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The World of Wine.


Can Chemical analysis confirm a wine's authenticity?

There's a romance to wine unmatched by most agricultural products. Making wine, with all its complex flavors, remains as much an art as a science.

Hints of citrus, peach, raspberry, pear, oak, grass, or flowers may show up in the taste or smell of wines. The catalog of factors that determine the flavor and bouquet is almost as long as the list of adjectives that connoisseurs use to describe them.

Rain before the grape harvest, for example, bloats the fruit and makes the wine's flavor less intense. Long growing seasons enable rich, complex tastes to develop. The slope of the hill where the grapes grow, its drainage, and the amount and intensity of sunlight that the vines receive all affect the taste of the grapes.

Even after the grapes are picked, vintners face an array of choices for fermenting the sugar into alcohol. Different species of yeast can change the flavor, as can the length of time the grapes are fermented. Finally, winemakers must decide whether to age their product in stainless steel stainless steel: see steel.
stainless steel

Any of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10–30% chromium. The presence of chromium, together with low carbon content, gives remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat.
 vats or oak barrels.

All these steps from vine to bottle vary the mix of organic molecules that give wines their distinctive flavors. Yet many wine experts, especially in Europe, trace the richness of a wine quite literally back to its roots. A vineyard's particular combination of soil, rock, and geography--its terroir--is the most significant aspect of a wine, they say.

Now, science is examining terroir Terroir (/tεʀwaʀ/ in French) was originally a French term in wine and coffee used to denote the special characteristics that geography bestowed upon them.  for both pragmatic and romantic reasons. It's asking whether chemical analyses can help authenticate (1) To verify (guarantee) the identity of a person or company. To ensure that the individual or organization is really who it says it is. See authentication and digital certificate.

(2) To verify (guarantee) that data has not been altered.
 where a wine was made and pin down the elusive nature of terroir.

Europeans are the strongest champions of terroir. In France, most wines are distinguished by the region in which they are produced, such as Champagne. As the year 2000 approached, for example, many people wanted to buy sparkling wine for New Year's Eve celebrations. "This big market led to many attempts to misrepresent mis·rep·re·sent  
tr.v. mis·rep·re·sent·ed, mis·rep·re·sent·ing, mis·rep·re·sents
1. To give an incorrect or misleading representation of.

2.
 [other] sparkling wines as champagne," says Dominique Tusseau, a scientist with the Interprofessional Committee for Champagne Wines in Epernay, France.

With a premium attached to wines from a specific region, "there are compelling legal reasons to be able to identify the terroir," says Robert M. Pool, a grape specialist at Cornell University Cornell University, mainly at Ithaca, N.Y.; with land-grant, state, and private support; coeducational; chartered 1865, opened 1868. It was named for Ezra Cornell, who donated $500,000 and a tract of land. With the help of state senator Andrew D. . While "the [tested] elements may or may not be responsible for the special characters of the wines from a given region, creating an effective [chemical] `fingerprint' will ensure that the production is from the region listed on the wine label," he says.

Laws around the world regulate the purity of wines. "German wine law does not allow you to mix wines," says Wolfgang Todt of the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry The Max Planck Institute for Chemistry (in German: Max Planck Institut für Chemie - Otto Hahn Institut) is a scientific research institute under the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.  in Mainz, Germany. "If a winery win·er·y  
n. pl. win·er·ies
An establishment at which wine is made.

Noun 1. winery - distillery where wine is made
wine maker
 is taking cheap wine from the Mediterranean and diluting [its finer wine with it], then it is cheating the people paying a higher price, even if they cannot taste the difference."

Chemical analysis is not new to the industry. Government inspectors test wines to identify unhealthy contaminants, such as lead, and to ensure that wines haven't been adulterated a·dul·ter·ate  
tr.v. a·dul·ter·at·ed, a·dul·ter·at·ing, a·dul·ter·ates
To make impure by adding extraneous, improper, or inferior ingredients.

adj.
1. Spurious; adulterated.

2. Adulterous.
 with water, sugar, or artificial colors.

U.S. winemakers have also looked to chemistry to identify the critical elements in wine and learn how to use them to produce high-quality wines, Pool says. "For the producer of an established wine type ... it is important to understand which elements are critical to achieving and maintaining the identity and quality of its wines," he says.

Already, chemical testing of wine has helped identify "the common characters of wines, so that reliable and palatable wines--the Cokes of the wine world--can be made and marketed at a reasonable price," says Pool.

Scientists have known for almost a decade that analysis of various chemical elements in wine can help roughly identify the geographic origin of wines, but the tests have been too complex and not conclusive enough to be used on a large scale.

