Litcius/Paper detail

Malt and Hop as Sources of Thiol <i>S</i>-Conjugates: Thiol-Releasing Property of Lager Yeast during Fermentation

Cécile Chenot, William Donck, Philippe Janssens, Sonia Collin

2022Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The contribution of polyfunctional thiols (PFTs) to the overall flavor of a lager beer has been well documented, but their origin remains unclear. In comparison with Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains previously investigated (same conditions: 7 days at 24 °C, 3 days at 4 °C), we examined how Saccharomyces pastorianus yeasts are able to produce these PFTs from cysteinylated (Cys-) and glutathionylated (G-) conjugates. Up to 0.35% release was observed from G-conjugates against less than 0.08% for all yeasts studied so far. Lowering the wort nitrogen level and the fermentation temperature (12 °C) strongly increased the release efficiency and the ester/alcohol ratio from Cys-conjugates. However, it did not improve the release from G-conjugates and even prevented the yeast from producing any acetate. Although poor in free PFTs and their Cys-precursors, both Saaz hop and pale malt (classical ingredients for premium lager beers) confirmed to be significant sources of G-conjugates (especially those of 3-sulfanylhexanol and 3-sulfanyl-4-methylpentanol).

Topics & Concepts

YeastThiolFermentationSaccharomyces cerevisiaeChemistryWineConjugateFlavorFood scienceHop (telecommunications)BiochemistryComputer scienceMathematicsMathematical analysisComputer networkFermentation and Sensory AnalysisHorticultural and Viticultural ResearchPhytochemicals and Antioxidant Activities