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Effect of microbial communities on flavor profile of Hakka rice wine throughout production

Junyi Wang, Ziyi Wang, Fangqing He, Zhuangguang Pan, Yixuan Du, Zhiying Chen, Yuxin He, Yuanming Sun, Meiying Li

2024Food Chemistry X29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hakka rice wine is produced from grains by co-fermentation with abundant microbes in an open fermentation environment. Indigenous microbiota and enzymes convert the nutrients in grains into flavor compounds through enzymatic biochemical reactions and microbial metabolism. High-throughput sequencing technology revealed that non-Saccharomyces yeasts dominated the traditional fermentation process, with genera such as Kodamaea ohmeri, Candida orthopsilosis, and Trichosporon asteroides forming a dynamic community that highly correlated with the evolution of 80 volatile compounds in Hakka rice wine. Among the 104 volatile compounds detected by GC–MS, 22 aroma-active compounds with relative odor activity values (ROAV) > 1 were quantified, 11 of which made significant contributions (P < 0.05) to the overall aroma and were responsible for the sweet, grainy, and herbal aromas of Hakka rice wine.

Topics & Concepts

WineAromaFlavorFermentationBiologyFood scienceAroma of wineFermentation in winemakingBotanyFermentation and Sensory AnalysisMicrobial Metabolism and ApplicationsBiochemical and biochemical processes
Effect of microbial communities on flavor profile of Hakka rice wine throughout production | Litcius