Improved analytical instruments and powerful computers are now enabling scientists to better determine a chemical fingerprint chemical fingerprint
n.
A unique pattern indicating the presence of a particular molecule, based on specialized analytic techniques such as mass- or x-ray-spectroscopy, used to identify a pollutant, drug, contaminant, or other chemical in a test sample.
 for products of each wine-producing region. For the past few years, for example, a coalition of the French government officials and local growers has collected samples of all the wine produced in the small Champagne region, Tusseau says. The group can now analyze--for as many as 100 organic compounds and elements--potentially mislabeled mis·la·bel  
tr.v. mis·la·beled also mis·la·belled, mis·la·bel·ing also mis·la·bel·ling, mis·la·bels also mis·la·bels
To label inaccurately.

Adj. 1.
 champagnes and compare them with these standards. This has helped the region put a dent in the serious problem of misrepresented champagnes, Tusseau says.

German researchers recently studied 165 wines from six grape-growing regions. The team showed that the differing proportions of 15 chemical elements, such as aluminum and calcium, can correctly distinguish wines from particular regions with 70-100 percent accuracy.

Testing for just three elements--barium, silicon, and vanadium--and three organic compounds, the researchers correctly identified the geographic background of as many as 90 percent of the wines tested, they reported in the October 1999 AMERICAN LABORATORY. The organic compounds they tested reflect wine-making procedures: 2-furancarboxaldehyde, whose content is determined by aging; 4-methyl-1-pentanol, the amount of fermentation; and 1-octanol, the wine's maturity.

It would be laborious to routinely identify the geographic origins of wine in this way, admits chemist Gabriela Thiel of the Institute of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry analytical chemistry: see under chemistry.  at the Friedrich Schiller “Schiller” redirects here. For other uses, see Schiller (disambiguation).
Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller (Marbach am Neckar, November 10, 1759 – May 9, 1805 in Weimar) was a German poet, philosopher, historian, and dramatist.
 University in Jena, Germany. "Temperature and the amount of rainfall fluctuate over the course of several years and within growing periods, so intake of trace elements Trace elements
A group of elements that are present in the human body in very small amounts but are nonetheless important to good health. They include chromium, copper, cobalt, iodine, iron, selenium, and zinc. Trace elements are also called micronutrients.
 from soil into grapes varies slightly from year to year," she says.

In addition, techniques of wine processing tend to vary from region to region, she says, and these differences could also affect the proportions of trace elements found in wines.

A slightly simpler approach might be to measure traces of strontium strontium (strŏn`shēəm) [from Strontian, a Scottish town], a metallic chemical element; symbol Sr; at. no. 38; at. wt. 87.62; m.p. 769°C;; b.p. 1,384°C;; sp. gr. 2.6 at 20°C;; valence +2.  in wine to track its origin, says Todt. In the soil over time, atoms of another naturally radioactive element called rubidium rubidium (rbĭd`ēəm), metallic chemical element; symbol Rb; at. no. 37; at. wt. 85.4678; m.p. 38.89°C;; b.p. 686°C;; sp. gr. 1.53 at 20°C;; valence +1.  decay into a form of strontium that can be distinguished from other isotopes of strontium The alkali earth metal Strontium (Sr) has four stable, naturally occurring isotopes: 84Sr (0.56%), 86Sr (9.86%), 87Sr (7.0%) and 88Sr (82.58%).  that are present. Just as the ratio of different chemical elements varies in the soil, grapes, and wine from region to region, the ratio of these isotopes of strontium to rubidium and each other varies as well, says Todt.

He and his colleagues have looked at about 60 different vineyards in Europe and Australia. They find that all grapes growing in the same soil have the same strontium composition and that the strontium-isotope ratio varies widely. among soils, and therefore grapes, around the world.

"This is simpler than multielement analysis and as accurate in predicting a wine's origin," Todt says. One advantage of the test is that the processes of fermentation and aging don't alter the strontium-isotope ratios in grapes and wine. Another advantage is that the type of grape used to make the wine doesn't affect the result, he says. Some fertilizers, however, may add strontium to the soil and thus alter the isotope ratio found in grapes and wine.

Todt says that for now, his team's analyses are "just too expensive to be routine," but he expects that the cost of the equipment used to measure isotopes will come down within 5 years.

Neither elemental analysis Elemental analysis is a process where a sample of some material (e.g., soil, waste or drinking water, bodily fluids, minerals, chemical compounds) is analyzed for its elemental and sometimes isotopic composition.  nor isotope measurements are foolproof, Todt says. "For unambiguous determination of the origin of a wine, we will probably need several analytical methods," he says.

The eventual development of national or even international registries of typical soil and wine compositions for different regions will aid authentication (1) Verifying the integrity of a transmitted message. See message integrity, e-mail authentication and MAC.

(2) Verifying the identity of a user logging into a network.
 efforts and make it easier to prove that a wine was not grown and made in a particular region, he adds.

