Chenot, Cécile
[UCL]
Donck, William
[UCL]
Janssens Philippe
Collin, Sonia
[UCL]
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).
Bibliographic reference |
Chenot, Cécile ; Donck, William ; Janssens Philippe ; Collin, Sonia. Malt and Hop as Sources of Thiol S‑Conjugates: Thiol-Releasing Property of Lager Yeast during Fermentation. In: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, Vol. 70, no.10, p. 3272-3279 (2022) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/260036 |