Abstract

A HPLC method that allows the separation of several anthocyanins present in red grapes and red wines, using a linear gradient of acetonitrile in water at pH 1.3, using perchloric acid as an acid modifier, is described. Data clearly show that the anthocyanins profile of red grapes may be complex, but quite different for each cultivar studied. Thus, those molecules may be used as chemotaxonomic markers for classifying red grape cultivars. However, the anthocyanin profile of red wines clearly differs from that presented by grapes employed in making it, because red wine contains a higher relative amount of malvidin-3- O-glucoside than grapes, and the relative amount of other anthocyanins in wines is usually lower than in grapes. Therefore, the use of anthocyanins present in wines to determine the grape cultivar used for winemaking needs a careful evaluation of the influence of different technological procedures on the anthocyanins fingerprint.

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