"People are so interested in terroir [because] wine is one of the few things that haven't become so homogenized ho·mog·e·nize  
v. ho·mog·e·nized, ho·mog·e·niz·ing, ho·mog·e·niz·es

v.tr.
1. To make homogeneous.

2.
a. To reduce to particles and disperse throughout a fluid.

b.
 it can be ignored rather than appreciated," Pool says.

"The beauty of wine is its quirky regionality," agrees Leo Leo, in astronomy
Leo [Lat.,=the lion], northern constellation lying S of Ursa Major and on the ecliptic (apparent path of the sun through the heavens) between Cancer and Virgo; it is one of the constellations of the zodiac.
 McCloskey of Sonoma-based Enologix, the largest wine-consulting firm in California. "Even those of us in the wine business are susceptible to its mysterious allure."

Can the effects of terroir be scientifically documented? McCloskey believes that for a few California regions the answer is yes. A few years ago, he and his colleagues showed that chardonnays from Carneros, Calif., tended to have more intense citrus and green-apple flavors than other chardonnays, he says. An earlier study suggested that pinot noir wines from the Carneros area tend to have notes of cherry and spice not present in other Napa Valley Napa Valley, Calif.: see under Napa.

Napa Valley

greatest wine-producing region of the United States. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 2990]

See : Wine
 wines.

From his work at the National Institute of Agronomical a·gron·o·my  
n.
Application of the various soil and plant sciences to soil management and crop production; scientific agriculture.



ag
 Research near Angers, France, Gerard Barbeau concludes that wines made from the same kind of grapes, grown in the same region using identical practices but in slightly different terroir, harvested at exactly the same time, and made into wine in exactly the same ways, still can be remarkably different. Some wines may be sweeter or more astringent astringent (əstrĭn`jənt), substance that shrinks body tissues. Astringent medicines cause shrinkage of mucous membranes or exposed tissues and are often used internally to check discharge of serum or mucous secretions in sore throat,  than others; the color intensity may differ; the types and intensity of aromas may vary. These underlying differences, he says, must be due to terroir.

"The quality of the raw material is of paramount importance," Barbeau says. "The variability induced by the physical characteristics of the terroirs is much more important than everything else."

Not everyone agrees. In a study published in the May 27, 1999 Food QUALITY AND PREFERENCE, German researchers found that among 20 Rieslings rated for odor, flavor, and body, the groupings of similar wines depended as much on the year that the wine was made and the winery that produced it as on the grapes' growing area.

A classification system based solely on geographic origin of a wine "would be rather confusing for consumers," says U. Fischer of the State Agricultural College and Research Center in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse Neustadt an der Weinstrasse (noi`shtät än dĕr vīn`shträsə), city (1994 pop. 53,782), Rhineland-Palatinate, SW Germany; chartered 1275. , Germany.

The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF ATF Molecular virology Activating transcription factor A cellular protein that stimulates transcription of adenovirus E4 transcription unit, which acts early in infection at any of several 'enhancer' binding sites ) is examining ways to test whether a wine is from the region it claims on the label. "One of our mandates is to make sure that the products we regulate are accurately labeled," says Richard Gahagan of the ATF bureau in Fresno, Calif. "We take it very seriously. Regardless of the eventual taste of the wine, the consumer is entitled to get what they think they are buying."

Unlike European wines, which are closely regulated by region, most U.S. wineries don't face rules that they must make wines only from grapes in a single field or a small vineyard, and therefore their products' taste is unlikely to reflect terroir.

Moreover, merchants identify most American wines by the kind of grape, such as chardonnay or pinot noir, used to make the wine. Such a category can encompass products of more than one vineyard, and a single bottle can contain wine made from grapes grown in different areas.

As American wines become more widely known, however, the wine industry is beginning to realize that people may prefer to buy a wine from a certain location, such as Sonoma or Napa Valley, says McCloskey. If wines from a region taste similar, and the label fully informs buyers, consumers have a better chance of choosing a new wine they like, he notes. Yet some geographic areas mentioned on a bottle label may say nothing about the taste.

"Since it is so hard to describe wine and define terroir to the consumer, wine can be a big mystery," McCloskey says.

"Testing [of wine] might protect you from buying a fraud, but it may not help you pick a wine which tastes any better," cautions Andrew L. Waterhouse of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905. .

So, what's a wine lover Noun 1. wine lover - a connoisseur of fine wines; a grape nut
cognoscente, connoisseur - an expert able to appreciate a field; especially in the fine arts
 to do? Perhaps just wait to see whether scientific, chemical analyses will be used to characterize and evaluate wines.

The art of winemaking is here to stay. It's possible, however, that long before the next millennial celebration rolls around, wine and champagne drinkers may be able to toast in the new year with wine that's not only carefully crafted but chemically authenticated.
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Author:CHRISTENSEN, DAMARIS
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2000
Words:1965
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