1 / 25

Wine flavor 101F: Uses, issues and innovation in wine fining

Fining is one of many instruments in the tool box of a Winemaker A suppliers View by Maggie McBride. Wine flavor 101F: Uses, issues and innovation in wine fining. Fining . What agents are currently approved for use How to approach fining in general Why we do it When should fining occur

carol
Download Presentation

Wine flavor 101F: Uses, issues and innovation in wine fining

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fining is one of many instruments in the tool box of a Winemaker A suppliers View by Maggie McBride Wine flavor 101F: Uses, issues and innovation in wine fining

  2. Fining • What agents are currently approved for use • How to approach fining in general • Why we do it • When should fining occur • Juice and or Wine stage • Allergen Labeling: Future fining agent possibilities • Our role

  3. Enological Fining agents the usual suspects (all approved for use) • Enological based fining agents • Proteins • Gelatins, Isinglass, Casein, Milk, and Egg whites • Earths • Bentonite • Synthetic Polymers • Polyvinylpolypyrolidone (PVPP) • Colloids • Polysaccharides (Sparkolloid), Gum Arabic, Mannoproteins

  4. OTHERS • Silica Gel, Carbon, Copper and Tannins • Silica Gel • Prevents over-fining • Carbon • Deodorizing and decolorizing carbons available • Copper • Sulfide issues • Tannins • Co-fining agent with proteins (mainly gelatin)

  5. My Approach

  6. What step in the winemaking process is the wine in? • Just a Tid Bit on Juice • Bigger Bang for your • Typically done on whites • To decrease turbidity, to enhance settling, treat or prevent oxidized phenolics, promote protein stablity, etc.

  7. What step in the winemaking process is the wine in? • IF it is Wine….. • Keep in mind when Bottling….Some agents need time to settle • DO A TRIAL! • Why? • Responsible • Not every fining agent works the same on different wines • Visual and Sensorial interactions between agent and wine

  8. My Approach

  9. Step 2 cnt’d: My Wine Bible

  10. Date your incoming samples -Product EXPIRES -1st in 1st out -IF you suspect samples are old call supplier and ask for FRESH new samples

  11. Don’t be scared of the Math! • I find some people get deterred from doing a trial b/c of Math! It can be a little daunting at first!

  12. Products Chosen • Consult your Suppliers Tech Sheets for Guidance!! • Or use website like www.wineadds.com to help with calculations

  13. Allergen Labeling? • It is going to happen • Has happened in EU • Alternative to current fining agents that may need allergen labeling

  14. Non Allergen Chitin Based Products • Been in development for last 2 Years

  15. http://www.ttb.gov/wine/wine_treating_materials.shtml

  16. Getting New Products to YOU! • ONLY THE INDUSTRY CAN GET IT TTB APPROVED! • We bring them in and introduce them to you • We have no power to get TTB to approve them • The Process: • Go to TTB Website and Read CFR’s • Or maybe call Mari Kiranne for Help with CFR interpretation • “Request for trial use” letter to TTB (SEE www.scottlab.com for example letters) • Once enough Request TTB can put it up for Ruling

  17. THANK YOU!! maggiem@scottlab.com www.scottlab.com

More Related