Abstract

Within the European Union the determination of chaptalization of wine involves the comparison of the D/H ratios of ethanol with the ratios of authentic wine samples that are similar to the suspect wine in terms of geographical origin, grape variety, and vintage. In the frame of a databank project comparison, wines are produced under official control on a small scale. To clarify the influence of the different production conditions between commercial wines and these databank wines, wines that were produced under varying conditions were investigated by the (2)H NMR method. None of the parameters under investigation, such as yeast strain, fermentation temperature, or wine fining, showed a significant influence on the (D/H)(I) ratio of wine ethanol, which is the most indicative parameter for the determination of the addition of extraneous sugar to wine. For the (D/H)(II) ratio, different values were found for different yeast strains used for fermentation and a slight decrease was observed with increasing fermentation temperature. At increasing points of fermentation yield an increase of the D/H ratios was found in the present alcohol. The total increase of the (D/H)(I) ratio throughout the fermentation was approximately 1 ppm, so that with a fermentation yield of more than 50% no statistical difference could be observed.

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