Browsing by Author "Cacho, Juan"
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- Amino acids and biogenic amines evolution during the estufagem of fortified winesPublication . Pereira, Vanda; Pereira, Ana C.; Pérez Trujillo, Juan P.; Cacho, Juan; Marques, José C.The current study was focused on the impact of accelerated ageing (heating step) on the amino acid and biogenic amine profiles of fortified wines. In this sense, three Madeira wines from two commonly used grape varieties (one red and the other white) were analysed during the heating, at standard (45∘ C, 3 months) and overheating (70∘ C, 1 month) conditions, following a precolumn derivatization procedure using iodoacetic acid, o-phthaldialdehyde, and 2-mercaptoethanol, carried out in the injection loop prior to RP-HPLC-FLD detection. Eighteen amino acids were identified, with arginine being the most abundant. An important decrease of the amino acid levels was detected during the standard heating (up to 30%), enhanced up to 61% by the temperature increase. Cysteine, histidine, and asparagine revealed the greatest decreases at 45∘ C. Conversely, some amino acids, such as asparagine, slightly increased. Four biogenic amines were identified but always in trace amounts. Finally, it was observed that the accelerated ageing did not favour the biogenic amine development. The results also indicate that the heating process promotes the amino acid transformation into new ageing products.
- Assessment of the development of browning, antioxidant activity and volatile organic compounds in thermally processed sugar model winesPublication . Pereira, Vanda; Santos, Magda; Cacho, Juan; Marques, José C.The study evaluates the contribution of the fructose and glucose's degradation for the Madeira wine's features. The browning index, antioxidant activity and volatile organic compounds developed by the glucose and fructose model systems simulating thermally processed sweet Madeira wines were assessed. Sixteen different fructose/glucose model systems were prepared in synthetic wine and stored at 50 C for 4 months. Then, three model wines were also submitted to 70 C for 1 month. The browning index and the antioxidant activity ranged between 0.00 and 0.27 AU and 3.0e65.3 mg(GAE)/L, respectively. The development of several volatile organic compounds was demonstrated (up to 47). The identified com pounds were mostly furans, with 5-hydroxymethylfurfural as the most abundant. For the first time, it was shown that the origin of sotolon in sweet wine can be associated with the acid-catalyzed fructose degradation mechanism. Other 2(5H)-furanones were also identified. It could be concluded that part of the browning, antioxidant activity and aroma compounds developed in sweet fortified wines is associ ated with the thermal degradation of fructose in acid medium.
- HPLC-DAD methodology for the quantification of organic acids, furans and polyphenols by direct injection of wine samplesPublication . Pereira, Vanda Nulita Gomes; Câmara, José S.; Cacho, Juan; Marques, José C.This article proposes a simple and sensitive HPLC method with photo-diode array detection for the analysis of organic acids, monomeric polyphenols and furanic compounds in wine samples by direct injection. The chromatographic separation of 8 organic acids, 2 furans and 22 phenolic compounds was carried out with a buffered solution (pH 2.70) and acetonitrile as mobile phases and a difunctionally bonded C18 stationary phase, Atlantis dC18 (250 4.6 mm, 5mm) column. The elution was performed in 12 min for the organic acids and in 60 min for the phenolic compounds, including phenolic acids, stilbenes and flavonoids. Target compounds were detected at 210 nm (organic acids, flavan-3-ols and benzoic acids), 254 nm (ellagic acid), 280 nm (furans and cinnamic acid), 315 nm (hydroxycinnamic acids and trans-resveratrol) and 360 nm (flavonoids). The RSD for the repeatability test (n55) of peak area and retention times were below 3.1 and 0.3%, respectively, for phenolics and below 1.0 and 0.2% for organic acids. The RSDs expressing the reproducibility of the method were higher than for the repeatability results but all below 9.0%. Method accuracy was evaluated by the recovery results, with averaged values between 80 and 104% for polyphenols and 97–105% for organic acids. The calibration curves, obtained by triplicate injection of standard solutions, showed good linearity with regression coefficients higher than 0.9982 for polyphenols and 0.9997 for organic acids. The LOD was in the range of 0.07–0.49 mg/L for polyphenols (cinnamic and gallic acids, respectively) and 0.001–0.046 g/L for organic acids (oxalic and lactic acids, respectively). The method was successfully used to measure and assess the polyphenolic fingerprint and organic acids profile of red, white, rose ´ and fortified wines.
- Polyphenols, antioxidant potential and color of fortified wines during accelerated ageing: the Madeira wine case studyPublication . Pereira, Vanda; Albuquerque, Francisco; Cacho, Juan; Marques, José C.Polyphenols, antioxidant potential and color of three types of fortified Madeira wines were evaluated during the accelerated ageing, named as estufagem. The traditional estufagem process was set to 45 °C for 3 months. Overheating conditions, 1 month at 70 °C, were also examined. Total polyphenols (TP), total monomeric anthocyanins (TMA) and total flavonoids (TF) were assessed by spectrophotometric methods, while individual polyphenols and furans were simultaneously determined by HPLC-DAD. Antioxidant potential (AP) was estimated by ABTS, DPPH and FRAP assays, while color was evaluated by Glories and CIELab. Traditional estufagem decreased the TP and AP up to 20% and 26%, respectively, with final values similar to other wines. TMA of the Madeira wines from red grapes decreased during estufagem. Six hydroxybenzoic acids, three hydroxycinnamic acids, one stilbene, three flavonols and three flavan-3-ols were found in these wines. The prominent phenolics were hydroxycinnamates and hydroxybenzoates, even after estufagem. Most polyphenols decreased, with the exception of caffeic, ferulic, p-coumaric, gallic and syringic acids. Finally, both chromatic systems revealed that all wines tended to similar chromatic characteristics after estufagem. The study suggests that estufagem can be applied without high impact on polyphenols and antioxidant potential of these fortified wines.
- Volatile profile of Madeira wines submitted to traditional accelerated ageingPublication . Pereira, Vanda; Cacho, Juan; Marques, José C.The evolution of monovarietal fortified Madeira wines forced-aged by traditional thermal processing (estufagem) were studied in terms of volatiles. SPE extracts were analysed by GC–MS before and after heating at 45 C for 3 months (standard) and at 70 C for 1 month (overheating). One hundred and ninety volatile compounds were identified, 53 of which were only encountered in baked wines. Most chemical families increased after standard heating, especially furans and esters, up to 61 and 3-fold, respectively. On the contrary, alcohols, acetates and fatty acids decreased after heating. Varietal aromas, such as Malvasia’s monoterpenic alcohols were not detected after baking. The accelerated ageing favoured the development of some volatiles previously reported as typical aromas of finest Madeira wines, particularly phenylacetaldeyde, b-damascenone and 5-ethoxymethylfurfural. Additionally, ethyl butyrate, ethyl 2- methylbutyrate, ethyl caproate, ethyl isovalerate, guaiacol, 5-hydroxymethylfurfural and c-decalactone were also found as potential contributors to the global aroma of baked wines.