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Wine (alt.food.wine) Devoted to the discussion of wine and wine-related topics. A place to read and comment about wines, wine and food matching, storage systems, wine paraphernalia, etc. In general, any topic related to wine is valid fodder for the group. |
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Salut/Hi Tom S,
le/on Fri, 03 Jun 2005 03:27:27 GMT, tu disais/you said:- >There are only a few yeast strains that are capable of reaching such high >alcohol levels. Montrachet is one, and Prise de Mousse may be another. >Even so, the conditions have to be favorable (temperature, nutrient, oxygen >access) for the yeast to produce such high alcohol without "sticking" >prematurely. Unless I'm mistaken, the record for more or less natural yeast strains is held by a tokay strain, which can ferment a little higher. I suspect that there are two different abilities required. One is to be able to withstand the high alcohol levels as the fermentation progresses, before dying. The other (and this is where the Tokay strain excells iirc) is the ability to survive and resist the VERY high osmotic pressure on the cell walls caused by the very high sugar concentrations in the starting must. Given that Tokaji Aszu Eszencia can start life with 400-500 gms/litre of sugar, there aren't many yeasts that can withstand it and grow. -- All the Best Ian Hoare http://www.souvigne.com mailbox full to avoid spam. try me at website |
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