Abstract

This study investigates the effect of ageing on the qualitative and quantitative composition of plum distillate in contact with oak wood chips. Maturation was performed with lightly toasted French oak (Quercus sessiflora and Quercus robur) chips or oak chips made from fragments of empty barrels that had been used for ageing cognac. The effects of oak chip dose, process temperature, ageing system (static or circulatory) and ultrasound treatment were assessed. Maturation of plum distillate samples with oak chips resulted in higher levels of extractable organics (including tannins) and colour changes, which were correlated with the type and dose of oak chips, and the conditions of maturation. The content of sugars such as glucose, xylose and arabinose also increased, depending on the conditions and type of oak chips. Degradation of lignin resulted in liberation of sinapaldehyde, syringaldehyde, coniferaldehyde and vanillin, with intensities depending on the applied parameters. In terms of volatiles, decreases in the concentration of higher alcohols and aliphatic aldehydes were observed in the majority of maturation experiments, while concentrations of furanic aldehydes increased depending on the type and dose of oak chips, as well as on the conditions of maturation. The quantities of esters such as ethyl acetate decreased in the majority of experimental variants, whereas concentrations of ethyl caproate, ethyl caprylate and ethyl caprate increased gradually. Some phenols and lactones were detected in all matured samples, with the lowest levels found in the samples aged with oak chips made from cognac barrels.

Highlights

  • Plum brandy is the spirit prepared from varieties of plum (Prunus sp.), originating from the Balkan Peninsula

  • One such change is a decline in the volume and the alcoholic strength by volume (ASV) of a new spirit with ASV higher than approx. 50 %, as a consequence of the preferential evaporation of ethanol through the oak wood

  • Lower ASVs could be further attributed to the penetration of ethanol into the porous structure of the oak chips during maturation

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Summary

Introduction

Plum brandy (slivovitz) is the spirit prepared from varieties of plum (Prunus sp.), originating from the Balkan Peninsula. This beverage is quite well known in Central Europe (Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Romania), and similar plum brandies are produced in Germany, Austria (Zwetschgenwasser), France (eau de vie de prune), and Switzerland (Pflümli wasser). The quality of plum brandy is influenced by many factors, including the soil and climate, the characteristics of the used fruit varieties and the employed technological procedures [2]. Plum varieties with their distinctive aromatic compounds give to the distillates the features of a local character [3]

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