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An Overview of Commercial Yeast
Selection
Linda F. Bisson
Department of Viticulture and Enology
University of California, Davis, CA
Wine Flavor 101
July 28, 2015
Outline of Presentation
 The
Importance of Yeast
 Desirable Traits of Yeast Strains
 Selection of the “Right” Strain
The Importance of Yeast
 Conversion
of sugar to ethanol
 Production of aromatic compounds
 Effects on mouth feel
 Modification of plant components
 Consumption of nutrients and prevention of
growth of other microorganisms
 Creation of reductive environment impacting
a range of subsequent chemical reactions
and aging
Yeast Production of Aromatic
Compounds
 Synthesize
positive characters
 Synthesize negative characters
 Modify existing grape characters
 Intensify perception of existing characters
 Reduce perception of existing characters
 Alter wine matrix: change in chemical and
sensory properties
Yeast Components Impacting Wine
Flavor
 Metabolites
 Enzymes
 Catalysts
 Mannoproteins
and Polysaccharides
Types of Yeast Impact on Aromatic
Compounds
 Primary
roles
– Production of flavor compounds de novo from
nutrients
– Liberation of grape flavor components from
precursors
 Secondary
roles
– Provide chemical reactants
– Enzymatic modification of grape/oak flavors
– Impact Redox status and buffering capacity
Major Classes of Yeast Flavor
Compounds
 Esters
 Sulfur
Compounds
 Alcohols
 Aldehydes
 Acids
 Carbonyl Compounds
Yeast Choice: Desirable Traits
 Fermentation
to dryness
 Reasonable rate of fermentation
 Predictable fermentation characteristics
 Appropriate ethanol tolerance
 Appropriate temperature tolerance
 Killer factor resistance
 Dominance of fermentation: wild
Saccharomyces, non-Saccharomyces and
bacteria
Yeast Choice: Desirable Traits
 Little
to no off-character production
 Little to no inhibition of other desirable
microbes
 Production of “natural” sulfur dioxide
 Production of desired aroma characters
 Production of mouth feel characteristics
 Enhancement of aging: enzymatic and matrix
effects
Commercial Yeast Choices
 Saccharomyces
cerevisiae cerevisiae
 Saccharomyces cerevisiae bayanus
 Saccharomyces bayanus
 Saccharomyces uvarum
 Saccharomyces hybrid strains (native or
constructed) often contain genetic
information from Saccharomyces kudriavzevii
 Non-Saccharomyces strains
Commercial Yeast Strain Diversity
 Ethanol
Tolerance: range from 12-18%
 Relative Nitrogen Needs: low/medium/high
(relative to other yeast strains)
 Fermentation speed (medium/fast) (relative
to other yeast strains)
 Temperature range (10-32°C/50-90°F); but
many yeast span a 10-20 degree range
within this overall range)
Commercial Yeast Strain Diversity

Stress tolerance:
– Nutrient shock
– Temperature shock
– Microbial competitor sensitivity
 Off-character
production
– Hydrogen sulfide
– Acetic acid
– Esters
– Sulfur dioxide
Commercial Yeast Strain Diversity
 Flavor
and aroma production
– Tropical esters
– Floral esters
– Thiol release
– Glycoside release
– Neutrality
– Yeast signature (bread/toast)
 Color
stability (absorption?)
 Mouthfeel effects
Commercial Yeast Impact
Is complicated . . .
– Affected by juice/must composition
– Impacted by nutrient additions
– Influenced by other microbiota (including other
strains of Saccharomyces)
– Impacted by processing decisions: oxygen,
temperature
– Many effects are poorly understood biologically
Selection of the “Right” Strain
 Make
sure strain has the needed ethanol
tolerance
 Meet nitrogen and micronutrient needs
 Rehydrate properly
 Manage “bad” flora
– Lactobacillus
– Acetic acid bacteria
 Strain
trials are useful but be aware of impact
of vintage variation
Strain Trials
 Challenging
to do due to
juice/must/fermentation variation
 Need replicates
 Need to emulate production conditions
 Need to confirm inoculated strain actually
conducted the fermentation and not a robust
house strain