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Understanding Wine Chemistry, 2nd Edition

ISBN: 978-1-119-89407-0

April 2024

544 pages

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Description
Understanding Wine Chemistry

Understand the reactions behind the world’s most alluring beverages

The immense variety of wines on the market is the product of multiple chemical processes – whether acting on components arising in the vineyard, during fermentation, or throughout storage. Winemaking decisions alter the chemistry of finished wines, affecting the flavor, color, stability, and other aspects of the final product. Knowledge of these chemical and biochemical processes is integral to the art and science of winemaking.

Understanding Wine Chemistry has served as the definitive introduction to the chemical components of wine, their properties, and their reaction mechanisms. It equips the knowledgeable reader to interpret and predict the outcomes of physicochemical reactions involved with winemaking processes. Now updated to reflect recent research findings, most notably in relation to wine redox chemistry, along with new Special Topics chapters on emerging areas, it continues to set the standard in the subject.

Readers of the second edition of Understanding Wine Chemistry will also find:

  • Case studies throughout showing chemistry at work in creating different wine styles and avoiding common adverse chemical and sensory outcomes
  • Detailed treatment of novel subjects like non-alcoholic wines, non-glass alternatives to wine packaging, synthetic wines, and more
  • An authorial team with decades of combined experience in wine chemistry research and education

Understanding Wine Chemistry is ideal for college and university students, winemakers at any stage in their practice, professionals in related fields such as suppliers or sommeliers, and chemists with an interest in wine.

About the Author

Andrew L. Waterhouse, PhD, is a Professor in the Department of Viticulture and Enology, University of California, Davis, USA. He is Chair of the Viticulture and Enology graduate studies program, and his research lab has made critical contributions to the chemistry of wine and wine analysis.

Gavin L. Sacks, PhD, is Professor in the Department of Food Science, Cornell University, USA. His research is concerned with the development and application of trace-level analyses to foods and beverages, especially wines. He also teaches courses related to wine flavor chemistry and wine analysis.

David W. Jeffery, PhD, is Associate Professor in the School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, University of Adelaide, Australia. His research involves the application of chemistry to understanding the links between composition and quality, and formation and fate of molecules, primarily in grape and wine. He also teaches courses related to stabilisation, clarification, and distillation, among others, and contributed to the development and delivery of an online wine education course called World of Wine: From Grape to Glass.