wine composition, differs quite considerably from grape composition, partly because parts of the grape are discarded during winemaking, and partly because the processes involved effect a complicated series of transformations. Alcoholic fermentation, for example, transforms sugars into alcohol, while malolactic conversion reduces the level of malic acid in favour of lactic acid. The precise composition of a wine varies with wine type, harvest conditions and date, vintage characteristics, and the age of the wine (see ageing for details of how wine composition may change with age). Nevertheless, the table gives some guidance as to the likely range of concentrations of the essential constituents of the approximately 1,000 so far identified.
Wine composition
Component
| Proportions per l
| Comments
|
Dissolved gases
|
carbon dioxide
| 0–50 cc
| |
sulfur dioxide
| | |
Total
| 80–200 g
| More in some sweet wines
|
Free
| 10–50 mg
| More in some unstable wines
|
Volatile substances
|
water
| 700–900 g
| |
ethanol (alcohol)
| 8.5–15% by vol
| More in fortified, less in low-alcohol wines
|
higher alcohols
| 0.15–0.5 g
| |
acetaldehyde
| 0.005–0.5 g
| Higher amounts in sherry and similar wines
|
esters
| 0.1–0.3 g
| |
acetic acid
| 0.35–0.6 g
| |
Fixed substances
|
residual sugar
| 0.8–180 g}
| According to type of wine; more in sweet and botrytized wines
|
glycerol
| 5–12 g
|
phenolics
| 0.2–0.5 g; 1.5–4.0 g
| Lower range for white wines, higher range for reds
|
Organic acids
|
tartaric acid
| 3–10 g
| Depending on grape origin
|
malic acid
| 0–4 g}
| According to climate and extent of malolactic conversion
|
lactic acid
| 0–1 g
|
succinic acid
| 0.2–1.5 g
| |
citric acid
| 0–1 g
| Found in wines where additions have been made
|
Mineral salts
|
Sulfates
| 0.1–0.4 g}
| Expressed as potassium salts
|
Chlorides
| 0.25–0.85 g
|
Phosphates
| 0.08–0.5 g
|
Mineral elements
|
potassium
| 0.7–1.5 g
| |
calcium
| 0.06–0.9 g
|
iron
| 0.002–0.006 g
| |
Based on Navarre, C., L’Oenologie (7th edn, Paris, 2010)