, Cell Communication, physiology, Coculture Techniques, Colony Count, Microbial, Fermentation, Industrial Microbiology, Kluyveromyces, growth & development, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Temperature, Time Factors, Vitis, microbiology, Wine

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          Abstract

          Multistarter fermentations of Hanseniaspora uvarum, Torulaspora delbrueckii and Kluyveromyces thermotolerans together with Saccharomyces cerevisiae were studied. In grape musts with a high sugar content, mixed trials showed a fermentation behaviour and analytical profiles of wines comparable to or better than those exhibited by a pure culture of S. cerevisiae. Sequential trials of T. delbrueckii and K. thermotolerans revealed a sluggish fermentation, while those of H. uvarum exhibited an unacceptable increase in ethyl acetate content (175 ml l(-1)). A low fermentation temperature (15 degrees C) of multistarter trials of H. uvarum resulted in a stuck fermentation that was not due to a deficiency of assimilable nitrogenous compounds since lower amounts of these compounds were used. Sequential fermentation carried out by H. uvarum at 15 degrees C confirmed the high production of ethyl acetate. The persistence and level of non-Saccharomyces yeasts during multistarter fermentations under stress conditions (high ethanol content and/or low temperature) can cause stuck fermentations.

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