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1 From Grape To Bottle: Avoiding Haloanisole Taint Napa Valley Wine Technical Group 26 February 2008 Eric Hervé, Ph.D. E T S Laboratories, St. Helena, CA
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2 1.Origins of Haloanisoles 2.Prevention at the Winery 3.Prevention of Cork Taint
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4 Phenols Microorganisms Halogens Haloanisoles Halophenols The Haloanisoles Triangle
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5 Phenol + Chlorine => Trichlorophenol Cl OH
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6 “Hidden Phenols” - Wood - Water - Grape / wine - Synthetic polymers (phenolic resin)
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7 Halogens - Chlorine (bleach, hypochlorite) Trichlorophenol (TCP) - Bromine (tablets) Tribromophenol (TBP) - Iodine ?
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8 Microorganisms - Detoxification of halophenols Haloanisoles
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9 Microorganisms - Molds/Fungi Trichoderma, Fusarium, Penicillium… (Alvarez-Rodriguez et al., 2003) - Soil bacteria Streptomyces (Mara et al., 2005)
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10 Phenols Microorganisms Halogens Haloanisoles Halophenols Pesticides, Flame Retardants
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11 Chloroanisoles in the Press France, 1998: “La maladie cachee du Vin” Wines “corked” by TeCA
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12 2,3,4,6- Tetrachlorophenol (TeCP) Present in pentachlorophenol - based wood preservatives Cl OH Cl
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13 February 2007: “Chile's Viña Errázuriz Confronts Contaminated Cellar - Problem with TBA may be widespread in Chile and Argentina“ James Molesworth
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14 2,4,6-Tribromophenol (TBP) Wood preservative and flame retardant Widely used in South America Beware of pallets!!! Br OH
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15 Vineyards Dichloran (Botran ® ) Traces of TCP, TeCP and PCP found in one sample Haloanisoles in treated moldy grapes (TCA > 20 ppt) Cl NO 2 NH 2
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16 1.Origins of Haloanisoles 2.Prevention at the Winery 3.Prevention of Cork Taint
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17 - Phenols:. few options… - Halogens:. no chlorine or bromine - Microorganisms:. humidity <70%
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18 - Halophenols:. Replacing bleach-sanitized items (hoses…). Checking wood materials
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19 Risk Assessment Visit Main Control Points: - Water - Air - Wood
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20 After “shock” chlorination (well, storage tanks) Water stored in wooden tanks Epoxy linings Contact with hoses Water Supply
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21 Concentrate airborne haloanisoles Drip pan sanitized with bromine tablets Where does the drip line go? A/C Unit Condensates
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22 Drains Wine and bleach mix TCP TCA TCA volatilized and distributed by drain system
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23 Haloanisoles are airborne contaminants get in wine via contaminated air or materials minute amounts (ppt) needed
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24 Trap for Atmospheric Haloanisoles Early detection < 0.1ppbbest 0.1 - 0.3 ppb“trace amounts” (common) ~ 1.0 ppbdanger! > 1.0 ppb wine contamination probable Monitoring (efficiency of corrective actions) “Snapshots”
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25 Barrel runners and chocks, wood tanks, wall paneling, posts stairs, catwalks, beams and rafters, plywood ceiling … Inventory, Sampling, Analysis (haloanisoles AND halophenols)
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26 Barrels and Winemaking Supplies. Hot issue: TBA. Ask barrel suppliers about QA program. Citric, tartaric, bentonite, DE, filter pads… Use your nose, beware of pallets,! In doubt… test (traps, soaks, analysis)
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27 “moldy”, “corked” “wet concrete” “muted” 0 ~ 2 ~ 6 TCA ng/L DifferenceRecognition The Threshold Fallacy: Gradation of Sensory Effects Sub-recognition levels are of concern
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28 Sensory Training
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29 Last Line of Defense Analysis right before bottling
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30 Remediation Options - Whole milk (0.2 to 0.6%) - Half and half (0.2 to 0.6%) - Yeast hulls (3 to 7 pounds / 1000 Gal) - Food-grade polyethylene sheets (~ 2 sq. feet / gal) - Commercial “TCA-Removal” offerings
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31 1.Origins of Haloanisoles 2.Prevention at the Winery 3.Prevention of Cork Taint
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32 Releasable TCA (RTCA) For a cork, or group of corks, the concentration of TCA reached at equilibrium in a wine soak. Expressed in ng/L (or ppt). (Hervé E., Price S. and Burns G. - ASEV 1999) Bulk vs. Individual
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33 Bale G: 3.8 ng/L No clear-cut line “good cork” / “bad cork”
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34 Individual soaks Bulk (group) soaks
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35 Bottle TCA after 9 months
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36 www.etslabs.com Thank You!
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