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Alcoholic fermentation What's
boiling in the wine vat?
This is the first stage of winemaking, a complex biochemical phenomenon which
involves transforming the sugars (glucose
and fructose) into ethyl alcohol (ethanol), carbon dioxide and numerous products
which are known as secondary products because they are present only in small quantities.
The agents for this process are the yeasts
in the grapes which feed on the sugars and change them. During alcoholic fermentation
heat is also produced, but the process may stop if the temperature reaches 35°-38°C;
in this situation the must becomes vulnerable
to bacteria which change the sugars into mannitol, producing an undrinkable liquid.
In order to prevent this danger (mannitolic fermentation) the
cellar must be aired and cold water has to be run over the fermentation
vessel. Other measures maybe adopted, depending on the situation
in the place concerned. The most up-to-date vessels have a double
skin with an internal cavity where a cooling or heating liquid
circulates, thereby allowing the temperature of the process
to be controlled. In northern areas there may be the opposite
risk; fermentation may not start because the temperature is
too low (10°C). In this case the cellar and the must would
obviously have to be heated.
The start of alcoholic fermentation is signalled by gurgling caused
by carbon dioxide gas being given off. Due to this typical noise fermentation
is known in the trade as boiling.
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