Sensory and chemical drivers of wine minerality aroma: An application to Chablis wines
- Rodrigues, H. 2
- Sáenz-Navajas, M.-P. 6
- Franco-Luesma, E. 6
- Valentin, D. 12
- Fernández-Zurbano, P. 34
- Ferreira, V. 6
- De La Fuente Blanco, A. 6
- Ballester, J. 25
- 1 AgroSup Dijon, 1 Esplanade Erasme, Dijon, France
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2
Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation
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3
Universidad de La Rioja
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4
Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino
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5
University of Burgundy
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6
Universidad de Zaragoza
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ISSN: 0308-8146
Year of publication: 2017
Volume: 230
Pages: 553-562
Type: Article
More publications in: Food Chemistry
Metrics
JCR (Journal Impact Factor)
- Year 2017
- Journal Impact Factor: 4.946
- Journal Impact Factor without self cites: 4.446
- Article influence score: 0.899
- Best Quartile: Q1
- Area: NUTRITION & DIETETICS Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 11/83 (Ranking edition: SCIE)
- Area: CHEMISTRY, APPLIED Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 5/72 (Ranking edition: SCIE)
- Area: FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 7/133 (Ranking edition: SCIE)
SCImago Journal Rank
- Year 2017
- SJR Journal Impact: 1.793
- Best Quartile: Q1
- Area: Food Science Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 8/356
- Area: Analytical Chemistry Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 8/123
- Area: Medicine (miscellaneous) Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 200/2935
Scopus CiteScore
- Year 2017
- CiteScore of the Journal : 8.9
- Area: Food Science Percentile: 98
- Area: Analytical Chemistry Percentile: 92
Journal Citation Indicator (JCI)
- Year 2017
- Journal Citation Indicator (JCI): 1.86
- Best Quartile: Q1
- Area: FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 4/157
- Area: NUTRITION & DIETETICS Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 4/101
- Area: CHEMISTRY, APPLIED Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 2/73
Related Projects
Abstract
The goal of this work was to evaluate the effect of vineyard position on the minerality of wines and to establish relationships between minerality scores, sensory descriptors and chemical composition. Sensory analyses included minerality rating and free description performed by wine professionals under two conditions: orthonasal olfaction alone and global tasting. Chemical characterization included analysis of major and minor volatile compounds, volatile sulphur compounds, mercaptans, metals, anions and cations. Results showed a significant effect of the river bank on wine minerality scores only in the orthonasal olfaction condition, samples from the left being more mineral than those from the right bank. Methanethiol, involved in shellfish aroma, was significantly higher in wines from the left (more mineral) than from the right bank. Contrary, copper levels, related to lower levels of free MeSH, and norisoprenoids, responsible for white fruit and floral aromas, were higher in wines from the right bank (less mineral). © 2017