What You Need to Know
The role of yeast in winemaking is the most important element that distinguishes wine from fruit juice. In the absence of oxygen, yeast converts the sugars of the fruit into alcohol and carbon dioxide through the process of fermentation. The more sugars in the grapes, the higher the potential alcohol level of the wine if the yeast are allowed to carry out fermentation to dryness. Sometimes winemakers will stop fermentation early in order to leave some residual sugars and sweetness in the wine such as with dessert wines. This can be achieved by dropping fermentation temperatures to the point where the yeast are inactive, sterile filtering the wine to remove the yeast or fortification with brandy or neutral spirits to kill off the yeast cells. If fermentation is unintentionally stopped, such as when the yeasts become exhausted of available nutrients and the wine has not yet reached dryness, this is considered a stuck fermentation.
Steps
- 1.
Barolo (Piedmont, Italy): Extended maceration with indigenous yeasts creates complex tannins
- 2.
Fino Sherry (Jerez, Spain): Flor yeast forms protective biofilm during biological aging
- 3.
Orange Wine (Georgia): Qvevri fermentation with skin-contact yeasts produces distinctive texture